Sri Lanka

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  • Bitter lessons, learnt well

    The people of Jaffna this week quietly marked the tenth anniversary of the ‘Exodus’, one of the lowest points of their nation’s decades-long struggle against the Sri Lankan state. On October 30, 1995, the entire population of Jaffna town fled advancing Sri Lankan government troops to other areas held by the Liberation Tigers. This week they remembered the exhausting, panic-stricken, monsoon-soaked trek, the Sri Lankan shelling and strafing and the miserable overcrowded refuges they reached, first in Chavacachcheri and, for many, later in Kilinochchi.

    They will also remember, with bitter disappointment, the shockingly muted response of the international community to one of the most significant mass displacements of the conflict. They also recall that the crisis was not unheralded. Sri Lanka’s military had already inflicted heavy civilian casualties in the months preceding the assault on Jaffna. International humanitarian groups, including UN agencies and the ICRC were acutely aware of the massacres at Navaly and Nagerkoil as well as the many deaths elsewhere on the peninsula.

    The scale of the destruction being wreaked on the Tamil region by Sri Lanka’s newly modernized and overwhelmingly Sinhala military was certainly no secret. On the eve of the exodus, for example, The Times of London reported: “Many civilians have been killed by government shelling and bombing, which has hit residential areas of the town. There is panic among the 600,000 Tamils on the Jaffna peninsula. The greatest humanitarian crisis of the war is in the making.” Not only should this awareness have caused alarm amongst the international community, it should have invoked an effort towards alleviating, if not preventing, the impending humanitarian crisis.


    If a conviction the war is in fact winnable takes hold, there is no guarantee the international community will not simply ‘revert to type’
    Operation Riviresa in 1995 was a central plank of Colombo’s strategy for breaking the back of the Tamil liberation struggle. Advised by an array of foreign militaries, Sri Lanka massed its might for a devastating blow against Jaffna, the Tamil cultural capital – and the heart of the LTTE’s de-facto state. The intent was to compel the Tigers to concentrate their fighters in the town’s defence and then wipe them out, as the late analyst Dhameratnam Sivaram pointed out in March 1996.

    But it couldn’t have escaped Sri Lanka’s allies that the plan required the focusing of overwhelming firepower on what also happened to be largest concentration of Tamils in the island. It was almost certain that thousands, perhaps tens of thousands, of the half million people trapped in the town could perish in the impending maelstrom.

    Jaffna’s residents are no strangers to the fury of a full-blown military offensive. Exactly eight years earlier, it was the Indian military which stormed the town, killing deliberately and indiscriminately, brutality symbolized by the massacre at Jaffna hospital on October 21. The stoic silence of the international community as tens of thousands of Sinhalese troops bore down on the town thus spoke volumes, confirming that implicit international sanction had been given to Sri Lanka to bring the ethnic conflict to an end through a quick, albeit bloody, military effort.

    If commonsense didn’t suggest that a humanitarian crisis and heavy bloodshed would ensue, then certainly recent history from other ethnic conflict zones ought to have. A year earlier, the Rwandan state and the Hutu majority had turned on its Tutsi minority with devastating results. In Europe, Serbian military forces had graphically demonstrated the consequences to civilians of ethnically driven war using modern weaponry. The bloody repercussions for the residents of Sarajevo and Sebrenica would have been fresh in the memories of the international diplomatic community.

    The Sri Lankan military’s human rights record was equally abysmal, with a history of massacres and ethnic cleansing operations in the country’s eastern districts and, before that, in the south, against its own community. Whether Jaffna fell quickly or came under protracted siege, enormous suffering and bloodshed was inevitable.


    Several international governments did provide much aid – not to the refugees who fled, but to the Army-occupied town
    In an effort to stem any international criticism that might ensue, the military censored coverage of the offensive and its aftermath. But this did not prevent the news from getting out. The Times of London, no less, reported on October 31: “Tamil civilians in Jaffna are evidently terrified by the advancing of the soldiers and are looking to the Tigers to save them from what they are convinced will be a massacre.”

    That very day the town’s half million people fled across Navatkuli bridge into the Thenmaradchchi sector to the east whilst the Liberation Tigers fought desperately to keep the Sri Lankan military from reaching the narrow crossing.

