Diaspora

Taxonomy Color
red
  • Tamil Nadu gears up for mass agitation

    Political parties from across the political spectrum announced plans for mass agitation in support of the Eelam cause and demanded the central government to intervene immediately to stop the ongoing war in the neighbouring island.
     
    Even as Viduthalai Chiruthaigal Katchi (VCK) general secretary Thol Thirumavalavan called off his indefinite fast for a ceasefire in Sri Lanka
    on Sunday, January 18 evening, Pattali Makkal Katchi (PMK) founder Dr S Ramadoss called for an indefinite hartal in Tamil Nadu.

    "Tamil Nadu will come to a standstill. Except basic services like milk and health, nothing should move in the state. Until the Centre intervenes to effect a ceasefire in Sri Lanka, the state will be paralysed,'' Ramadoss said after Thirumavalavan gave up his fast in Maraimalainagar in the city suburbs.

    As chief minister M Karunanidhi had requested his allies to find ways to end the ethnic cleansing of Lankan Tamils, the PMK founder came up with the idea of a hartal and appealed to Karunanidhi to participate not as chief minister but as DMK president.
     
    "If Karunanidhi comes up with a better idea, we will follow it,'' he said.

    Earlier, Thirumavalavan announced that the VCK would not have any truck with the Congress in the state.
     
    Describing the party as utterly unhelpful for the Tamil cause, he vowed to work tirelessly to eliminate Congress from the state.

    Meanwhile, the MDMK announced it would hold State-wide demonstrations on January 28 to protest against the central Indian and Tamil Nadu governments for not bringing about a ceasefire in the north of Sri Lanka where the island military and the LTTE are engaged in a war.
     
    In a statement, MDMK chief Vaiko said External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee was yet to undertake his visit to Sri Lanka to hold talks with the island government as assured by the Centre to an all-party delegation led by Chief Minister M Karunanidhi in December last year.
     
    He said the Tamil Nadu government was equally doing nothing to pressure the Centre and therefore workers of MDMK, an ally of AIADMK, would stage demonstrations condemning the State and Central governments at district headquarters on January 28.
  • Traumatised children and a disordered society in Tamil Eelam
    As the fireworks thundered above our heads welcoming 2009 in Sydney, despite the magnificent display, my three year old son was terrified – clutching my shoulders and burying his head – only occasionally having the courage to look up while his older sister looked on gleefully.
     
    I remember him being terrified at the age of one when we had brought him along to watch the fireworks - but he still seemed very fearful of sudden large noises.
     
    Standing under that colourful night sky, I felt sad thinking about the outcomes of traumatised children in war situations.
     
    How many bombs Sri Lanka would have dropped in Tamil territories since I first saw an aerial bombing back in 1986, I wondered.
     
    A day later when the Army entered Kilinochchi, I plunged further into depression and had to remind myself of the power of proactive deeds of individuals and positive visualisation.
     
    One cannot fathom the hardships that the Tamil youth would have endured in fighting a highly equipped army that advanced from many sides, backed by Pakistani and Chinese weaponry and Indian radar operators!
     
    It’s almost like, it is the rest of world vs. Tamil Eelam. If only India had done something.
     
    These kind of “if only” scenarios ache our hearts. One simply cannot eliminate the sick feeling of having Kilinochchi - a prototype of a free and fair Eelam of the future, an infant model of our statehood - crushed before our own eyes.
     
    Anyway, leaving political and military outcomes aside, in this article I have attempted to highlight two long felt concerns of mine – disorder in society and the effects of trauma in children.
     
    While lamenting about the loss of land, we need to focus on the survivability and wellbeing of future generations in Tamil areas.
     
    In this article, I am not talking about the relatively small middle class populations, but the vast majority of poverty stricken people in the war torn Tamil areas - the poor or those who have become poor, keeping in mind the many years of medical and economic embargo and the prolonged war.
     
    What are the future outcomes for a young IDP (Internally Displaced Person or Refugee) child who has been a refugee for most or whole of his/her life? What are the outcomes for children living on hand-outs or in prolonged poverty and insecurity?
     
    What will happen to children with interrupted schooling or no schooling? What about the subset of children who are more timid in nature and have less coping skills? Add to that, the trauma of a physical injury or losing a parent? These are some of the questions that come to mind.
     
    First of all, when looking at trauma in children, one can acknowledge that given the right support systems, many children have good chances of bouncing back to their normal physical, emotional and cognitive developmental milestones.
     
     Many of us have grown up to be well balanced individuals even after experiencing traumatic aspects of the war. But, what about repeated and prolonged exposure to traumatic events? 
     
    The traditional society of Ilankai Tamils has had many support systems or “safety nets” such as: the extended family system; strong religious beliefs, strong spiritual beliefs and de-stressing techniques and rituals; an ecologically friendly way of living or living off the land with a great awareness for environmental conservation and sustainability.
     
    But, prolonged unrelenting war can pound and pound until holes are created in these safety nets! Children are especially prone to the disorders associated with trauma.
     
    Maybe excepting teenagers, many children neither have the cognitive ability to make sense of why the war is happening nor the emotional ability to cope up with family, social break down and disruptions to normal way of living, normal education etc.
     
    The intensified horrific war that we are seeing now in Tamil areas, has reached new levels in the destruction of society.
     
    While Singhalese children wake up to go to schools, the scared, displaced Tamil child rotting away without schooling in a dismal shelter, wakes up to the sound of shells in the middle of night.
     
    Take a young toddler who gets scared by the noise of the thunder or fireworks and put him/her in Vanni war zone, and the child would not cope with the bombs, cluster bombs and shells, let alone the constant running from one place to another, lack of food, lack of family and school routines etc.
     
    Now, if there is the added trauma of injury or death – the child’s sense of security and well being is seriously damaged.
     
    For a child, the parents and caregivers are powerful people. Seeing powerful people rendered powerless, can be very traumatic to the young child.
     
    To compound the issue even further, the surviving parent or family member might be occupied with getting or providing very basic needs, that the emotional needs of the child can easily go unanswered.
     
    Brooks and Siegel (1996), two experienced psychologists who worked with traumatised children talk about different kinds of trauma - death, illness and injury, abuse, natural disasters and trauma by proxy.
     
    They talk about children who had been in car accidents who refuse to go back into the car, children who had seen buildings collapse due to earthquakes refusing to be inside buildings etc.
     
    They talk about how different age groups react differently to trauma (see box for summary).
     
    It’s easy to deny or turn away from the psychological and mental problems that can occur in war situations especially since stigma is attached to such happenings.
     
    We need to be aware of these problems among vulnerable groups especially children, just as we are aware of loss of lives, limbs, property and a way of life, that is taking place in the Tamil homeland.
     
    The Singhalese government is well aware of the benefits of creating a disordered Tamil society. One can clearly see it has an agenda of creating “reserve” like areas or pockets of fragmented IDP populations who are often reduced to living on handouts.
     
