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  • Tamil media said harassed

    A five-member International Mission on Press Freedom visited Colombo from October 9 to 11 at the invitation of leading media institutions and organizations in the country.

     

    Tamil media persons and Tamil media institutions in Sri Lanka have been subjected to intimidation and harassment said an International Press Delegation in its press briefing at the conclusion of the International Mission's three-day visit to Colombo.

     

    The delegation said at the press briefing that it is the utmost duty of the government to safeguard the media institutions and media personnel.

     

    Press freedom in the North East has been seriously affected, said the delegation.

     

    The government has agreed to hold independent inquiry into the killings of journalists with the support of the international community, the delegation said.

     

    Sunanda Desapirya of the Free Media Movement (FMM), A. Nixon, Joint Secretary of the Sri Lanka Tamil Media Alliance (SLTMA) and M. Mussamil, Secretary of the Sri Lanka Muslim Media Forum, thanked the international press delegation for visiting Sri Lanka in support of local journalists.

     

    The Press Freedom and Freedom of Expression Advocacy Mission to Sri Lanka comprised delegates from the International Media Support (IMS), International Press Institute(IPI), International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), United Nationals Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and the International News Safety Institute (INSI).

     

    The international mission sought to address threats and murders of journalists, censorship, and possible legal reforms.

     

    At a meeting held on October 10 at the Galle Face Hotel in Colombo, Mr. R. Bharathy, the secretary of the Federation of Tamil Media Associations, and joint secretary, Mr. Nixon, explained the difficulties faced by the Tamil media in Sri Lanka.

     

    It was pointed out that four journalists have been gunned down within the past six years by SLA Troops and the paramilitary groups. Citing the case of BBC reporter Mr. M. Nirmalarajan, killed in Jaffna on Oct 25, 2000, the delegation was told that though clues for the killing were discovered the government not only failed to conduct proper inquiries but helped the assassins flee Sri Lanka.

     

    The meeting was also told of internationally acclaimed investigative journalist Sivaram (Taraki), who was assassinated on Apr 28, 2005, near the parliament in the country’s capital, in a High Security Zone, and though the culprits were arrested, no enquiries have yet been held.

     

    The delegation was also told of the several incidents in Colombo in the recent past where Tamil media personnel have been selectively targeted.

     

    Detailing the state of affairs in Colombo, the speakers said that paramilitaries collaborating with SLA personnel have effectively prevented the sale of the two newspapers in the East for the past three months.

     

    Referring to the state of affairs in East, the delegation learnt that consequent to the killing of Mr. G. Nadesan, the reporters are afraid to work in those areas and all six senior reporters have sought refuge in foreign countries.

     

    Sunantha Deshapiriya, summing up the situation stated that paramilitary groups with assistance of the government have registered themselves as political parties and are indulging in indiscriminate killings in North and East with the help of SLA personnel and reporters are fearful of working in these areas.

     

    Mr. Deshapiriya also mentioned the case of Sinhala journalist Mr. Lakmal Sampath, who was allegedly killed by a Lieutenant in the Sri Lankan Army on whom no action was taken.

    The IFJ is organizing another tour between October 23 and 25, with the goal of bringing more attention to journalists’ conditions in Sri Lanka and promoting media independence and safety.

     

    The group will meet with senior colleagues as well as government and military officials, the IFJ said. The visit also includes a roundtable discussion among Sri Lankan and other South Asian editors. The topic: the challenges of independent media during times of conflict.

     

     

  • Crisis amongst Vaharai displaced

    Internally displaced civilians from 23 villages from Muthur East, SLA controlled areas south of Muthur, and 20 villages from Eachilampattu, Veruhal area, have sought refuge in Vaharai area, rendering the area densely populated with 61,000 civilians.

     

    "The ICRC and UNHCR are only allowed to enter the region twice, on Tuesdays and Fridays and their officials face lot of restrictions to transport supplies and shelters to the civilians," Tamil National Alliance MP Thurairatnasingham said.

     

    "Sri Lankan forces have continued to impose a severe blockade against the population."

     

    Thousands of civilians, most of them recently displaced from Trincomalee, were struggling to flee to safer areas. Civilian casualty figures are yet to be reported. "An inhumane war has been thrust upon 61,000 civilians," says the Trincomalee District parliamentarian.

     

    The humanitarian situation was also worsened as the funds of Tamil Rehabilitation Organisation, the only local NGO to assist the civilians on the spot, were frozen by the Government, he adds.

     

    "It is an inhumane war, thrust upon Vaharai IDPs" said the MP who recently highlighted the plight of IDPs in the Sri Lankan assembly.

  • LTTE defeats SLA push into Vaharai

    The LTTE claimed last Saturday (October 7) that it had blunted a Sri Lankan offensive in Vaharai, on the border between Trincomalee and Batticaloa districts in Eastern Sri Lanka.

     

    The Liberation Tigers claimed to have "boxed" an area of 10 square kilometers and repulsed the three-pronged Sri Lanka Army (SLA) offensive that was supported by heavy artillery shelling, Sri Lanka Air Force (SLAF) bombardment and rocket fire from the Sri Lanka Navy (SLN) gunboats.

     

    The offensive was launched from Kajuwatte SLA camp, south of Vaharai towards Panichchankerni, from Sinhapura SLA camp 3 km inside the LTTE territory in Kattumurivu and the Sri Lanka Navy attempted to land troops in Panichchankerni, the LTTE said.

     

    The LTTE said 400 soldiers and an 80-strong force of paramilitary cadres of the Karuna Group were involved in the attack.

     

    The Military Spokesman of the LTTE, Rasaiah Ilanthirayan said that the Sri Lankan troops had penetrated 1.5 km into LTTE-held territory. But other reports said that SLA troops had gone 5 kms in.

     

    The Tigers accused Colombo of triggering the latest fighting – a charge rejected by the government – and said the new violence represented a major setback to reviving peace talks.

     

    "This is serious blow to the peace process. We have complained to the Norwegians," LTTE spokesman Rasiah Ilanthiriyan said, referring to Norway's role as peacebrokers in the conflict.

     

    "The large-scale offensive comes at a time when the co-chairs have called on the parties to halt all violence and come for unconditional direct talks and the LTTE has responded positively to that call," the Tigers said.

     

    The LTTE said they had lodged formal protests with Norway and Nordic truce monitors over the military action, which they blamed on government forces.

     

    The truce monitors condemned the push by the army into LTTE territory. Thorfinnur Omarsson, spokesman of the Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission, said: "It is totally unacceptable if the military penetrate Tiger territory. That is an offensive right after agreeing to talks."

     

    The SLA described its actions in the island's east as "defensive" and said they were intended to "neutralise artillery and mortar fire".

     

    "The Tigers fired artillery and mortars at our forward defence lines, and the military wants to neutralise them and push them back [to the east]," a military source told Reuters on condition of anonymity. "This is a defensive measure."

     

    The government claimed the aerial attack was to prevent the Tigers moving artillery guns. Tamil Tiger fighters are “highly mobile” in the area and are trying to move armaments after government forces captured the town of Sampoor last month, the Media Center for National Security said on its website.