    That the international community was well aware of the extent of the crisis was amply demonstrated by swift expressions of “deep concern” by the United Nations Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali who called for “humanitarian assistance on a significant scale to minimize the suffering.” Some prominent non-governmental organizations (NGOs) tried to mobilize help, albeit timidly: “Relief workers are so afraid of making the [Sri Lankan] government angry, they refuse to photograph or shoot video of the refugees suffering and smuggle the pictures out to reporters,” the Toronto Star reported.

    In any case, protests on humanitarian grounds were given short shrift by Colombo: “We do not intend to permit any outside agencies, including the UN...to carry out independent operations,” Foreign Minister Laksham Kadiragamar bluntly said. He also expressed displeasure at the comments by Mr. Boutros-Ghali, whom he accused of exaggerating the situation.

    There is no doubt that months later, after the capture of Jaffna, several international governments did provide much aid – but not to the refugees who had fled to LTTE controlled areas in southern Jaffna and the Vanni. Instead, international aid was dispatched to the Army-occupied town. The message was simple: come back to the government and get this help or stay with the Tigers and suffer. International aid was thus seen as an integral part of Sri Lanka’s counter-insurgency strategy.

    In a further effort to force hundreds of thousands of Tamils out of LTTE held areas, Sri Lanka tightened its embargo on food, medicine and other vital supplies to LTTE-held regions. The international community, including the INGOs were, implicated in this movement-inducing strategy. They pushed aid into government-controlled parts of the Northeast whilst withholding it – citing official restrictions, of course – from LTTE-controlled areas.

    In the meantime another predictable outcome was underway in Jaffna. Abductions, disappearances, torture, extra-judicial killings and rape were increasingly being reported from the Army’s ‘liberated’ zones. Any seasoned observer of Sri Lanka’s conflicts (i.e. in the north and in the south), as many members of the international community in fact were, would have anticipated this. But Sri Lanka’s ‘security’ was, as ever, prioritized over humanitarian principles.

    The indifference of leading members of the international community, whom barely months earlier had condemned similar assaults on towns in the former-Yugoslavia, was a wake up call to the Tamils both in Northeastern Sri Lanka and the Diaspora.

    But there was more to come. As the war continued in the subsequent years, hundreds of thousands remained displaced. Whilst the state imposed a famine on the Northeast, it received over US$ 11 billion of financial assistance from the United States and various international donors, including the World Bank. INGOs carried on with their developmental work in the south and Army-controlled parts of the north. President Chandrika Kumaratunga’s so-called ‘War for Peace’ received the full sanction of the international community.

    The substantial financial, military and political backing Sri Lanka received from the international community during some of its most repressive years was a clear message that the strategic interests of international actors in the region had taken precedence over the welfare of the Tamil people. The common objective, it was clear, was to wipe out the Tamil challenge to the state once and for all, whatever it took.

    But the ‘War for Peace’ failed. Instead, the LTTE got stronger, both militarily and politically amongst the Tamils. Even casual analysis of the conflict would discern a straightforward connection between the extraordinary suffering inflicted on the Tamil people, the complicity of the international community and the growth of the LTTE.

    Matters came to a head at the turn of the century, when the LTTE struck back with a ferocious six-month campaign that drove the Sri Lankan military out of the Vanni. The battlefield reversals culminated in April 2000 with the fall of Colombo’s largest military base on the island at Elephant Pass.

    The u-turn in international policy was just as dramatic. Within two years the international community would be backing an indefinite ceasefire and peace talks between the Sri Lankan state and the LTTE. Moreover, future aid to the war-shattered state would now be conditional upon the progress of the negotiations. In the span of a decade the Sri Lankan state had suffered an ignominious demotion from impending victor in the ethnic conflict to negotiating parity with the LTTE.

    This message, too, has not been lost on the Tamils. Military strength, it appears, has greater force in international calculations than humanitarian principles. Whilst Tamil appeals to the international community – to back their self-determination goal, for example – are couched in terms of the latter, the is little doubt that it is the former which is underpinning international backing for a peace process.

    Which is why the international community’s extraordinary focus in the recent past on humanitarian standards has been received with considerable skepticism. The Tamils are also perplexed by the disparity in reaction to human rights abuses blamed on the LTTE and on the state.

    The assassination of Foreign Minister Kadirgamar in August, for example, drew a strident response from the European Union which, blaming the LTTE, refused to meet with delegations from the organizations and, moreover, threatened punitive measures against the Diaspora. Yet, from 1995 (leaving aside the period before then), amid well documented human rights abuses, Sri Lanka’s envoys continued to be readily received across the Western world. Janaka Perera, one of the more brutal Sri Lanka generals was accepted as Ambassador to Australia, despite five hundred disappearances documented by Amnesty International as having occurred under his command.