    It is effectively waging a psychological warfare. It is aiming for breakdown of family, cultural and social structures. This can be seen in all parts of the Tamil homeland.
     
    Coming to the long term effects of disorder in society, some time ago I wondered about the alcoholism and self destructive behaviours found among Indigenous communities in Australia.
     
    In Canada and US, similar problems were seen in “reserves” for Indigenous people. Though some of you may rightfully argue that the indigenous situation was socio-culturally different to Tamils, I think its worth looking at the cycle of events that has contributed to their present social disorder.  
     
    Theoretically, parallels can be drawn with the forced relocation of indigenous people (who were made refugees in their own land), forced removal of indigenous children and destruction of indigenous languages and culture.
     
    The destruction of indigenous cultures also occurred with the trauma due to forced relocations, European renaming of land, losing access to sacred sites and traditional food sources.
     
    In Tamil areas, refugees who are internally displaced or evicted, are herded from one area to another - often aerial bombings and shellings are used to make people flee, to kill them off or to relocate them to suitable positions for the government.
     
    Internment of refugee families and in worse cases, killings of refugees are taking place. Children are being injured or killed in aerial bombings. Teenagers are vulnerable to detention, torture and death in custody.
     
    These are the aspects of war regardless whether the people are in “liberated areas” or war zones. In all these cases, children are put into situations which are very traumatic.
     
    We can see that in the East, destruction of culture is taking place through a gradual process of colonization and “Singhalisation”.
     
    Young students are particularly vulnerable to government propaganda and their version of history based on Mahavamsa.
     
    Professor Tatz (1999) in his report on youth suicide among indigenous communities, talked about how experiencing extreme forms of racism creates a disordered society for the victims. Initially, feelings of frustration are followed by a sense of alienation, of not belonging, then withdrawal from society, and finally, the threat of, or actual, violence.
     
    Tatz mentions that violence could be ‘coercive violence’ or ‘appealing violence’ - ‘Coercive violence’ is when a person uses violence in a premeditated and controlled manner (this could be directed towards the enemy); ‘Appealing violence’ is about harm to self or to kin such as domestic violence and child abuse.
     
    In the case of Indigenous peoples, a society that was living off the land was made to become heavily dependent on handouts and subsequently State Welfare.
     
    A culture that had strict tribal laws on family duties, incest prohibition etc became a common place for abuse of children.
     
    Petrol sniffing, drug addiction and alcoholism permeate day to day living.
     
    Family gatherings and funerals are often accompanied by extensive drinking through the night where children are left to their own devices. The social decay among the youth is heart wrenching.
     
    Loss of culture and loss of a way of life became almost a social suicide in the case of Indigenous societies.
     
    Some of you may claim that the Tamils are more advanced that that, but one would need to consider the poor and the continuously battered people in low socioeconomic conditions.
     
    John Campbell, a World Food Program official, recently got into trouble for comparing the conditions in Vanni to Somalia.
     
    However, interestingly, the Tamils in North East have not yet shown any serious signs of self destructive behaviour – at least within the family unit. But there are warning signs.
     
    Recently, a relative from Jaffna informed me that one green chilli costs 2 rupees there -One green chilli! A meal of bread and sambol would cost about 200 rupees. How can the poor afford it?
     
    My relative also reported that thefts have become so widespread with poverty stricken people stealing coconuts, mango, chicken and whatever they can get their hands on.
     
    Yet these problems sink into background when compared with what the displaced populations in the East and Vanni are going through.
     
    The increase in thefts, increasing number in orphanages, refugee camps and “rehabilitation centres”, prolonged disruptions to schooling, increasing number of armed groups etc are alarming indicators where the once stable Tamil society is heading towards.
     
    The Singhalese government is getting shrewder and shrewder with this kind of destruction to ways of living. In fact, what we are seeing is not just genocide but a well planned genocide.
     
    The “70 million strong Tamil Diaspora” as been in called upon often. This can be a waste of time and wishful thinking.
     
    The bottom-line is that the Ilankai Tamils living abroad are the ones who can’t go back to their home towns; are the one whose brethren are being massacred; are the ones whose unique ancient culture and language form is being destroyed. They are the stakeholders here.
     
    The estimated 1 million Ilakai Tamils living abroad is the current lifeline to Tamils in Sri Lanka. This is the vital connection that can help prevent a disordered Tamil society in Sri Lanka until peace comes.
     
    Recently I met a 2nd generation Tamil youth who is very involved with humanitarian and political work and whose father went back to Vanni few years ago. There is a small dedicated group of volunteers (local and expatriate Tamils) on the ground in Sri Lanka who is willing to take on aid work and rehabilitation work
     
    The effects of post traumatic stress in children can be reversed with proper support, nurturing and debriefing - which consists of four steps: preparing, having the child tell the story, sharing the child’s reactions, survival and recovery.
     
    Sometimes, debriefing could be simple as telling the child that it is not his fault. For example, Brooks and Siegel talk about a 4 year old child who saw his father being shot to death by intruders. The child told the counselor that he had shouted at the men to stop and if he had shouted louder, they might have left. According to his mother, the child had not shouted at all!
     
    To help the child understand that he was not responsible, the counselor had to tell the child that even a grown up might not have been able to do anything.
     
    In the above case, the child was suffering from guilt. Debriefing takes the child through the stages of sadness, denial, guilt and anger, shame or stigma and finally acceptance. Anger towards the enemy is understandable but it should never be fostered on guilt or shame – that kind of anger would be self destructive.
     
    Getting a child to tell the story through play, role play and drawing, correcting misconceptions about the events, providing explanations, providing realistic reassurances and explaining that time would heal, are all effective. However, debriefing can also be complex depending on the trauma.
     
    Children in Tamil areas of Sri Lanka, whether it is the North and East or Upcounty or other Southern parts stand exposed in this war on Ilankai Tamils.
     
    Now is the time to refocus. Now is the time for more humanitarian help. The children of Tamil Eelam need our support more than ever before.
     
    It is very impotent to carry on rehabilitation and humanitarian work at grass root levels even while the war is raging on: this could mean helping out a relative in the North East or contributing to the Tamil charities that work at the ground level.
     
    For example, we have medical organisations helping hospitals, alumni associations helping schools, TRO projects etc.
     
    This could also mean helping out with political work and rallying politicians, media, NGOs etc.
     
    This could mean professionals (such as doctors, lawyers, teachers, psychologists, historians etc) creating support networks. “Siru thuli, peru vellam” - Every thought, prayer, word and action counts. No defeat is greater than a psychological defeat.
     