     

    The defence ministry insisted the Tigers provoked the violence and that troops were only defending themselves. "In spite of the peace initiatives, security forces are compelled to repulse the continuous provocative attacks of the Tigers," the ministry said. "Security forces are experiencing provocative actions from the Tigers despite the assurances given by them few days ago (to enter talks)," the ministry said.

     

    The military, which claimed to have recovered 22 bodies of Tiger guerrillas on Friday, revised down the number to 12, but said security forces had seen more behind LTTE lines.

     

    "Twelve bodies of Tiger terrorists shot down when they attempted to infiltrate the forward defence lines were handed over to the Valachchenai hospital," the defence ministry said in a statement. "Troops have observed 40 to 45 bodies of Tiger terrorists laying ahead (of) the defence lines," it added.

     

    The Liberation Tigers denied the SLA claim that 12 dead bodies of Tigers were captured by the Sri Lankan forces. They claimed 11 cadres were killed in action.

     

    The military statement said two soldiers were killed and eight wounded. But hospital officials said about 50 combatants wounded on Friday were brought in for treatment. At least 6 seriously wounded were airlifted to Colombo for further treatment.

     

    The Tigers said they had recovered the bodies of 13 government soldiers and that another soldier was captured. They claimed more than 30 soldiers had been killed in the fighting.

     

    A SLA Major who led the crack forces and paramilitaries into Tiger territory, identified as Major W. S. A. Wijetunge, was among the dead. Nine bodies of Sri Lankan soldiers were dug up, in addition to the 2 bodies recovered later, and handed over to the ICRC by the Tigers. Earlier, Sri Lanka had declined to receive the bodies.

     

    The slain SLA Major was responsible for military activities in areas Punanai, Valaichenai and north of Valaichenai, according to Sri Lankan military officials in Batticaloa.

     

    The dead soldiers were identified as S. P. Fernando, D. M. Muthubanda, T.M.C. Pushpakumara, C.J.M Ariyaratne, K. Premachandra, R.M.K. Ratnayake, L.G. Bandaranaike, S.M. Silva and E.D.Gunawardene.

     

    Although Colombo accepted the dead bodies of the Sri Lankan armed forces through the ICRC, they declined to accept the bodies of the 6 paramilitary cadres killed in action.

     

    Two civilians were killed, one in Panichchankerni and another in Vaharai, press reports said. Seven civilians were also wounded.

     

    Military officials said the navy sank two boats of the rebels' naval Sea Tiger wing in waters off Batticaloa, while the air force bombed newly-built rebel bunkers south of Trincomalee harbour.

     

    They said many Tiger casualties were lying near the forward defence line that separates rebel from government territory in Batticaloa. Military officers have said they are keen to inflict as many casualties as possible before any talks.

     

    The LTTE claimed the Sea Tigers defeated an SLN attempt to land troops in Panichchankerni and that one SLN boat sustained damages in the counter-attack.

     

    "Two tractors full of SLA soldiers were killed in our counter-attack," he said. "Sri Lanka Air Force Kfir jets bombed our area in 4 sorties. Heavy artillery shelling was launched from Valiachenai Paper Factory SLA camp."

     

    The Tiger operation was conducted under the supervision of Special Commander Col. Sornam. Vehicles used by the military, two 81 mm mortars with more than 100 shells, one 60 mm mortar with shells, 10 Rocket Propelled Grenade Launchers, PK LMGs, AK LMGs, AK-47 rifles, and a quantity of ammunitions that included landmine-proof shoes left behind the retreating Sri Lankan forces were displayed by the Tigers in Vaharai.

  • Sri Lanka to double defence spending

    Sri Lanka's government plans to sharply raise its state spending in 2007 from levels it budgeted for this year, including a rise in defence spending amid renewed civil war.

     

    Defence spending will rise 100 percent next year to 139.6 billion rupees from 69.5 billion budgeted for 2006, the appropriation bill seen by Reuters ahead of its presentation to parliament showed.

     

    Sri Lanka will raise overall spending to 804.6 billion rupees ($7.7 billion) in 2007 from that budgeted for 2006, a government appropriation bill presented to parliament showed on Thursday.

     

    Officials have included police spending with the armed forces, and say no direct defence spending comparison can be made.

     

    "We have included police. All security-related and all defence-related expenditures are there," said R.A. Jayatissa, Deputy Secretary to the Treasury. "This reflects a large increase in salaries."

     

    "It looks as though they might be planning to upgrade their defence hardware, which means they will have to raise foreign money," Dushyanth Wijayasinghe, head of research at Asia Securities in Colombo told Reuters.

    Jayatissa said the government was also comparing its 2007 forecast to 609.3 billion rupees rather than the amount budgeted for last year, citing an appropriation act – which means that overall spending would increase by 32 percent rather than 40 percent.

     

    "The expenditure of the government ... will be 804,643 million for the service of the period beginning January 1, 2007, and ending December 31, 2007," the appropriation bill said.

     

    In its appropriation bill issued in late 2005, the government forecast its overall expenditure would total 568.3 billion rupees in 2006.

     

    "They need to get public sector spending under control ... and improve tax collection. There's no other way," said Dushyanth Wijayasinghe, head of research at Asia Securities in Colombo.

     

    Analysts say much will depend on whether a new round of peace talks between the Tamil Tigers and the government due later this month will defuse weeks of the worst fighting since a 2002 truce and halt a new chapter of the island's two-decade civil war.

     

    Many investors have either cancelled or held back investments in the $23 billion economy amid a rash of violence that has killed hundreds of civilians, troops and rebel fighters this year and flared into military offensives in August.

     

    "The peace process will be key," Wijayasinghe said. "If they can take it forward, that will relieve a lot of pressure on the inflationary front and enable the corporate sector to take a longer view."

     

    Inflation rose to 11.2 percent in September as measured on a 12-month moving average, due largely to the impact of high international oil prices on a country that produces no crude of its own. The central bank has had to raise its policy rates three times so far this year in a bid to tame inflation.

     

    Some analysts, however, fear fighting between the government and Tamil Tigers could hit the economy and dent growth prospects. The central bank and government have forecast economic growth of around 7.0-7.5 percent for 2006 and 8.0 percent in 2007.

    Meanwhile, many investors have either cancelled or held back investments in Sri Lanka’s $23 billion economy amid serious clashes between the armed forces and the Liberation Tigers, especially since late July when the military launched a major onslaught against the LTTE.

    "The peace process will be key," Wijayasinghe said. "If they can take it forward, that will relieve a lot of pressure on the inflationary front and enable the corporate sector to take a longer view.”
     
    "They could do that partly from dollar bond issues and partly from long-term credit lines from (arms) suppliers," he added.
    "They need to get public sector spending under control ... and improve tax collection. There's no other way."
  • Northeast merger deemed ‘null and void’

    Sri Lanka's Supreme Court on Monday declared the merger of the northern and eastern provinces, effected in 1987 as part of the Indo-Sri Lanka Accord, "null and void and illegal."

    The move defied explicit calls by international backers of the Norwegian peace process, including India, for Sri Lanka to refrain from moves which would inflame tensions and undermine a negotiated settlement.

    Sri Lanka’s largest Tamil party has reacted angrily, disrupted the proceedings of Parliament in a protest against the Supreme Court decision.