    Defendants of the Western policies towards Sri Lanka in 1995 and subsequent years would no doubt highlight the state’s sovereignty as a crucial impediment to foreign intervention. However, Colombo’s excessive reliance on foreign financial aid had rendered Sri Lanka’s sovereignty oxymoronic long ago. And the same sovereignty proved no bar when a peace process was unceremoniously imposed on Sri Lanka in 2000.

    International humanitarian norms have come to have little force in Sri Lanka’s conflict today because they have been so blatantly ignored by so many key players for such a long time. Indeed, the day-to-day dynamics of Sri Lanka’s Northeast today reinforces this. Many of those displaced by Operation Riviresa over a decade ago are amongst the three quarters of a million yet to be resettled, even after four years of ‘peace.’ As in 1995, the international community has again demonstrated that plight of the Tamils is a lower priority than Sri Lanka’s ‘security’.

    This stark inconsistency inevitably leads to the conclusion that the international community cynically wields human rights as a political stick to pursue its particular interests. This is not to say that human rights have no value. But they are demonstrably not an overriding principle even for their most vocal advocates.

    From a Tamil perspective, the implications of this are that the welfare of the people of the Northeast can but continue to depend upon the LTTE maintaining its strategic parity with the state, measured best, perhaps, by the preparedness of international defence analysts to maintain that the war is not winnable. In the event a conviction the war is in fact winnable takes hold, there is no guarantee the international community will not simply ‘revert to type’, backing Sri Lanka again to crush the LTTE.

    The international community’s conduct before, during and, for a long time, after the Jaffna exodus has significantly affected Tamil political thinking, quite separately from the LTTE’s. In order to engage Tamils in a constructive manner, the international community needs to regain credibility lost in recent times.

    Meanwhile, the logic of self-reliance from which extraordinary efforts to promote the Tamil struggle have sprung since 1995 can be traced back to this betrayal of ideals. So can Tamil prioritizing of security over international norms. Meanwhile, the international community’s continuing unevenness when it comes to defending human rights principles in Sri Lanka only serves to reinforce the sense of their fragility.
  • Acrimony as troops block protesters’ access
    Whilst the Tamil resurgence rally in Trincomalee passed off peacefully weekend before last, tensions flared around the sister event in Vavuniya last week with Sri Lankan troops stopping people trying to attend the event at the main crossing point and others returning after it.

    The event was held Thursday, with thousands of people, including academics, religious leaders and social activists, gathering in Vavuniya Urban Council grounds to reaffirm the Vavuniya Declaration, a political statement issued at the first of the Resurgence rallies in the Northeast held also in Vavuniya on July 27.

    Last Friday’s rally is the last but one of a series of ‘Tamil Resurgance’ rallies which have been held since then in every district of the Northeast bar one – and the concluding event is to be held in Amparai on November 12.

    Tensions had already risen in Vavuniya last Wednesday after grenades were tossed into the building at which the rally’s organizing committee was meeting. No was injured and the two attackers rode off on a motorbike. Vavuniya is a Sri Lanka Army garrison town.

    Tensions escalated Thursday when a large group of Tamil youths on their way to the event on bicycles carrying a large poster of Tamil Tiger leader Vellupilai Pirabakaran were blocked at the Thandikulam check point.

    There is no official bar on either organizing the event or attending it, and tempers quickly flared. With the soldiers’ actions breaching Article 2 of the February 2002 Ceasefire agreement which prohibits harassment of civilians traveling through checkpoints, international truce monitors were brought into the fray.

    Unable to proceed, the youths slept in the demilitarized zone – as did many others traveling to the rally from LTTE-controlled parts of the Vavuniya district -and following morning blockaded the A9 highway with their bicycles in protest.

    Meanwhile, many participants from the Convention were forced to stay in Vavuniya overnight after the rally when the military closed the border two hours before the time agreed with organizers.

    Tension heightened again Friday as these participants returning to the Vanni were again denied access by Army officials at the checkpoint.

    Additional Sri Lankan security forces and police personnel were brought in to maintain control the crowd. Earlier soldiers and policemen were deployed in large numbers in the town and civilians were subjected to severe checking.

    The situation grew hostile after the police used tear gas on the crowd, and protestors responded by smashing up a police vehicle - prompting the arrest of two University students.