    Reaction to trauma in various age groups
    Summary of Brooks, B. & Siegel, P. (1996) The Scared Child – Helping Kids Overcome Traumatic Events US: John Wiley & Sons Inc
     
    Age group – 0 to 2
    • Are unable to articulate how they feel (limited vocabulary). May fuss more.
    • May lose developmental steps already acquired
    • May fail to learn new and expected developmental tasks
     
    Preschoolers : Age group 2 - 5
    • Preschoolers combine reality with fantasy/make belief. The very self centered outlook at this age may cause them to think that they caused the events.
    • May lose developmental steps already acquired
    • May become aggressive in their interactions with others
    • May express non-realistic ideas about an event (“Father was taken away because I was bad”)
    • May become anxious and clingy
    • Playing the same game over and over again maybe a sign of post traumatic stress
    • May get angry, sullen or intense with play
     
    School age children: Age group 6 -12
    • More realistic thinking of this age group, makes the world a very frightening place for them – “Even Mother and Father can’t protect us”. “Mother and Father are just as frightened and vulnerable”.
    • Tends to put a brave face while still traumatised inside
    • Lack of control over trauma may make them feel that the future is unsure. Hence, some children might engage in reckless behaviour
    • Significant change in School performance – may find it difficult to concentrate and to perform
    • May blame themselves
    • Sleep disturbances, difficulty sleeping
    • May show fear of supernatural things
    • This age group believes in rules. When bad things happen even when they have been good and have obeyed rules, children may become oppositional and defiant
     
    Teenagers
    • They feel whatever they are working for or studying for, can be destroyed in a minute - So planning for the future is pointless.
    • May develop a negative self image because they are not able to avoid or alter a situation
    • Engages on revenge fantasies but then feel guilty about their feelings.
    • May experience a shift (either an intensification or withdrawal) in the normal developmental tasks of their age – such as love, friendship, sense of autonomy ie They can become obsessive or withdrawn 
  • Sri Lanka spends over $1 billion defending the Rupee
    The Sri Lankan government which is adamant that the local currency, Sri Lankan Rupee (LKR), will not be devalued continued spending large sums of its already dwindling foreign reserves trying to prop up the Rupee at its current levels against the US Dollar.
     
    Since peg defence began by selling dollars and injecting liquidity to sterilize cash shortages, a total of 1,182 million dollars had been spent, reports Lanka Business Online (LBO).
     
    In December alone, Sri Lanka spent 125 million US dollars defending the rupee in foreign exchange markets, LBO reported citing the latest data.
     
    In early December the peg was loosened and the rupee moved steadily from 110 to over 113 to the US dollar. However in the latter part of December, the central bank spent 160.20 million US dollars in the month and also bought 34.50 million from the market., LBO reported.
     
    The highest amount of 587.7 million US dollars was spent in October when the rupee was tightly pegged to the US dollar at just under 108 rupees, according to Central Bank data, LBO reported.
     
    In the past week however a new dollar peg had started to develop around 113.87 rupees to the US dollar, and reserve losses have again started to pick up, dealers told LBO.
     
    According to LBO, excessive sterilized intervention of a dollar peg usually snowballs into a severe currency crisis, a process which some monetary economists call 'amplification.'
     
    According to official data end-November foreign reserves were 2,029 million dollars.
    Since the end of November to January 16 the central bank's holding of Treasury bills had increased from 92.8 billion rupees to 151.0 billion rupees or 510 million dollars at an average exchange rate of 113.80 rupees.
     
    The monetary base of the country (reserve money) was at 259 billion last week from 253 billion rupees at the end of November indicating an increase of around 50 million US dollars over the same period.
     
    The increase in the central bank Treasury bill holdings, less the increase in the monetary base indicates an approximate level of sterilization of foreign reserve losses and appropriations, reported LBO.
     
    At the 2,029 million dollars level at end-November, the Central Bank said foreign reserves were enough to cover 1.7 months of imports, reported LBO.
  • Sri Lanka denies FX crisis, banks on 'patriotic Diaspora'
    Sri Lanka’s foreign exchange reserves have fallen to little more than enough for six weeks of imports. And Japan, traditionally the island’s biggest donor, is cutting aid globally.
     
    But while local economists say the situation is critical government will inevitably have devalue the rupee by 20% this year or accept a conditions-laced bailout package from the IMF, the Central Bank is adamant neither is necessary, the Sunday Times reported.
     
    Instead, the government is to launch a campaign on February 4, Independence Day, to attract Sinhalese expatriates to invest in Sri Lankan treasury bills and bonds.
     
    The Sunday Times quoted a top Colombo economist as saying foreign reserves of around 1.5 months worth of imports was precarious and immediate solutions needed to be found.
     
    “Any level below two months is worrying while three months is the acceptable level,” he said, adding that even if tea prices rise and oil prices continue at low levels, petrol bills have to be paid (at least $2 billion a year) while the CB will be compelled to eat into the depleted foreign resources to defend the rupee in the money markets.
     
    Another economist said Japan, Sri Lanka’s largest donor, was cutting aid globally.
     
    Sri Lanka’s overall balance-of-payments was negative, which the CB was hiding from the public by not disclosing the (correct) figure, according to Dr Muttukrishna Sarvananthan, Principal Researcher of the Point Pedro Institute of Development and currently Fulbright Visiting Research Scholar in the US.
     
    He however feels a depreciation of the rupee at this moment is too little too late and says approaching the IMF is the only realistic option.
     
    The last time Sri Lanka got an IMF standby credit facility was in 2001 which was required to buy costly military equipment after the Elephant Pass military camp was taken over by the LTTE, and due to high oil prices. Last week Elephant Pass was re-captured by government troops.
     
    Most economists contend that the government is left with few options – either devalue by 20%, seek an IMF package or enforce import controls similar to the 1970-77 era, the Sunday Times said.
     
    However, currency dealers told Reuters the central bank called a meeting with bank treasuries on Monday to assure them the rupee will not be devalued and to explain plans to build up reserves and meet its external borrowing needs this year.
     
    Economists and exporters say the rupee should be depreciated to about Rs 128-130 in relations to a US dollar.
     
    It is now around Rs 114, after a marginal float of the rupee some weeks back by the CB. The rupee hit an all-time low of 114.15 a dollar on Jan. 5, while it hit a life closing low of 113.85/114.00 on Friday, Reuters said.
     
    However, Nandalal Weerasinghe, chief economist at the central bank, confirming the meeting with bankers, told Reuters the Times’ report was false.
     
    "There is no necessity for central bank to devalue the currency by 20 percent and this is an erroneous, politically-motivated news report," he said.
     
    The current reserves position is similar to 1975-76 during the controlled economy of the Sirima Bandaranaike regime, when however there weren’t much imports, according to a retired World Bank economist.
     
    However, Governor Ajith Nivard Cabraal said there was no cause for alarm and thus the need for IMF support did not arise. Instead the government would turn to Sri Lankans abroad, he said.
     
    “The general assessment from our envoys is that with interest rates falling and a patriotic feeling amongst [Sinhala] people, there is a lot of interest to invest,” Mr. Cabraal told the Sunday Times.
     
    “The Tamil diaspora also wants to invest in the north and east,” he said.
     
    The campaign to raise up to $500 million this year will be launched on February 4, Independence Day, in North America, Europe, Asia and West Asia, The Sunday Times reported.
     