    The Tamil MPs charged the Sri Lankan judiciary which they charged was being used to nullify any arrangement towards a peaceful resolution of the national problem.

    The Northeast merger was temporarily effected under the Accord, pending a referendum. Amid the conditions of war that have gripped the Northeast for the past two decades, the merger has been extended annually.

    The Supreme Court’s ruling Monday in favour of a petition by Sinhala nationalists is a direct attack on the Accord’s recognition of the Tamils’ historic homeland in the island’s Northeast.

    Indeed, the Court declared that material provided by the Sinhala nationalist petitioners resulted in "volumes of material to establish the divisions that existed in historic times and that the eastern province was part of the Kandyan Kingdom at the time of British conquest."

    The 1987 Indo-Sri Lanka Accord recognized the Northeast as "the historical habitat of the Tamil-speaking people of Sri Lanka" and thus deemed the Northern and Eastern Provinces to be merged and operate as one administrative unit and be administered by one elected council

    From a Tamil perspective, that merger was the single most significant achievement of the Indo-Sri Lanka Accord, which failed on many other counts, including the prevention of state-sponsored Sinhala colonization of Tamil areas.

    When earlier this year three members of the ultra-Sinhala nationalist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) filed a case demanding the merger be repealed, many Tamils saw the outcome as a foregone conclusion – the Supreme Court had already upheld other nationalist demands, including the abrogation of a much-heralded tsunami aid sharing mechanism in 2005.

    On Monday jubilant JVP supporters burst crackers outside the court building and its leaders posed before television cameras.

    Last month the Co-Chairs of the donor community backing the peace process – the United States, European Union, Japan and Norway – cautioned against the move.

    "There should be no change to the specific arrangements for the north and east which could endanger the achievement of peace," they said in a statement.

    "The legitimate interests and aspirations of all communities, including the Tamil, Muslims and Sinhala communities must be accommodated as part of a political settlement," they said.

    Separately, the Indian government, in a notable diplomatic intervention, opposed the de-merger.

    The point was made by Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh personally to Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse, Indian press reports said.

    At their meeting on the sidelines of the NAM summit in Havana, the Indian leadership had also pressed that the island's Tamil-majority Northeastern province should not be de-merged without a referendum and that such a referendum would only be possible when there was a 'conducive atmosphere,' IANS reported.

    In his reply to Mr. Singh, President Rajapakse distanced his government from the opposition to the merger now before the Sri Lankan judiciary, IANS also reported.

    But Monday this week a five-member Bench of the court, headed by Chief Justice Sarath N. Silva, gave the ruling on the JVP petition.

    The Bench said the President had no powers to effect a merger of provinces under Emergency Regulation, and only Parliament could decide on the subject.

    The court referred to the two conditions laid by the India-Sri Lanka Accord before considering merger — cessation of hostilities and laying down of arms by Tamil militant groups. It said the President went ahead with the merger, though the conditions were not met with after the LTTE violated ceasefire.

    The international community has seen the merged Northeast province as a tool to address the Tamil demand for self-autonomy for the regions they have traditionally inhabited.

    The JVP’s petitioners said the merger would result in the "Muslim and Sinhala communities being permanently subjugated to a minority." The situation would exacerbate "ethnic cleansing," they said.

     

  • Talks in doubt amid violence

    Escalating violence in Sri Lanka is casting doubts on whether the talks scheduled to take place in Geneva later this month between the hardline government of President Mahinda Rajapakse and the Liberation Tigers will go ahead.

     

    Both sides say they are prepared to go for the Norwegian-facilitated talks on October 28-29, the first since February this year.

     

    But deepening mistrust and simmering hostility fuelled by heavy bloodletting raises serious doubts about the talks, despite intense international diplomatic activity this week.

     

    The LTTE’s Chief Negotiator, Anton Balasingham, told a Sunday newspaper this week, the government seems to operate with a clandestine military agenda while pledging to pursue the peace process to placate the international community.

     

    "The Tamil people are deeply sceptical over this deceptive 'war and peace' strategy of the Rajapakse regime," he said.

     

    The proposed peace talks were further complicated Monday when Sri Lanka’s Supreme Court ordered that the Northeastern Province, which the Tamils claim as their homeland, should be split in two.

     

    The merger was a key Tamil demand accepted under a 1987 peace accord signed by India on behalf of the Tamils with Sri Lanka. But the Court backed the petition by a key ally of President Rajapakse.

     

    Global concern over Sri Lanka’s escalating violence has also mounted. The United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan has deplored it.

     

    The European Union and India Friday demanded an immediate halt to violence and an early resumption of peace talks.

     

    A joint statement issued after the India-EU summit meeting said: "Both sides are convinced that violence is not the answer to problems in Sri Lanka, and call on the parties to return to talks immediately."

     

    On Monday the US embassy in Colombo pressed the LTTE to "renounce the use of terror."

     

    "Only through the cessation of violence, a renewed commitment to peace talks, and constructive engagement by both sides can a political solution to this conflict be achieved," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said in a statement.

     

    Yasushi Akashi, the peace envoy of the island's chief financial donor, Japan, and Norway's special envoy, Jon Hanssen-Bauer, held talks with Sri Lankan officials this week while U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Richard Boucher is also due to visit for two days on Thursday.

     

    Akashi and Hanssen-Bauer are also planned to travel to the LTTE-held Vanni in the north to talk with the Tiger leadership during their visits to Sri Lanka.

     

    Two weeks ago the LTTE said it would respond positively to the international community’s calls for both sides to attend Norwegian-facilitated talks in Geneva.

     

    However, the LTTE, dropping any preconditions for the talks, said it wanted Sri Lanka to call off the military offensives which have made a mockery of the February 2002 Ceasefire Agreement (CFA) both sides say they are committed.

     

    Coming in the wake of two months of Sri Lankan military offensives, the LTTE move was widely interpreted as a sign of severe weakness.

     

    And within days of both sides agreeing to talks earlier this month, there were two Sri Lankan offensives against the LTTE, first in the eastern Batticaloa district and the second in the southern Jaffna peninsula.

     

    Both failed, the second spectacularly so, with Sri Lanka army (SLA) units who stormed LTTE positions in front of the Elephant Pass area last Wednesday being routed and suffering heavy causalties in a few hours.

     

    And on Monday a devastating bomb attack on a marshalling site for Sri Lanka Navy (SLN) personnel going on leave killed over 100 sailors and wounded 130 more.

     

    At least 130 SLA soldiers were killed and 450 wounded, some 280 seriously in six hours of heavy fighting in the Muhamalai area last Wednesday. The LTTE say they lost 22 fighters killed, although the Army, reeling from the defeat claimed 200 Tigers are estimated killed.

     

    In the wake of its debacle at Muhamalai, Sri Lanka’s military has continued bombing and shelling LTTE controlled areas, further raising tensions.

     

    Several civilian areas have been targeted. This week international ceasefire monitors have visited destroyed homes and wounded civilians in hospital as the military in Colombo claimed ‘successful’ attacks on LTTE bases.

     

    Diplomats and analysts interview by Reuters this week the latest talks, scheduled under intense international pressure, also seemed doomed even before they began due to the huge distrust between both sides.