    To defuse the situation, Tamil National Alliance Parliamentarians, Sri Lanka military commanders, police officials, an official of Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission and officers from the International Red Cross (ICRC) met in Vavuniya.

    After this meeting, the SLMM official, ICRC officers and TNA Parliamentarians met the LTTE political leader of Vavuniya and the district’s Students Federation Organizer to consult with them.

    The SLA agreed to allow those crossing into Vanni first, but refused to allow those traveling into Vavaniya to do so carrying Mr. Pirapaharan’s photograph.

    Compiled from TamilNet reports.
  • Slaughter in the wards
    October has bitter memories for Jaffna’s people. Ten years ago they fled their city as a Sri Lanka Army offensive neared. Eight years earlier, Jaffna had been the target of another military onslaught, that time by the Indian Army.

    Last month a remembrance ceremony was held in the town’s teaching hospital to mark the 18th anniversary of the slaughter by advancing Indian troops of several doctors, nurses and patients in its wards and officers eighteen years ago.

    As Deepavali was celebrated by Tamils around the globe this week, many recalled that the joyful occasion fell on a bloody October 21 in 1987.

    At the memorial service last month to honor those slain in the massacre, several surviving doctors recalled the atrocities carried out troops of the Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF) when it overran Jaffna.

    The massacre occurred amid a full-scale IPKF assault on Jaffna town intended to disarm and destroy the Tamil Tigers as a fighting force.

    Having fought their way past bitter resistance by the Liberation Tigers, Indian troops reached the hospital treating civilians wounded earlier by their heavy weapons.

    The troops indiscriminately opened fire in the wards of the hospital, mowing down doctors, nurses and labourers alike. Patients were shot in their beds. 21 people were killed outright and 55 seriously wounded.

    The pitiless and wanton slaughter has remained at the forefront of Tamil memories of India’s role in Sri Lanka, having become emblematic of the Indian Army’s conduct there.

    “Point blank gunfire and grenade explosions were how the Indian ‘peace-keepers’ responded to staff with raised hands as a gesture of peace and surrender,” Adele Balasingham, who was in the northern town at the time, wrote in ‘A Will to Freedom’, her account of her times with the LTTE.

    In contrast to the Sri Lanka Army’s conduct, it had been expected Indian troops would honour international humanitarian law stipulating hospitals and other civilian targets be protected in times of war.

    As such patients and staff were unconcerned at the IPKF’s approach, believing the troops would enter and, upon being presented proper identification, would move on peacefully.

    However, witness accounts described doctors such as pediatrician Dr. Sivapathasundaram attempting to surrender and being immediately gunned down.

    Some reportedly attempted, unsuccessfully, to save themselves by proclaiming their support for Indian Premier Rajiv and his pro-Tamil mother, Indira Gandhi.

    Some argue the victims’ expectations were naively unfounded and point to the IPKF’s use of heavy weaponry against the densely populated town - despite a campaign by leading citizens of Jaffna who pleaded with the Indian Embassy to cease the shelling.

    When confronted with claims of massacres and killings of civilians, the Indian government flatly denied any wrongdoing.

    “The IPKF were given strict instructions not to use tactics or weapons that could cause major casualties among the civilian population of Jaffna, who were hostages to the LTTE,” Premier Rajiv Gandhi declared 19 days after the hospital massacre.

    “The Indian Army have carried out these instructions with outstanding discipline and courage, accepting, in the process a high level of sacrifices for protecting the Tamil civilians,” he declared.

    Even the anti-LTTE University Teachers for Human Rights-Jaffna (UTHR-J), describing a climate of terror by the IPKF, said: “it left us among the dead, the debris and the crumbling structures. The smell of putrefaction clung to the fresh morning air. The terror of the army on every street corner, molestation and even rape became facts of life.”

    Covert Indian involvement began at the time of the 1983 anti-Tamil pogrom, when Delhi’s intelligence service provided training and arms to build the Tamil independence movement.

    The objective was to exploit the Tamil insurgency to pressure the Jayawardane regime in Sri Lanka into a negotiated settlement that would accommodate Indian geopolitical interests.

    The strategy was successful with both states concluding the Indo-Lanka Accord which offered limited devolution as the solution to the ethnic trouble, gave Delhi control of Trincomalee and obliged the uninvolved LTTE to disarm.