    Teams led by CB Deputy Governors, Asst’ Governors and other CB officials along with the six lead banks will go on roadshows across the world with the initial phase in February.
     
    The campaign will take teams to the US and Canada; Qatar & Dubai among others in West Asia; Italy, Germany, Switzerland, Norway, Netherlands and the UK in Europe; Singapore, Malaysia, Korea and Japan in Asia; and Australia and New Zealand.
  • 3,000 troops killed in three months, Army to double
    Three thousand Sri Lankan soldiers were killed fighting the Liberation Tigers in the past three months, the Sunday Island newspaper reported this week, quoting government Defence spokesman and Minister Keheliya Rambukwella.
     
    He was responding to opposition charges that 15,000 troops had been killed in the battles since October last year.
     
    Asked about opposition claims of heavy SLA casualties in the heavy fighting in the Vanni, Rambukwella told the Sunday Island, that the figure of 15,000 soldiers dead was exaggerated and not correct.
     
    "According to our estimates, around 3,000 soldiers have been killed in action since October 2008."

    Meanwhile SLA commander Lt. Gen. Sarath Fonseka wants to eventually double the size of the SLA to 300,000 soldiers to hold areas captured from the LTTE.
     
    The SLA has an official strength of 160,000.

    The Nation newspaper added that Lt. Gen. Fonseka is of the view that at least 300,000 personnel will be needed to ensure security in the areas recaptured by the SLA in the Vanni operations.

    The Sri Lanka Army already has eight divisions deployed to fight the LTTE, The Nation said, adding that another, Task Force V, which was raised as the ninth fighting division was deployed a week ago for holding operations of crucial areas already cleared and the security of A-9 Highway.

    As the SLA commander unveiled plans to expand the numbers of troops, Minister Rambukwelle said that there are only two thousand Tamil Tiger fighters left.

    Asked about the whereabouts of LTTE chief Velupillai Pirapaharan, Rambukwelle told the Sunday Island: "He is in Mullaithivu and being guarded by the 2,000 cadres that the LTTE has left. It is a matter of time before its last bastion is also overrun."

    Asked if he thought the remaining LTTE cadres could regroup and operate as an effective guerilla organization, the minister opinioned: "No, they might be able to cause some damage occasionally, but the LTTE, as an organization, has lost its effectiveness and the morale of their cadres is very low. They can no longer pose a serious threat."
  • Only 1,000 Tigers left, war almost over – Fonseka
    Sri Lanka Army (SLA) commander Lt. Gen. Sarath Fonseka on Sunday January 18 said that as there were only a thousand Tamil Tigers left and they were “boxed” into a small jungle area in Mullaitivu, the war would soon be won.
     
    The Tigers could not resist the 50,000 SLA soldiers surrounding them, he said.
     
    Lt. Gen. Fonseka, who spoke at an annual dinner he hosts for defence correspondents at his residence, joked that he expected most of them "to be out of work by this time next year." He wore a black shirt, adorned with a dragon strangling a tiger, Reuters reported.

    "It would be extremely tough for the 1000-odd LTTE cadres to take on Sri Lankan army of 50,000 personnel, deployed in areas around Mullaitheeivu," Fonseka said.

    At least 200,000 people who fled towards Mullaiththeevu from Sri Lankan Army advances in recent months, along with almost a similar number of residents are enduring relentless and indiscriminate shelling from the SLA’s heavy guns and rocket artillery and the Air Force’s bombing.

    Fonseka said the LTTE now only hold an area of 30 km (18 miles) by 15 km (9 miles). The LTTE controls 40km of coastline, the military says.

    "When the war started, I used 50 map sheets to plan it. Now I only need one sheet to plan it," he boasted.

    Lt. Gen. Fonseka suggested LTTE leader Vellupillai Pirapaharan may even have fled the island, unable to face the advancing Sri Lankan army.
  • Sri Lanka targets Diaspora, but Tamils resist
    Following the capture of Kilinochchi and Elephant Pass Sri Lankan defence establishment started psychological operations targeting the Tamil Diaspora spread across the globe, according to informed sources.
     
    But the result has been the opposite of what the Sri Lankan government hoped, with an increasing number of Tamils taking to the streets in support of the liberation struggle and those dying in the Tamil homelands.
     
    Expecting the Tamil Diaspora to be demoralised by the Sri Lankan military’s territorial gains, and in an attempt to further demoralise the Tamils living in North America, Europe and Australia, the Sri Lankan military has been portraying a bleak picture of the fortunes of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam’s (LTTE).
     
    Whilst political leaders and the military chiefs are claiming the end of LTTE and projecting total victory within weeks, the defence establishment has been leaking stories of disarray, defection and discontent within LTTE ranks, hoping these messages would alienate the Tamil Diaspora and the LTTE, say informed sources.
     
    Sri Lankan military spread rumours include LTTE leader Velupillai Puirapaharan escaping Mullaitheevu, LTTE Commanders Bhanu and Theepan defecting and LTTE Intelligence wing head Pottu Amman being imprisoned by the LTTE.
     
    However, Tamil sources say that Sri Lanka efforts have not had the anticipated impact on the Tamil Diaspora.
     
    Instead of being demoralised by false stories being propagated by Sri Lanka, Tamil communities across the globe are actively engaged in highlighting the plight of fellow Tamils in Sri Lanka.
     
    They have also stepped up shows of solidarity with the liberation struggle through protests and vigils, with younger Tamils at the forefront of organising events.
     
    In London, more than 9000 Tamils gathered in front of the Prime Minister’s residence on January 17, urging British Prime Minister Gordon Brown to exert pressure on the governments of Sri Lanka and India to call for an immediate ceasefire in Sri Lanka.
     
    ‘Stop the war!’, ‘Stop Tamil genocide!’, ‘Mahinda! Stop the war!’ and ‘We want Tamil Eelam!’ were some of the slogans shouted during the protest, along with the beat of drums.
     
    "The worsening humanitarian tragedy unfolding in Vanni where Tamil civilians are pounded with indiscriminate artillery barrage and aerial strikes killing even infants and children has energized the Tamil Youths in UK to rise in protest," protestors said.
     
    This was the third of a series of events organised by the the Tamil Youth Organization (TYO) in United Kingdom as part of an ‘Awareness Campaign’.
     
    The protesters said they hoped the campaign would grow into force that will bring British Tamils to act in unison to find a just and honourable solution to the Tamil struggle.
     
    In a similar series of events, nearly 300 Norwegian Tamils, along with Norwegian Members of Parliament and political leaders, gathered in the premises of the Norway Parliament on January 16, appealing to the Norwegian government to save Tamils in the Vanni.
     
    The demonstrators urged Norway and the International Community to immediately act to bring about a ceasefire in Sri Lanka.
     
    Separately, on January 20, around 400 Norwegian Tamils gathered in front of United States Embassy in Oslo, urging the U.S. Government to help stop the genocidal war on the Tamils in Vanni in Sri Lanka.
     