     

    "No, there is no rethink. The President has reaffirmed that we will go ahead with the talks whatever," said Palitha Kohona, head of the government's Peace Secretariat, told Reuters Tuesday.

     

    "We will continue retaliating, taking action against them but we will go to the talks."

     

    LTTE military spokesman Rasiah Ilanthiraiyan echoed Kohona's sentiments and said the Tigers "remained committed to a negotiated settlement" to the decades-long civil war.

     

    But he warned the LTTE would not be passive in the face of Sri Lankan attacks.

     

    “When Sri Lanka Air Force bombers continue to bomb targets in Tamil homeland, far off the defence line localities where the Sri Lankan ground troops engage in frontal assaults, how could anybody expect the Tigers to refrain from targeting military installations?” he asked.

  • What the Indo-Sri Lanka Accord says about the Northeast Merger
    1.4 The Northern and the Eastern provinces have been areas of historical habitation of Sri Lankan Tamil speaking peoples, who have at all times hitherto lived together in this territory with other ethnic groups.
     
    2.1 Since the Government of Sri Lanka proposes to permit adjoining provinces to join to form one administrative unit and also by a Referendum to separate as may be permitted to the Northern and Eastern Provinces as outlined below:
     
    2.2 During the period, which shall be considered an interim period (i.e. from the date of the elections to the Provincial Council, as specified in para 2.8 to the date of the referendum as specified in para 2.3), the Northern and Eastern Provinces as now constituted, will form one administrative unit, having one elected provincial council. Such a unit will have one Governor, one Chief Minister and one Board of Ministers.
     
    2.3 There will be a Referendum on or before 31st December, 1988 to enable the people of the Eastern Province to decide whether:
     
    a)      The Eastern Province should remain linked with the Northern Province as one administrative unit, and continue to be governed together with the Northern Province as specified in para 2.2 or:
     
    b)      The eastern province should constitute a separate administrative unit having its own distinct provincial council with a separate Governor, Chief Minister and Board of Ministers. The president may, at his discretion, decide to postpone such a referendum.
     
    2.4 All persons who have been displaced due to ethnic violence or other reasons, will have the right to vote in such a referendum. Necessary conditions to enable them to return to areas from where they were displaced will be created.
     
    2.5 The Referendum, when held, will be monitored by a committee headed by the Chief Justice, a member appointed by the President, nominated by the Government of Sri Lanka, and a member appointed by the president, nominated by the representatives of the Tamil speaking people of the Eastern Province.
     
    2.6 A simple majority will be sufficient to determine the result of the Referendum.
     
    2.7 Meetings and other forms of propaganda, Permissible within the laws of the country, will be allowed before the Referendum.
  • Man questioned and misses flight for speaking Tamil

    A 32-year-old man speaking Tamil and some English about a sporting rivalry was questioned at Sea-Tac Airport and missed his flight Saturday because at least one person thought he was suspicious.

    The Port of Seattle dispatched its police officers to investigate the case, which occurred Saturday around noon, said Bob Parker, airport spokesman. The Chicago man was preparing to board an American Airlines flight to Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport.

    The man was speaking Tamil, a language largely used in India, Sri Lanka and Singapore, on his cell phone at the departure gate and on the aircraft. An off-duty airline employee heard the conversation and informed the flight crew.

    The man also apparently said something in English about a sporting rivalry at his alma mater.

    "It's a big misunderstanding," said Parker. "He had a perfectly innocent explanation that all added up."

    Parker said it is incumbent on airport officials to investigate reports of suspicious activity.

    "It's hard to triage over the phone," he said.

    But Parker had no explanation as to why a man speaking Tamil, which is spoken worldwide, would be considered suspicious. The person who contacted airport officials could give an answer to that question, he added.

    Parker said the man was cooperative and boarded a later flight to Texas. He told officials that he would not speak in a foreign language on his cell phone at an airport in the future.

  • Army-backed milita 'abducting hundreds' in Batticaloa

    A feared militia along Sri Lanka's volatile eastern coast has abducted hundreds of men and boys - some as young as 12 - and is training them for combat in camps operated with the government's consent, witnesses and officials said.

    The so-called Karuna Group takes its forced recruits to rudimentary thatched-roofed bases near army compounds where they are used as labourers or taught to use weapons, witnesses, family members and aid workers told The Associated Press in recent interviews.

    Named for its commander, who goes by the nom de guerre "Karuna," the paramilitaries have added a new factor to Sri Lanka's civil war, which began in 1983 and has savaged the nation. Their existence also complicates efforts by foreign mediators to revive peace negotiations.

    By allowing Karuna's forces to operate, the government has gained an ally against a common enemy, said Robert Karniol, Asia Pacific bureau chief for Jane's Defense Weekly.

    "The Tamil Tigers are a serious threat to the government and anything that weakens or distracts from that is advantageous to Colombo," Karniol said.

    The Karuna faction split from the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam in 2004, with Karuna saying the larger group didn't defend the interests of the country's eastern Tamils. The faction has since built up a strong military presence in the island's east.

    It is demanding a role in peace talks with the government and says there can be no solution without them.

    Hundreds of Karuna fighters are terrorizing the district of Batticaloa, the scene of a rash of abductions that began in March, residents said.

    The total number of disappearances is unclear because so many go unreported, but officials from several aid organizations estimate at least 300 people have been taken by Karuna's men this year.

    "It has definitely been hundreds and it might not be all of them," said Bjorn Kjelsaas of the Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission, established to oversee the 2002 cease-fire.

    The government, for its part, denies helping the Karuna faction.

    "We don't know about his (Karuna's) whereabouts. We have been right throughout denying that we are involved with them," the government's national security spokesman, Keheliya Rambukwella, said.

    But the two forces clearly work together, many people say. Karuna faction troops, mostly dressed in civilian clothing, work alongside police and army officials at roadblocks, according to a high-ranking local official and aid workers. Because of the violence in the area - unexplained killings happen nearly every day, as various factions battle for supremacy - only a handful of people were willing to use their names.

    A leader of the faction's political wing, E. Prethip, told The Associated Press that the group's members are "volunteers."

    He blamed the Tamil Tigers for committing atrocities in Karuna's name, and said members were armed only in self defence.

    "They carry out ambushes, loot houses, kill civilians. They kidnap the children and they say it was done by Karuna," Prethip said in his office, where children served visitors drinks.

    "Our military does not cooperate with the Sri Lankan army, but we're not enemies either," he said, sitting in front of a bookcase filled with children's books and a recent copy of "Eye Spy" intelligence magazine.

    The disappearances have become so common that almost every family around Batticaloa has lost a son, or knows someone who has, residents said. A teacher said his 10th grade high school class had almost no boys left.

    Scores of underage boys - sometimes dozens at once - have been rounded up at their homes, Hindu temples, schools or by the side of the road and spirited away in white vans, according to witnesses and confidential case files presented to Sri Lankan prosecutors and the Ministry for Human Rights and obtained by The Associated Press.

    In the most recent known case, two dozen youngsters were taken from a single village on September 24, said a human rights activist who spoke on condition of anonymity because she feared for her life.

    In a desperate attempt to protect their children, many families have sent their sons to safe houses, a local resident said.