    However, both the Sinhalese and Tamils opposed the Accord and the introduction of IPKF troops into Tamil areas to ensure its implementation.

    With the LTTE refusing to settle for the terms laid out in the Indo-Lanka accord and disarm, the IPKF moved to destroy the organization, sparking a guerilla war with horrific consequences for the Tamils.

    “The Indian troops behaved as an occupation army and committed war crimes that shocked the Tamil nation, which had previously looked to India as guardian and protector” LTTE political advisor Anton Balasingham wrote in his book ‘War and Peace: Armed Struggle and Peace Efforts of Liberation Tigers.’

    Having been fought the IPKF to a stalemate on the battlefield, the Indian government was politically outmaneuvered by the LTTE, which entered into peace talks with the new Premedasa regime, which under simultaneous pressure from anti-Indian Marxist insurgents, ordered the Indian troops out of Sri Lanka.

    The Jathika Vimukthi Peruma (JVP) led a rebellion against the Sri Lankan government had used the presence of Indian troops on Sri Lankan soil as a powerful mobiliser amongst Sinhala nationalists.

    In March 1990, the last of the Indian troops withdrew from the humiliating historical experience Delhi’s intervention in Sri Lanka had become.

    After the Indian withdrawal, the LTTE released a publication titled ‘The Satanic Force’ that included eye witness statements of rape, torture and unprovoked violence that revealed the severity of the human rights abuses by the IPKF.

    On May 21, 1991 Rajiv Gandhi, now out of office, was killed by a suicide bomber whilst campaigning at Sriperumbudur, about 30 miles from Madras, the capital of the southern state of Tamil Nadu.

    India blamed the LTTE for the killing and banned the organization. The LTTE has denied involvement.
  • Violence escalates in Jaffna, Batticaloa
    A sharp upsurge this week in the violence that has plagued the Northeast for months has created widespread anxiety and confusion amongst the region’s residents who fear a breakdown in the almost four year old ceasefire.

    Numerous attacks on the Liberation Tigers, Sri Lankan security forces, and civilians have resulted in several deaths and injuries amid tensions between Tamil civilians and security forces.

    International ceasefire monitors warned again this week the February 2002 ceasefire is being undermined and called on the Sri Lankan government and the LTTE to work together to end the cycle of violence.

    The Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission (SLMM) said the number of politically-related killings in Sri Lanka this year is nearing 200.

    ‘The killings have gradually undermined the ceasefire and resulted in mistrust and a bad atmosphere between the parties,’ the SLMM said in a statement issued after the assassination in Colombo of a senior military intelligence officer.

    Whilst there have, as has become commonplace, several attacks on the LTTE ad the security forces in the restive Batticaloa district, violence has escalated in the Jaffna peninsula too. Apart from clashes between local residents and Sri Lankan troops which left one protestor dead, there have been a number of attacks on security forces in the northern peninsula.

    Three Sri Lanka Army (SLA) soldiers and two policemen were injured in 3 different grenade attacks in Jaffna Wednesday night.

    Two policemen were wounded when assailants lobbed a grenade into their post in Navanthurai, a coastal suburb of the Jaffna town at 9pm. Two soldiers were wounded in Malusanthi junction near Nelliyadi in Vadamaradchi when a grenade was thrown at their sentry point.

    Two men on a motorbike on Valvetithurai-Atchuveli Road lobbed a grenade into an army post in Atchuveli town, wounding a soldier.

    Troops blocked civilian movement in Gurunagar, another coastal suburb of Jaffna, after a grenade was lobbed at a checkpoint but did not explode.

    In the last of four grenade attacks in Jaffna last weekend, a policeman was killed and three were injured Monday when unidentified men lobbed a grenade into a police truck on the Palaly Road, north of Jaffna town. Travelers at the scene were beaten up by furious policemen and soldiers following the incident.

    A grenade lobbed into a police post located in front of the Kondavil post officeSunday night seriously wounded two policemen and a SLA soldier.

    Earlier, two men on a motorbike had followed a SLA truck in Thenmaradchy and hurled a hand grenade into the vehicle near Mirusuvil junction, wounding at least two soldiers. Their colleagues opened indiscriminate fire after the incident, but no one was injured, press reports said.

    On Saturday two men on a motorbike lobbed a grenade into the bunker of a SLA checkpoint in Jaffna town, but no casualties were reported.