    They also urged the US to exert pressure on the Sri Lanka government to bring about an immediate cease fire. A memorandum submitted by the demonstrators was accepted by a representative of the American Embassy.
     
    ‘Bring about a ceasefire in Sri Lanka!’, ‘Urge the Lankan govt. to stop the genocide!’, ‘Help us Obama!’. ‘Work for paradigm shift in Sri Lanka!’, ‘Focus on Tamils’ plights!’, ‘Act promptly!’ and ‘End Tamils’ sufferings!’ were the slogans the participants kept shouting throughout the demonstration, which was timed to coincide with the swearing in of Barack Obama as the 44th President of the United States
     
    Meanwhile, in Sydney, the TYO there organised a token fast in support of those starving in the Vanni, and to highlight the facts of occurrences in the Vanni for the local population.
  • Army suffers casualties but continues offensive
    The Sri Lankan military continued its military offensive towards Mullaitheevu in Vanni with the support of heavy aerial and artillery fire despite suffering casualties.
     
    Following the withdrawal of Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) from Elephant Pass and then from southern parts of Jaffna peninsula including Muhamaalai, Kilaali and Naagarkovil, Sri Lankan security forces took control of the whole of A-9 and moved further east of the highway, laying siege to LTTE controlled Mullaitheevu, where over 300,000 displaced Tamils have taken refuge.
     
    With seven Sri Lankan Army (SLA) offensive formations trying to breakthrough LTTE defences in Mullaitheevu, there have been fierce clashes in the past week with heavy casualties to the SLA.
     
    35 SLA soldiers were killed and at least 60 wounded when LTTE defensive formations pushed back the SLA from Neththaliyaattup paalam Monday, January 19, according to LTTE sources.
     
    SLA suffered similar losses few days earlier when its attempt to advance into LTTE territory was thwarted by LTTE defensive forces.
     
    On Friday, January 16, 51 SLA soldiers were killed and 150 troops sustained injuries when the advance by the SLA from Tharmapuram on three fronts were repulsed by LTTE fighters in a confrontation that lasted for 14 hours from the early hours.
     
    Despite suffering losses Sri Lanka is confident that it can take control of the remaining LTTE held territory in the northeast of the island and is continuing its military offensive pouring all its military might into the offensive.
     
    According to Sri Lankan military sources, there are 50,000 troops belonging to seven military divisions and or task forces are deployed around Mullaitheevu.
     
    Meanwhile, on Monday January 19, LTTE Sea Tigers attacked a convoy of Sri Lanka Navy (SLN) off the coast of Mullaiththeevu, sinking a Super Dvora Fast Attack Craft Monday around 11:30 p.m., LTTE officials told media.

    A flotilla of Sea Tigers intercepted a convoy of SLN Dvora FACs. Fierce sea battle ensued. One Super Dvora FAC was sunk by Black Sea Tigers, according to the LTTE.
  • Peace or Perpetual War?
    The territorial advances of the Sri Lanka military this month has produced what is said to be an existential moment in the island’s sixty-year-old ethnic crisis. The end of the LTTE is confidently predicted by the Sinhala government, as ever, and various pundits who have begun to speculate on the various futures to follow. As always, we will desist from tactical military predictions. Instead, we will confidently state, once again, that Sri Lanka will not see the end of Tamil militancy until and unless Sinhala oppression is permanently checked. By this we do not mean a political solution, but the concrete impossibility of further Sinhala tyranny. The two are, as is often conveniently forgotten, not the same.
     
    To begin with, the LTTE is a product of Sinhala oppression and Tamil defiance. Just as the Palestinian Liberation Organisation (PLO) was a product of Israeli oppression and Palestinian resolve. Although the Sinhalese and the West have preferred to see the LTTE as a project unto itself, i.e. an externality to the imperfect ‘normalcy’ of Sri Lanka, basic political analysis begs the question: what dynamics, exactly, has ensured the LTTE a steady and widening stream of committed fighters, funding and political support from the Tamils for over three decades? And what can be expected of those dynamics in the hereafter?
     
    The Sinhala (and Western) fixation today with eliminating the LTTE and its leader Vellupillai Pirapaharan as a solution to the Tamil question mirrors that of Israeli (and Western) obsession of yore with eliminating the PLO and Yasser Arafat as a solution to the Palestinian question. Observers of the Middle East will recall how the end of the Palestinian struggle was confidently predicted in 1982 after the massive Israeli onslaught into Lebanon ‘boxed’ the PLO into Beirut. However, Palestinian militancy did not end because Israeli oppression did not end. Instead, the latter escalated and the former kept violent pace (it is worth reflecting, at this juncture, on why the PLO and Arafat later became dubbed ‘moderates’).
     
    Tamils have never rioted against Sinhalese. But, even before the armed conflict began, our people had been subjected - in 1956, 1958, 1977, 1981 and 1983 - to what Professor Sankaran Krishna has aptly called “annihilatory violence”. As he also argues, “these periodic explosions of violence against Tamils represent efforts to put them back in their places on grounds they have become too assertive and need to be taught a lesson.” The Sinhala military has taken over from the Sinhala mobs, but the Tamils, it seems, still refuse to learn their lesson, to accept their rightful place under the Sinhalese, that the island belongs to the people of the lion and we – and other non-Sinhalese – are invading interlopers.
     
    The Rajapske government, the other Sinhala parties and the majority of the Sinhala people (save a shrinking handful of progressives) are united in violently teaching the Tamils the lesson begun sixty years ago. Notice how not one Sinhala voice protests the daily slaughter of Tamil civilians in the north. It is not an accident that Sinhala chauvinism is undisguised today: the belief that the LTTE is (finally) being destroyed drives a misplaced confidence that the Tamils can (finally) be subordinated.
     
    The point here is that Sinhala chauvinism is the ‘tectonic plate’ underlying the island’s crisis. The mentality that resulted in ‘Sinhala Only’ in1956 is even more entrenched in the fabric of the state and polity today. The reason a federal answer was impossible then is the same reason it is impossible now, a point those preoccupied with ‘solutions’ ought to bear in mind.
     
    Yet, for the most part, the fixation has been on the LTTE and “its” demand for Tamil Eelam. Many – including even some Tamils– have suggested, especially during the reverie induced by the Norwegian-led peace process, that a federal solution is “enough”. But this logic of ‘extreme’ and ‘reasonable’ demands suggests that the Tamils are being indulgent while choosing from some kind of constitutional menu. But is that the problem in Sri Lanka, our demand for independence? What came before that to precipitate such a radical demand by our people?
     
    As for a ‘political solution’, would the Sinhala people - today baying hoarsely for more blood as scores of Tamil civilians are killed and maimed - have ever agreed to a federal solution? Even if it had been signed with one of the Sinhala parties, would it have lasted – what happened to the much-vaunted PTOMS after the tsunami? Even the anemic provisions of the Indo-Sri Lanka Accord were discarded by the Sinhalese when they thought the moment opportune. Why would things have been any different re: federalism?
     