    Some Karuna Group recruits receive wages, normally around 6,000 rupees a month, with two thirds generally going to the family. Relatives are sometimes allowed to visit the camps, often in exchange for not going to authorities, aid workers said.

    "The communities seem to know who is taking their children and they live in fear and are in need of protection," said Marcel Smits, head of the aid group Nonviolent Peaceforce Sri Lanka.

    Parents who had visited said their children were receiving military training to fight the Tigers, Smits said.

    One couple, whose names were withheld to protect them, told The Associated Press their 16-year-old son was taken by a neighbour eight months ago and has not been seen again.

    The parents are too scared to go to the police, choosing to suffer silently while protecting the three boys they still have.

    "We didn't try to go after him and don't know where he is," said the father, as his wife huddled in a corner, staring blankly into the glow of an oil lamp. "We just want to have an ordinary life."

  • India clears weapons exports to Sri Lanka

    The Indian armed forces have cleared military hardware for export to Sri Lanka, among other countries, after Colombo requested a number of items.

     

    The chief of naval staff, Admiral Arun Prakash, told The Telegraph in an interview that military items for export had been “cleared for security”.

     

    The clearance is not specifically for items requested by Sri Lanka but also covers them.

     

    “The policy so far has been not to give them (Sri Lanka) offensive weapons. But our instructions from the government are we must do everything to protect the sovereignty and integrity of Sri Lanka,” Prakash said.

     

    “We have been in dialogue with DRDO (Defence Research and Development Organisation). We can now export some types of sonars, radars, electronic warfare suites and some makes of naval guns,” he said.

     

    The navy chief limited himself to saying that some exports to Sri Lanka were cleared. He acknowledged that Colombo has requested Delhi for “a lot of things”. The politics of giving military aid to Sri Lanka is complex.

     

    “As far as we are concerned, military-to-military relations with all our neighbouring countries are very good — Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Bangladesh.... For instance, if our ships require berthing and replenishment facilities anywhere in the region — Seychelles, the Maldives, Mauritius, Sri Lanka — they are available,” he said.

     

    Delhi has been dithering over Colombo’s long list of hardware that it needs in its fight against the LTTE.

     

    Colombo has made it plain that it wants a defence cooperation agreement with Delhi. But three factors have played on Delhi’s Lanka policy before taking any step that might be interpreted as interventionist.

     

    First, Delhi’s policy has so far been not to arm neighbours with equipment that could pose a threat to India.

     

    Second, there are concerns over the political fallout from Tamil Nadu.

     

    Third, India has burnt its fingers in Sri Lanka with the peacekeeping force it sent there in 1987 and does not want those memories to be revived.

     

    But now apprehensions that Pakistan and/or China are stepping into the vacuum created by lack of Indian critical support are coming true.

     

    Sri Lanka has already sourced military hardware from Pakistan as India winked.

     

    Delhi is worryingly monitoring Islamabad’s efforts to use its arms supply to Sri Lanka as a lever to create a point of consternation in the island nation.

     

    In August, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh told MDMK chief Vaiko that India will not do anything to reinforce the Sri Lankan armed forces.

     

    But it is the Indian Navy’s job to monitor and guard against the LTTE, which has a seaborne capability.

  • Army suffers worst defeat in four years at Muhamalai

    A major military action in the battlefields of Muhamalai by the Sri Lanka Army (SLA) last Wednesday morning turned out to be its worst reversal during the four-year ceasefire.

     

    An assault on LTTE positions turned into a disaster, with at least 130 soldiers killed and around 515 injured, over 280 of them seriously. Main Battle Tanks, Armoured Personnel Carriers and other military hardware were also lost in the battle.

     

    The high intensity battle resulted in the loss of six Armoured Fighting Vehicles (AFVs)-four Czechoslovakian built T55s and two Russian built BMPs, reported The Island. Two of them are believed to have been disabled by ‘monster’ anti-tank mines. One is believed to have fallen into a ditch while two are believed to have been hit by heavy fire.

     

    Three frontline battalions, involved in the frontal assault, suffered heavy losses.

     

    “Action against the LTTE was carried out by the Army's 53 Division which has been placed in a reserve role in the Jaffna peninsula,” reported the Sunday Times’ Situation Report. “That was made up of the Air Mobile Brigade and 533 Infantry Brigade. They were supported by men of the 55 Division that has been tasked for a holding role.”

     

    The fighting lasted about five hours and the government troops stalled the advance into the LTTE-held part of the peninsula because the level of resistance was greater than they anticipated, the Defence Ministry said.

     

    "Troops are consolidating their positions after fierce gun battles that lasted for over five hours. Intermittent fighting however still rages on," it said.

     

    As in the case of other government offensives in Sri Lanka’s north and east over the past three months, the military claimed that its actions were purely defensive.

     

    The Media Centre for National Security said security forces retaliated after it came to light that there was a major LTTE build up just outside their forward defence lines (FDL) that straddle the one-time Entry-Exit point at Muhamalai.

     

    Defence Ministry spokesman Brigadier Prasad Samarasinghe said the operation was intended to neutralize a Tiger build-up near the front line on the Jaffna peninsula.

     

    "There were attempts to infiltrate our defence lines in three places and we took counter-measures," Brigadier Samarasinghe told AFP. "They had been firing artillery at our positions in the past few days and last night we noticed a build-up."

     

    The military said its ground offensive, supported by warplanes, was a "defensive act" as a result of Tamil Tiger attacks. Naval gun ships were deployed to prevent the LTTE sending reinforcements by sea to the peninsula, it said.

     

    Brigadier Samarasinghe told the media that the army had successfully driven back a massive LTTE attack and killed hundreds of its fighters. His initial death toll for government forces was just 22 with more than 110 soldiers injured.

     

    However, the Liberation Tigers accused the SLA of launching a major offensive and had complained earlier about such action.

     

    The Liberation Tigers Peace Secretariat had sent an urgent communiqué to the Head of the Sri Lankan Monitoring Mission (SLMM) on Saturday, informing him of Sri Lanka's military build-up and urging the monitors to take immediate steps to visit the Muhamalai FDL and confirm Sri Lanka's preparations for the offensive.

     

    The LTTE's Political Head told TamilNet that the LTTE is concerned about the SLMM's limited access to Muhamalai. Unhindered access is vital for a fair and neutral judgement on the SLA offensive that will likely lead to a full-scale war, Mr. S. P. Tamilselvan said.

     

    "We want to ensure that we are not blamed for the out break of war as consequence to any Sri Lankan offensive," Tamilselvan said. "We have reliable military intelligence that suggests Sri Lanka military is in full preparation to launch offensive operations into our territory," he said.

     

    The Sri Lankan military had on Sunday denied the LTTE claim. Samarasinghe denied that a major offensive was being planned. "We will retaliate only when we are attacked" he said.

     

    LTTE Military Spokesman Irasiah Ilanthirayan told media that on Wednesday, that SLA troopers who broke through LTTE FDL positions in Kilali and Muhamalai were defeated, leaving around 75 dead bodies of Sri Lankan soldiers inside the LTTE territory in Kilali. A soldier was captured alive by the Tigers, he said.

     

    Six LTTE fighters and four members of LTTE's auxilliary forces were killed in action, he said.

     

    "The SLA offensive inside the LTTE territory disregards the expectations of International Community, and brushes aside Co-Chairs's call to cease violence and engage in talks," Mr. Ilanthirayan said.

     

    The security forces denied crossing into LTTE territory, but blocked truce monitors from inspecting the area.

     

    "The battle happened in no-man's land, between our forward defence lines and theirs," said Samarasinghe. "They don't have 75 bodies."

     

    "Some people are missing -- about 25-30 troops. They must be having those bodies."

     

    However, Samarasinghe’s story quickly fell to pieces. By Thursday evening, the spokesman admitted that the bodies of 55 solders had been recovered, another 78 were missing and 283 had been wounded. The new figures tallied more closely with the LTTE’s claims to have defeated a major army offensive and killed more than 200 troops.

     

    Samarasinghe also acknowledged that the LTTE handing over the bodies of 75 soldiers via the International Committee of Red Cross (ICRC). He did not explain the obvious: why was the LTTE handing back bodies from its territory if the military had engaged in a “defensive” operation?

     

    The SLMM, which oversees the 2002 ceasefire agreement, commented to the press: “If the Tigers’ have recovered 75 dead troops, that would suggest the army had been mounting a fresh offensive inside rebel areas, despite the rebels’ warnings.”

     

    The LTTE also captured an 18-year-old soldier, Samantha Veerasingha. The ICRC said they had visited the wounded soldier, who is in a hospital.

     

    According to eyewitnesses in Mirusuvil, Thenmaradchi, 20 civilian buses were engaged in rushing SLA casualties from Muhamalai and Kilali northwards.

     

    Ambulances in Colombo made 40 trips carrying unknown number of wounded soldiers to Colombo Hospital from Ratmalana Airport to which the SLA troopers were air-lifted from the north

     

    Following the handover of 74 bodies to the ICRC, the Liberation Tigers also displayed the weapons they had captured.

     

    "We have handed over the dead. We have also recovered a large amount of weapons, including 98 semiautomatic rifles and a light anti-tank weapon," said Tiger military spokesman Rasiah Ilanthiraiyan.

     

    "This is very good. As usual, we will take these weapons and use them against the military to fight for the freedom of our homeland."

     

    SLA forces and the LTTE exchanged artillery and mortar fire on Thursday and Friday. The LTTE fired artillery and mortars across the defense line in Muhamalai overnight, wounding four soldiers, said an officer at the Media Centre for National Security, speaking on condition of anonymity in line with policy.

     

    He said there was continuing sporadic artillery fire from both sides along the defense line.

     

    For all the public propaganda, the mood in the military establishment was sombre.

     

    The AFP news agency quoted a top defence source as saying: “There is no doubt that the army suffered a bloody nose.... It was a big mistake.”

     

    Another report cited high-ranking military sources who said the army was forced to abandon its offensive after striking fierce resistance.

     

    Immediately following the attack, President Mahinda Rajapaksa set in motion a number of measures to ensure the final rites of the deceased and the urgent needs of the next of kin are provided with State assistance.

     

    The President was also to write individually to every bereaved family “appreciating the contribution made by each officer and soldier in protecting Sri Lanka’s sovereignty and territorial integrity”, reported The Island newspaper.

     

    A further indication of government concern was an AFP report indicating that President Rajapakse had directed “ministers to all the hospitals to attend to the needs of the soldiers”.

     

    Analysts speculate that the army launched this week’s failed operation in a bid to retake Elephant Pass.

     

    In 2000, the military suffered a serious blow when the LTTE seized the army’s base at Elephant Pass for the first time in the country’s protracted civil war. The base was a key strategic entry point to the peninsula and its capture allowed LTTE fighters to rapidly advance toward Jaffna town and major military bases on the north of the peninsula.

     

  • Broadcasts continue despite airstrike

    Two Sri Lanka Air Force (SLAF) jet bombers Tuesday destroyed the main broadcast tower and transmitter of the Thamileelam Radio station of the Liberation Tigers, but failed to disrupt broadcasts.

    The station, on the A9 15 km south of Kilinochchi, broadcasts the Voice of Tigers (VoT), the LTTE’s official radio, the Thamileelam Vanoli, a commercial Tamil service and a Sinhala language service, both also run by the LTTE.

    The services continued to be transmitted, although the Sri Lankan bombers hit the main 500 feet high broadcast tower and the associated building 25 times Tuesday morning at 9:30 a.m.

    An electricity generator, and two vehicles of the station were also destroyed in the attack, which wounded two employees.

    Altogether US$3 million worth of equipment was destroyed, according to officials at Thamileelam Radio.

    The Political Head of the LTTE, Mr. S.P. Thamilchelvan, who visited the wrecked station, accused the Sri Lankan government of attempting to silence expressions of Tamil opinion and condemned the attack which came despite both sides saying they are committed to negotiations in Geneva later this month.

  • Why Tamils say genocide
    Tamils’ invocation of the word ‘genocide’ with regards their treatment by the Sri Lankan state is viewed by many external observers as exaggeration. After all, they argue, even by the worst Tamil assertion, ‘only’ 90,000 of us have been killed in the conflict - and that too over several decades.
     
    But genocide need not involve the deaths of millions of people nor need these be carried out en masse. But the swift, explosive types of genocide such as Rawnda’s, while generating international attention, often do so too late.
     
    However where genocide may be discernible but slow burning, the international political community may choose to ignore it for tactical reasons, de-prioritising it precisely because it does not command the attention of international media and may thus be conveniently ignored in the interest of geopolitical objectives.
     
    The treatment of Tamils in Sri Lanka fits all the requirements of a genocide. According to the UN convention of 1948, genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group: (1) killing members of the group; (2) causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group; (3) deliberately inflicting conditions calculated to bring about its physical destruction; (4) imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; (5) forcibly transferring children of this group to another group.
     
    The term genocide was first coined by a Polish Jewish scholar Raphael Lemkin in the context of the Jewish Holocaust.
     
    But Lemkin said of the original Geneva legal definition: “generally speaking, genocide does not necessarily mean the immediate destruction of a nation, except when accomplished by mass killings of all members of a nation. It is intended rather to signify a coordinated plan of different actions aiming at the destruction of essential foundations of the life of national groups, with the aim of annihilating the groups themselves.”
     
    He went on to say:
     
    “The objectives of such a plan would be the disintegration of the political and social institutions, of culture, language, national feelings, religion, and the economic existence of national groups, and the destruction of the personal security, liberty, health, dignity, and even the lives of the individuals belonging to such groups”
     
    Lemkin’s definition, which formed the basis of the UN convention, was broad in that it included not only physical genocide but also slower, but equally deliberate acts aimed at destroying the culture and livelihood of the target group.
     
    According to the Swiss academic Julia Fribourg, the term ‘genocide’ includes the deliberate displacement of national groups from their homelands with an aim of destroying their cultural and habitational grounds.
     
    Further, as James Smith, another academic specialising in genocide, observed: “genocide is not extreme war or conflict; it is extreme exclusion. Exclusion may start with name-calling, but may end with a group of people being excluded from a society to the point where they are destroyed.”
     