    It is worth noting that Tamils’ faith in an ‘internal’ solution – whatever it may be – was based entirely on the international community’s integrity as its underwriters. Indeed, in 2003 US Ambassador Ashley Wills even confidently assured the Tamils in a media interview that “now that the international community is watching” they no longer have any need of the LTTE. Well, the West is certainly watching today - just as they did in Sebrenica, in Rwanda or, if the point needs need underlining, in Gaza.
     
    The history of Sri Lanka’s armed conflict has been marked regularly by Colombo’s confident predictions of ‘the end’ of Tamil militancy. Even when much detail of the battlefront was available, escaping the censors best efforts, as in President Chandrika Kumaratunga’s time of ‘War for Peace’, for example, those analysts daring or foolish enough to predict the course of history have been consistently wrong. Yet today, despite an extraordinary blackout, confident predictions abound.
     
    These flow, moreover, primarily from a ‘self-evident reality’ marked out by the Sri Lankan military-supplied binary colored map. The LTTE, SLA commander Lt. Gen. Sarath Fonseka asserts, has been ‘boxed’ into Mullaitivu. Perhaps. But the LTTE has been so cornered before, in Jaffna and in Mullaitivu. It is precisely in this situation that the true colours of the Sinhala have come out, on the one hand, and the Tamils have stood closer together, on the other. In other words, this is when the Tamil project of nation-building and liberation has moved forward.
     
    There are those who ask what the Tamils have achieved after sixty years of conflict. That is self-evident. Lest it be forgotten, this is not a war not of our choosing, but one forced upon us by the murderous ethnocracy the British left behind. Yet we have not been subdued. We have not accepted a place as second-class citizens in our own homeland or surrendered our dignity as a people. No matter what deprivations the Sinhalese and their international allies have visited on our people, no matter how they have sought to erase our national identity we have resisted. We have made defiance our hallmark.
     
    The Tamil struggle for self-determination is at a crucial moment today. This is not about the armed struggle - the will to resist embedded in the LTTE will ensure that Sinhala hegemony remains an impossibility. Rather, it is about how to the Tamil nation moves beyond the myth we have been laboring under, that of peaceful co-existence as equal with the Sinhala nation being possible. The Sinhala nation is today making its greatest effort yet to annihilate the Tamil nation, politically and physically. Having made this possible, the international community is watching and waiting. The moment has come for us to unite as a people and stand fast - until we can never be put in this situation again.
  • Gothabaya says armed attack on TV station ‘self-inflicted’
    Journalists in Sri Lanka expressed fresh fears for their safety today after the headquarters of the country’s biggest privately owned television station was destroyed in an arson attack.
     
    In the latest in a series of attacks against reporters, on Tuesday January 6, over a dozen masked gunmen stormed the premises of Maharajah Televisions Network (MTV) network located just outside the capital, Colombo and threw grenades, shot up equipment with assault rifles and set fire to the main control room.
     
    In recent times the network has been criticised for not giving enough air-time to recent government victories over the rebels, with state-run media outlets accusing it of reporting a suicide attack in Colombo on 2 January, the day the army occupied LTTE’s former administrative capital Kilinochchi, in northern Sri Lanka.
     
    A bomb was thrown at the network's offices just after news of the government victory was broadcast.

    Following the attack, Sri Lanka’s Defence Secretary, Gotabhaya Rajapakse, claimed that the television station had in fact staged the attack to win public sympathy, because the Tamil Tigers, which he said the Sirasa station, owned by Maharajah Broadcasting Corporation (MBC), was supporting, were losing the war.
     
    He said government investigations had conclusively established this. The Defence Secretary, who is also the brother of President Mahinda Rajapakse, made his comments to a state media station, The BBC Sinhala service reported Friday, January 16.

    "At this moment Sirasa is the Voice of Tigers. In Colombo Sirasa is the station that represents the LTTE. As we are winning now they have become desperate. Now the Tigers are losing the war, they are seeking public sympathy. That is why they set fire to Sirasa," Rajapakse was quoted as saying.

    Claiming a huge compensation from insurance companies was another motive of the attack, he said.

    Rajapakse also warned that he would imprison the official from MTV, who gave an interview to the CNN after the attack.
     
    Reporters sans frontiers (RSF), a Paris-based media watchdog, in a press release issued, condemning the attack on MTV said: "Violence and threats against such privately-owned media outlets and journalists trying to impartially report on the conflict must stop," the RSF release said, adding, "[t]he network is one of the country's few, and very popular, independent news sources." Several Sri Lanka Government Ministers and Government owned media have previously charged the network for being not "patriotic" enough in reporting the war between Sri Lanka military and the Liberation Tigers.

    Full text of RSF's press release follows:

    Government urged to punish violence against independent media outlets after new attack

    Reporters Without Borders strongly condemned today's pre-dawn attack by a dozen heavily-armed men that badly damaged the studios of the Maharaja Television/Broadcasting Network (MTV/MBC) in Pannipitiya, near Colombo, after charges that the network's reporting of the war between the government and Tamil insurgents was not "patriotic" enough.

    "Violence and threats against such privately-owned media outlets and journalists trying to impartially report on the conflict must stop," the worldwide press freedom organisation said. "The government must quickly find and punish those responsible for this latest attack and see the network is compensated.

    "The attack seems to be because its coverage was not 'patriotic' enough. The network is one of the country's few, and very popular, independent news sources. The incident recalls the November 2007 attack on the Leader Publication printing works, for which nobody has been punished."
  • Vanni civilians under deadly siege
    "There are no words to describe the plight of the civilians who say that they prefer to face death on the spot rather than succumbing to serious injuries or ending up in the hands of the invading Sri Lankan forces, which many of them regard as genocidal military and fear that their young men and women would be 'filtered' away, tortured or killed by it," reported a TamilNet correspondent from an outskirt of Puthukkudiyiruppu last Sunday evening amid artillery fire.
     
    The indiscriminate fire was targeting areas where there were no hostile military activities. The fighting was going on in a few corners, but the artillery barrage by the Sri Lankan forces was targeting all the areas, threatening to cause civilian carnage, completely ignored by the International Community.
     
    As nearly all of the civilians are displaced, they are unable to conduct proper funeral with rites. There are dead bodies un-attended due to artillery siege, only some of those killed are buried hurriedly before the remaining have to choose fleeing onwards from the onslaught of the indiscriminate shelling.
     
    Ambulance drivers said they spotted at least 10 dead bodies on Sunday. Six of the bodies were transported to hospital mortuary until 3:00 p.m. But, there were reports of more bodies lying in areas un-accessible by the ambulances. The casualties were reported in Va'l'luvarpuram (Redd Barna settlement), Mayilvaakanapuram (2 dead bodies recovered), Thearaavil and Maa'nikkapuram. 12th Mile Post in Visvuvamadu, Punnaineeraavi and areas close to Chu'ndikku'lam, which have come under continuous artillery barrage.
     