    It has been often said that the problematic aspect of the legal definition of genocide is the question of intent. Intent is always difficult to prove. One way of getting around this is by the legal construct of an independent, rational observer.
     
    However in the Sri Lankan case, intent may not be so much of a problem.
     
    For many historical actions of the Sri Lankan state vis-à-vis the Tamils, it is difficult to find rationalisations other than the ‘disintegration of the political and social institutions, of culture, language, national feelings, religion, and the economic existence’ or the intent of ‘exclusion’ as defined by Smith or the intent of ‘displacement from the traditional homeland’ as defined by Fribourg.
     
    Large numbers of Tamils have been compelled to flee their traditional homeland. At least 800,000 people are internally displaced or refugees abroad. That’s out of a total population of just over three million.
     
    Whilst displacements occur in many conflicts, there is a key difference: colonisation by Sinhalese of traditional Tamil areas and the long-term incorporation of Tamil areas into sprawling military complexes.
     
    Sinhala colonisation of Tamil areas has been actively, even aggressively, sponsored by the Sri Lankan state from as early as the sixties. It has proceeded most forcefully during the decades of conflict, with the Sinhala-dominated military paving the way for Sinhala settlers by driving Tamils out.
     
    The government has historically not only subsidised Sinhala colonisation of Tamil areas, in the seventies it even forcibly resettled Sinhala ex-convicts there as part of a ‘rehabilitation’ programme.
     
    At independence from Britain in 1948, Sinhalese formed only 3% of the population of the Trincomalee district in the contested east. They now form 30%. The Amparai district, now dominated by Sinhalese, has been hived off the Batticaloa district.
     
    Jaffna was home to a million Tamils. Now there are 450,000. Many of the rest are abroad. But up to a third of the peninsula has been incorporated into so-called High Security Zones (HSZs). That was by ten years ago.
     
    Apart from the changing demographics due to the dispersal of the Tamil people by military offensives and the shrinking of traditional Tamil areas by state sponsored colonisation, there are state actions that are detrimental to the Tamil population specifically.
     
    These include the under-investment in the Northeast over the many years before and after the start of the conflict, the paltry resources allocated since independence to education in Tamil areas (in contrast to Sinhala areas) and the discrimination against Tamils entering university.
     
    The last was achieved by ‘standardisation’ which was the practice of allocating intake to districts by quota to enable students from underdeveloped areas greater access – except Jaffna was defined as well-developed even though it had the same indicators as under-developed Sinhala areas.
     
    Many of the recent actions of the Sri Lankan state are not new measures against the Tamils but merely part of a habitual, systemic pattern.
     
    Take, for example, aspects (2) and (3) of the above UN definition: Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group and deliberately inflicting conditions calculated to bring about its physical destruction
     
    The closure of the A9 highway, the only road link that allows food and essentials to reach Tamil areas not under the control of the Sri Lankan military and the associated embargo of food and medical supplies fall within section 3.
     
    The Geneva conventions do not allow deprivation of food and medicine against a civilian population in times of war. In this instance it is deprivation of the Sinhala-dominated state against a minority population, the Tamils.
     
    That the obstruction is deliberate and intentional is demonstrable from the ruthless crackdown on international and local relief and rehabilitation NGOs. All NGO staff are required to obtain new ministry of defence permits before they can work. But over 500 are still waiting. Meanwhile, the massacre in August of 17 aid workers from Action Contre le Faim, a French NGO, has spread considerable disquiet.
     
    Amid the government embargo and blockades, international NGOs are not only the main relief actors, they are also witnesses to events in the Northeast who can appraise the international community.
     
    The denial of food extends to the recent scattering of cluster bomblets across Tamil farmland in areas not under government controlled.
     
    Meanwhile, Sri Lankan troops advancing into the Tamil Tiger areas have deployed a scorched earth policy, razing Tamil villages to the ground, preventing the return of fleeing inhabitants.
     
    That this is a systematic process may be seen by considering events of the past decades. Food and medicine have been used as weapons against the Tamils before.
     
    A strict economic embargo was an integral part of the infamous ‘war for peace’ waged from 1995-2002 by the government of President Chandrika Kumaratunga. As were bans on faming and fishing – reinforced by murderous military attacks on farmers and fishermen who ventured out.
     
    Officially, the UNP government of 2002-3 lifted the embargo and restrictions on fishing and farming following the ceasefire with the LTTE in 2002. However, even during the ceasefire, the military ignored the terms of the truce and kept the restrictions in place in many places, despite repeated protests by local communities.
     
    Mass killings of Tamils have not taken place since 1983 – when 3,000 Tamils were slaughtered by Sinhala mobs in the ‘Black July’ pogrom. The lack of mass communal violence may partly be due to fear of retaliation by the LTTE.
     
    But that is not to say being a Tamil in the Sinhala south is unproblematic. Whereas Sinhala nationalists point to the large numbers of Tamils in Colombo as a sign that ‘there is no ethnic problem’ an altogether different inference can be made.
     
    Whilst some of the Tamils in Colombo are long settled there, many others have sought safety there from the conflict zones of the Northeast. This is not to say that they are safe there, but safer than the violent Northeast.
     
    Tamils are routinely arrested and either murdered or ‘disappear’ in military custody. The numbers have been rising in recent months. Scores are being killed each week in all districts of the Northeast – Jaffna, Trincomalee, Vavunia, Mannar, and Batticaloa – and even in Colombo.
     
    Tamil journalists, academics, politicians, aid workers and rights activists have been abducted and murdered by Sri Lanka’s military with complete impunity, despite the frequent protests by local and international human rights groups and civil society organisations.
     
    This liquidation of Tamil intelligentsia is not a side-effect of the conflict but an integral part of the state’s efforts to blunt and undermine the Tamil nationalist project.
     
    The pattern is not new. One of Nazi Germany’s first priorities after the invasion of Poland was the targeting of Polish Jewish academics and intellectuals. Raphael Lemkin had good cause to know intimately the pattern of acts that build up, sometime initially unnoticed, towards genocide.
     
    Apart from the deprivations inflicted by the state, there is the exclusion from it, particularly exclusion from participation in the governance of the country. Sri Lanka’s military is 99% Sinhalese. It was so in 1983, before the armed conflict erupted, as Harvard academic Stanley Tambiah noted then.
     
    Apart from the token Tamil minister, especially the Sinhala sycophantic Lakshman Kadirgamar, or the pro-government paramilitary leader, Douglas Devananda, the control of the state is in Sinhala hands. Indeed, Sri Lanka’s two main parties are predominantly Sinhala.
     
    The Sri Lankan state bureaucracy is Sinhala-ised and even radicalised against Tamils. So is the judiciary. And these trends are not recent, the expulsion and exclusion of Tamils can be traced back to the fifties, shortly after independence.
     
    The infamous ‘Sinhala Only’ language Act of 1956 is a quintessential icon of the exclusionary ethos of the Sri Lankan state. The point of the Act was to remove Tamils from the machinery of state.
     
    A study of Sri Lankan legislation, including the present constitution, graphically demonstrates the privileging of Sinhala-Buddhism over other ethnic and religious identities.
     
    There are the longer term trends which are discernible. Then there is the scale and pattern of displacement (and resettlement/colonisation). The patterns, nature and intensity of economic embargo and military violence are there to see.
     