    At least 18 civilians were killed within the last 24 hours and 42, including many children, women and elderly, wounded in the indiscriminate artillery barrage by the SLA, according to available data from the medical sources, as reported earlier.
     
    But, many more are feared dead, wounded and trapped in areas not accessible for medical assistance.
     
    On Saturday, the premises of Punnaineeraavi school, one of the few remaining localities where Ki'linochchi hospital is functioning, came under artillery barrage. All treatment at the hospital stalled and there was no medical transport available to approach the injured. Civilians were screaming and running in all directions, confused and shocked by the indiscriminate bombardment.
     
    Medical authorities said they had repeatedly urged protection for medical installations and provided coordinates through the ICRC.
     
    Two civilians were killed and six wounded while they were fleeing from their house in Punnaineeraavi, while the hospital was under artillery barrage on Saturday. Three of the wounded, with serious injuries, had to wait for hours for medical assistance.
     
    Many of the wounded civilians were only managing with the first aid knowledge that they now possess.
     
    At Piramanthanaaru, at least two civilians were killed when their tractor, hit by artillery shelling got fire and burnt down on the spot on Saturday. Also on previous day, the shelling by the SLA killed 3 civilians who were fleeing with their belongings on Piramanthanaaru - Visuvamadu Road.
     
    "Deaths by artillery shells have become all too common."
  • Concerned over the deteriorating situation in east
    UNHCR is concerned over the deteriorating situation in Sri Lanka's east following a significant increase in the number of killings, abductions and injuries in areas of return during the last few months. In November alone, the United Nations recorded 24 civilian deaths in the Batticaloa district.
     
    We're also worried about the negative impact these security incidents may have on the sustainability of the return process.
     
    Most of the more than 200,000 people displaced during fighting between government forces and the Liberation Tamil Tigers of Eelam (LTTE) in the eastern districts of Trincomalee and Batticaloa have returned home over the past two years.
     
    UNHCR and other humanitarian agencies have been supporting the government in reintegration programmes, principally in shelter and quick impact community based livelihood programmes and through the provision of non-food relief items.
     
    But returnees in the Batticaloa area report they increasingly feel intimidated and face restrictions on their movement, which limits their ability to support themselves and their families.
     
    More than 50 families have already left their villages in some of the return areas in Batticaloa due to fear and insecurity.
     
    Others are no longer sleeping in their own homes, but gather several families in one house at night.
     
    UNHCR calls upon the Government of Sri Lanka to effectively investigate these security incidents and urges the relevant authorities to provide adequate security to all civilians living in these areas.
     
    We are also concerned over the abduction of four refugee returnees from India in the Trincomalee district.
     
    UNHCR is heartened by the fact that more than 1,500 Sri Lankan refugees returned from camps in Tamil Nadu in southern India in 2008, either spontaneously or with our facilitated voluntary return programme.
     
    We are keen to see this positive trend continue this year.
     
    UNHCR is also closely monitoring the rapidly developing situation in Sri Lanka's north, where some 250,000 people remain displaced due to the ongoing conflict.
  • “International norms have become a joke”
    The LTTE doesn't obstruct the civilians of Vanni or instruct them on what direction they have to take in fleeing the current phase of war, but people want to stay in LTTE areas for security reasons argues the head of a Vanni welfare organisation.
     
    "Allowing the war to continue, leaving Tamil civilians in the hands of the preying Sinhala army, which we dread, demonstrates only the cruelty of the few minds that determine the course of the war from outside of the island and how international norms evolved through civilisation have become a joke," said P. Kanakalingam, the president of Vanni People's Welfare Organisation, last Thursday.
     
    Describing the civilian movement as the second exodus of Eezham struggle, Mr. Kanakalingam said around 100,000 civilians were on the move.

    But, a large section of the civilians have considered that their security, even now, lies in the LTTE held areas in the eye of war, and are spontaneously moving towards that direction, he said.
     
    The movement has continued for days as Tamils from Vadamaraadchi East, Chundikkulam and Vaddakkachchi, and from Tharmapuram, where the civil administration was centred after the displacement from the Kilinochchi town, all move further into LTTE controlled territory.
     
    This is in contrast to the 1000 civilians the Sri Lankan military claims have moved into military controlled territory.

    A driver, who was returning in his vehicle to Tharmapuram from Kaiveali, said it took 10 hours to pass one kilometre.
     
    "The Establishment of the International Community by assenting to Colombo's conspiracy of sending away the U.N. Agencies and the International Non Governmental Organisations from Vanni and by remaining silent when it has to act, has become a party to be indicted in the genocide of Eezham Tamils," said Kanakalingam.

    "Which norms of liberal democracy preached by the International Community accord with not attending to expulsions of civilians, exodus and genocide?" he asks.

    People were struggling to take cover from the artillery shells that were exploding continuously. Very few volunteered to help the wounded. It was difficult to get an overview of the casualties, TamilNet reported.

    Shells exploded in refugee settlements in Puththadi, Thoddiyadi and Vinaayakar koayiladi near the hospital.
     
    The makeshift hospital at Visuvamadu Maha Viththiyaalayam (school) was struggling to function as shells were exploding at a one kilometer distance in both the directions.

    Vehicles were piled up throughout the road from Tharmapuram to Kaiveali, a suburb of Puthukkudiyiruppu.

    It takes two days and two nights to pass through the whole stretch of around 16 km road distance, locals estimated.

    Last Wednesday heavy rainfall added to the woes of the people on the move with their belongings in tractors and other vehicles.

    The following day the road was dusty as hundreds of vehicles were moving on both the directions. The rugged road caused vehicle breakdowns, which added to the misery.

    There were no government officials from the district or divisional secretariats to help the civilians. Most of them had gone to Vavuniya, Tamil Net reported, adding that it was not known whether they had been instructed by the government to do so.

    The TRO and civil personnel of the Tamileelam Administrative Service were engaged in helping the civilians at some locations, where the volunteers were seen providing cooked food.

    Civilians were seen in all the jungles areas from Thearaavil towards Kaiveali and on both sides of the road.
     
    Many complained that they had no cloths to change after the rain and that they had no meal for more than 60 hours. They were living under the trees with their belongings.

    "These are IDPs in Vanni. They wish to remain in Vanni in an area without Sri Lankan military and its bombardment," said the president of the Vanni welfare organisation.
     
    Kanakalingam argues that it is unfair of the International Community to refer to them as IDPs of Sri Lanka. Such a reference, in his argument, technically implies that they could be displaced further to any part of the island.

    "We should be treated as IDPs of Tamil territories resisting capture from the Colombo government," he argues.

    Only a few thousands of civilians, mostly trapped in the peninsular part captured from the LTTE, were taken by the SLA.
     
    To discourage civilians of the peninsula moving towards the LTTE held areas in Vanni, the Sri Lankan forces attacked them while crossing the land bridge by artillery and aerial bombardment. At least 40 civilians were wounded in these attacks, press reports said.
     
    The whereabouts and the fate of nearly 200 civilians reportedly captured by the Sri Lanka Navy in the seas off Vadmaraadchi East, are still not known.