    Although mass killings are not a common feature of the conflict now – and may not be as long as the threat of Tamil militant retaliation exits – there is a pattern to the disappearances and killings of Tamils.
     
    All of this must be viewed in the context of Raphael Lemkin’s comment that genocide “is intended rather to signify a coordinated plan of different actions aiming at the destruction of essential foundations of the life of national groups, with the aim of annihilating the groups themselves. The objectives of such a plan would be the disintegration of the political and social institutions, of culture, language, national feelings, religion, and the economic existence.”
  • In Denial
    Sri Lanka's war continued this week, even as a clutch of international diplomats flew to the island to support Norway's peace efforts. Oslo's special envoy, Jon Hanssen-Bauer, his Japanese counter-part, Yasushi Akashi and US Assistant Secretary of State Richard Boucher are due to meet with President Mahinda Raja-pakse's government. The central question is whether the talks scheduled in Geneva for later this month will take place. Many years ago, a top official at the World Bank coined an expression to capture the stark discrepancy between Colombo's words and actions with regards to stopping the war and solving the ethnic question; that word was 'disconnect.' Today, no other word sums up the inconsistency between President Rajapakse's oft stated commitment to peace and the Sri Lankan military's sustained offensives against the LTTE over the past few months.
     
    Last Wednesday the Sri Lanka Army (SLA) suffered a debacle in the sands of southern Jaffna when a major offensive was routed by LTTE counterattacks. A few days before that, another SLA offensive in the east was also defeated by the Tigers. Both were after the LTTE has agreed to unconditional talks. Meanwhile, the indiscriminate bombardment of LTTE-held areas has continued, with all three service arms unleashing bombs and shells. The LTTE is striking back. A truck bombing this week killed 100 sailors and Galle naval base was also attacked.
     
    Press reports have suggested President Rajapakse and the military high command were unaware of the massive SLA offensive launched in Jaffna last week. The claim is laughable. No offensive, except perhaps the ill fated ‘Jayasikirui’ of the late nineties, was telegraphed more clearly beforehand. The LTTE even registered a formal protest through the Norwegians ahead of Muhamalai. But even at face value, this puerile denial of responsibility, raises a frightening possibility for the peace process: that Sri Lanka's military can arbitrarily launch a massive onslaught using all three service arms outside political control. But we all know that is not the case here. Rajapakse's administration is simply trying to distance itself from an ill-timed, unexpected and humiliating debacle.
     
    And it is not just the steadily rising violence that casts doubt on the viability of a negotiated solution. The Rajapakse administration - now implicitly supported by the main opposition UNP with whom it is negotiating a national government - is undertaking a range of measures to cement Sinhala hegemony over the island. A crucial step in this regard was the Supreme Court's ruling this week that the merger of the Northern and Eastern provinces by the 1987 Indo-Sri Lanka Accord is "null and void and illegal." Though a legal technicality is the stated reason, the main rationale is clear: a reification of the Sinhala rejection of the Tamils' claim to a homeland. That was made explicitly clear by the Court's own recourse to a disputed history of the limits of the Kandyan kingdom.
     
    We have long protested the international community's fetishisation of the mere mechanisms of talks over the need for suitable objective conditions. February’s Geneva round was meaningless, Colombo simply ignoring the agreements reached afterwards. The Oslo meeting was also a fiasco. And now, the manifest lack of goodwill on both sides and, more importantly, Colombo's unashamed pursuit of a military solution, are not seen by the international community as problematic antecedents for talks. Notably, it is the international community, not the protagonists who are seeking these talks. Colombo is hell-bent on a military solution. The LTTE is preoccupied with resisting it (the Tigers have bluntly stated that they are going despite their misgivings in deference to the demands by the international community).
     
    And by its ongoing tolerance of Colombo's military adventurism, the international community has also undermined Tamil trust in the present peace process. Even the recent international expressions of concern last week came, notably, after the SLA suffered a debacle, not in the many days of undisguised preparation for the offensive. We note that although the Co-Chairs - US, EU, Japan and Norway - and India warned against the demerger of the Northeast, there is now a ringing silence now that is has happened. The international community cannot simply argue this is the due legal process of Sri Lanka - the Tamils note the readiness with which Sri Lanka's anti-conversion bill was crushed by international intervention last year, for example. The Tamil struggle does not operate within the confines of Sri Lanka's constitution and laws for a good reason: they are Sinhala chauvinist frameworks. Which is why any solution can only emerge from outside and beyond these. But that problem is a long way off.
  • Dramatic crisis worsening day by day

    Sri Lanka faces a "dramatic and deteriorating" humanitarian crisis caused by the worst violence since the inception of a 2002 cease-fire agreement, the head of a Nordic monitoring mission said last week in interviews with Associated Press and Reuters.

     

    Although the most severe clashes have subsided since August, aerial bombings, artillery and mortar shelling, sea battles and individual shootings continue to kill combatants and civilians every day.

     

    "We see a period of the most serious violations of the CFA (cease-fire agreement) since it was created in 2002, with offensive military operations and territory shifting hands," Lars Solvberg, the new head of the Nordic-led Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission, told The Associated Press in an interview.

     

    Solvberg, who took over as the head of the mission on Sept. 1, said the organization created as a peace monitor is effectively "here now to see how massively the parties are violating this agreement."

     

    Amid daily clashes, "the most important issue right now is that we have this void - that the humanitarian situation is dramatic and is deteriorating day by day," he told AP.

     

    The monsoon season is rapidly approaching and the displaced urgently need shelter, he said, referring to tens of thousands of people who fled the strategic eastern harbor area of Trincomalee.

     

    In the northern Jaffna peninsula, where killings and abductions are reported daily, the situation is heading toward "the state of collapse," Solvberg told AP.

     

    "The situation in Jaffna is very alarming. It's a ship that is barely floating," Solvberg told Reuters also.

     

    "Most of the mechanisms of the society are about to collapse."

     

    Solvberg backed an appeal last week by UN human rights chief Louise Arbour for international action against what she called "grave breaches of international human rights and humanitarian law" in Sri Lanka.

     

    He told AP it "would be a good idea" to have UN investigators in Sri Lanka to evaluate "the human rights situation, because it is so huge."

     

    The mission has no prosecutorial powers, but has offices throughout the country documenting as many incidents as possible.

     

    Among the most flagrant atrocities are the execution-style killings of 17 Sri Lankan aid workers for Action Against Hunger last month in the eastern town of Mutur and the slaying of 10 Muslim laborers near the southeastern town Pottuvil on Sept. 17.

     
    Tamil refugees in Vaharai await relief supplies blocked by the Sri Lanka government.
    - Photo TamilNet


    With so many crimes being committed, Solvberg believes outside intervention is needed to ensure they don't go unpunished.

     

    “The government side is not doing a wholehearted approach to investigate these brutal incidents, which elsewhere in the world would be a major, major case for the authorities," Solvberg told Reuters.

     

    "The nature of the violence by all parties in this conflict is shocking. I'm disappointed to see no real sign of will to limit this violence," Solvberg told Reuters

     

    "That's a totally unacceptable situation if one should commit oneself to the CFA."

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