    "Look at the plight of the civilians who live in Sri Lanka Army occupied Jaffna, where more than 800 have been reportedly killed within the last 3 years, another 800 disappeared and more than 250 languishing in prisons after seeking humanitarian protection with the Human Rights Commission," said Kanakalingam.

    "We are also reminded of hundreds of those who were killed and buried in Chemmani in Jaffna after the Sri Lankan occupation of Jaffna in 1995," he says.
  • Civilians fleeing fighting have no safe passage: ICRC
    Tens of thousands of people, on the run because of fighting between Sri Lankan government troops and the LTTE, have no safe passage, the Red Cross said Friday.
     
    Aid workers and diplomats have expressed growing concern over the fate of the civilians trapped in LTTE-controlled territory in the northeast after months of fighting, especially with increasing reports of civilian casualties.
     
    The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said it was "extremely concerned" that the warring parties had not agreed on a safe route for civilians since January 9.
     
    "For the last five days for example, there has been no aid that has reached this population at all because of the fighting," Paul Castella, the ICRC's head of delegation, told Al Jazeera.
     
    "And its not just about aid or assistance, but also about healthcare for the sick and the wounded," Castella said. "As you know, a number of hospitals had to be evacuated because of the moving frontline."
     
    "This has put at risk the lives of patients who cannot receive suitable treatment on the spot and therefore need to be transferred to Vavuniya Hospital, in government-controlled territory," the ICRC said in a statement.
     
    It did not say what type of treatment the patients needed and if they had been hurt in the fighting.
     
    The ICRC said there had been a "massive displacement" of civilians - many of them having already been forced to move numerous times - who were increasingly seeking safety away from the war zone.
     
    "Repeated displacements, often involving the loss of their personal belongings, have taken a toll," Castella was quoted by AFP as saying.
     
    Castella said fighting had prevented relief supplies from reaching the refugees.
     
    "Tens of thousands of displaced civilians are concentrated in an area so small that there are serious concerns for their physical safety and living conditions, in particular in terms of hygiene," ICRC said.
     
    "Families heading westward in search of safety are encountering other families moving eastward with the same aim," Castella said.
     
    The ICRC is among the few international relief agencies allowed to operate in LTTE-held areas. The Sri Lankan government ordered most of the others out, citing security concerns.
     
    Aid groups say about 230,000 people are trapped in an area of no more than 330 square km (127 square miles), and that they are under increasing attack from air strikes and shelling.
     
    Foreign journalists are prevented from entering the conflict zone, but Al Jazeera said it had exclusive pictures showing civilians fleeing the fighting as buildings burn and craters from heavy shelling pockmark the earth.
     
    "We lost everything, our property and all," one fleeing civilian told Al Jazeera. "It was the same at the last place we were staying, we lost everything there too."
     
    "We don't have any property now, we have lost everything. We are now worse than before, we don't have anything to eat."
     
    Aid agencies say at least 30 people are being either killed or wounded daily in the violence, and getting food and emergency medical supplies to the area is also becoming impossible.
     
    But the Sri Lankan military denies shelling civilians. President Mahinda Rajapaksa has said he had ordered the army to avoid all civilian casualties - even if it means slowing down the offensive.
     
    The Sri Lankan government and rights groups have accused the LTTE of forcing Tamil civilians to stay in the war zone to be conscripts or labourers. The LTTE denies that and even the military admits that in the past civilians have largely ignored government appeals for them to cross into military-held areas.
     
    Selvamalar Ayadurai, who runs an aid organisation helping civilians in Sri Lanka's north, says the term genocide may be justified.
     
    "They use the term genocide - it may be right because the definition for genocide is a systematic and planned destruction of a social, racial or political group. So this is the destruction of a racial group, which are the Tamils of northern Sri Lanka," she told Al Jazeera.
  • Vanni humanitarian tragedy getting deadlier
    Indiscriminate fire by the Sri Lanka Army from all corners of a shrinking territory already overcrowded with civilians has worsened the humanitarian disaster unfolding in the Vanni.
     
    Deaths and injuries to civilians fleeing the Sri Lankan military onslaught are daily occurrences, while hospitals to treat the injured are also coming under attack.
     
    The civilians are trapped in territory centering on Puthukkudiyiruppu town, its suburbs and adjoining jungles in the Mullaiththeevu district. This is the same area that the Sri Lankan military is targeting with its shelling, air strikes and multi-barrel rockets.
     
    There are deaths and injuries caused to the civilians fleeing the onslaught of the SLA.
     
    Medical authorities have said the situation was beyond control and that hospitals have come under attack.
     
    Ambulances are also not operating as access route from Vadamaraadchi East have been cut off by the SLA, while the Mullaiththeevu Puthukkudiyiruppu land route has also been blocked by the indiscriminate mortar attacks.
     
    The entire area with civilians has come under artillery range. Gunfire was heard in all the directions.
     
    Unless the shelling is stopped, every shell being fired into the overcrowded area would cause civilian casualties, local reports said.
     
    The access route for civilians to cross over into Vanni mainland from Vadamaraadchi East has been blocked by the SLA, according to initial reports.
     
    Medical personnel at the hospital in Visuvamadu said the situation was pathetic as SLA-fired shells were exploding in the close vicinity.
     
    The hospital at Tharmapuram has been displaced and the streets were full of vehicles with displaced civilians trying to move further away from the attacks.
     
    The adjoining areas of makeshift hospitals in Visuvamadu and Puthukkudiyiruppu hospital have also come under artillery fire by the SLA, which is driving civilians away from Tharmapuram and Vaddakkachchi by intensifying bombardment.
     
    Meanwhile, hospital authorities in an urgent appeal issued Tuesday afternoon have urged the ICRC to at least take efforts to safeguard the hospital premises from the Sri Lankan shelling.
     
    28 civilians have been killed from within the 13 days from 01 January and 185 wounded. Blood was not available at Puthukkudiyiruppu and makeshift hospitals, TamilNet reported.
     
    As hospitals were displacing to relatively safer areas, there are more wounded from all corners being rushed to the makeshift hospitals functioning in schools and under trees.
     
    There are reports of civilian deaths and casualties in Visuvamadu town being vacated by the civilians. Multi-Barrel Rocket Launcher (MBRL) attacks targeted Athisaya Vinayakar temple area in Visuvamadu, causing panic among the fleeing civilians.
     
    Detailed reporting and verification of casualties have become difficult under the prevailing circumstances.
     
    If Tamil Nadu fails to exert pressure on New Delhi to stop the Sri Lankan offensive in Vanni, there will be no hope left for civilians who fear being subjugated by the Sri Lankan military, say displaced peoples representatives in Vanni.
     
    There have been no reports of fighting in densely populated areas. However, the SLA has been continuing artillery attacks and gunfire.
     
    There have also been reports of civilians moving towards Vadamaraadchi East, recently occupied by the Sri Lanka Army.
Subscribe to Diaspora