    Tension surged in Jaffna last week after troops fired on residents of Puthur protesting Friday against an attempted rape by Sri Lanka Army (SLA) soldiers. A 20-year old youth was killed and several other demonstrators wounded, as troops reportedly fired 250 rounds. There have been demonstrations outside the Jaffna offices of international truce monitors as well as Army camps in the area.

    A three-wheel driver was shot in Trincomalee town last Thursday in the only recorded incidence of violence in that town last week.

    But in Batticaloa Army-backed paramilitaries staged several raids into Tamil Tiger-controlled areas, in one case using local residents as human shields as they withdrew into Army-controlled areas.

    A LTTE cadre was killed when the Tigers launched a counter attack on a raiding paramilitary party which penetrated into their controlled areas in Vaharai on Sunday.

    The LTTE said paramilitary cadres and Sri Lankan military intelligence operatives retreated with their dead and wounded behind a human shield of local residents.

    The paramilitaries in the area are operating out of the SLA’s Singapura and Mankerny bases, the LTTE said, adding another Tiger cadre had been killed a week earlier in another incursion.

    A series of grenade attacks on Sri Lankan troops and police have also claimed lives and caused injuries. Two SLA soldiers were seriously wounded when men riding in a motorbike lobbed a grenade into a sentry point 5 km east of Batticaloa town Sunday night.

    A little later, a 32-years-old mother and her 16-years-old daughter were injured when two motorbike-riding men lobbed a grenade into their house, located behind a Special Task Force (STF) camp 6 km south of Batticaloa. The motive for the attack is not clear.

    In Batticaloa town, two civilians were wounded when two motorbike-riding men lobbed a grenade in front of a shop near Batticaloa Railway station.

    Also on Sunday, three refugee children were injured in Batticaloa when SLA soldiers returned fire at gunmen who had fired at their sentry point. One soldier was wounded in the attack.

    Two gunmen riding a motorbike shot a rice mill worker on his way to work in Akkaraipattu last Saturday. The 38-year-old Sinhalese father of one who was married to a Tamil woman was residing at Kannakipuram Refugee Camp.

    In Batticaloa town itself, the Sri Lanka Army and paramilitary forces conducted a cordon and search operation herding over a thousand young men and women into common grounds and searching them.

    Masked paramilitary cadres wearing military uniforms assisted over 500 SLA personnel to round up the youth and parade them to common grounds for identification in an operation that took 10 hours, reported TamilNet.

    Twenty Tamil youths, identified by the masked-men were detained by the SLA for further questioning.

    The raid follows a similar operation in Pottuvil in the Amparai district, where masked motorbike-unit-soldiers of the SLA cordoned off and searched the town and its suburbs, holding residents at gunpoint for 4 hours Sunday evening.

    In another search operation in northern suburbs of Batticaloa town, SLA troops arrested four Tamil youths and seized two assault rifles, a pistol and grenades.

    Civilian organisations in the Northeast have complained that the return to arbitrary round-ups by the Sri Lankan armed forces on a large scale involving large number of personnel and masked paramilitary cadres, harking back to pre-ceasefire days, are causing panic among the population.

    ON a related theme, an LTTE delegation from Trincomalee met with international ceasefire monitors Monday to outline the increasing restrictions being placed on civilians by the SLA in the eastern district.

    Aside from curtailing the movement of civilians through a checkpoint and subjecting all travelers to body checks, the SLA has also begun to restrict the transporting of fuels such as kerosene and diesel, the LTTE officials told the Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission (SLMM)

    The LTTE delegation also said it had evidence to prove that SLA soldiers are attacking Tiger cadres with the assistance of paramilitary Tamil groups in the LTTE held Vaharai division in Batticaloa district.

    The increasing securitisation is not restricted to the Northeast, with reports that young Tamil men living in rented apartments in Colombo are being threatened by men in military uniforms and warned to leave Colombo immediately and return to their own towns.

    Compiled from TamilNet and local reports.
  • Monitors fret over Northeast impact on polls
    Amid a close race between the two leading contenders to be Sri Lankas’s next President, election monitors are increasingly concerned that Tamil paramilitaries in the Northeast could affect the outcome of the November 17 polls.

    Although there are thirteen candidates entered, the two leading contenders by far are main opposition leader Ranil Wickremesinghe and Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapakse.

    Although the Tamil Tigers have said they will remain neutral and detached from the elections to elect a successor to President Chandrika Kumaratunga, political analysts expect Tamil voters and other minority community voters to back Wickremesinghe, who signed a ceasefire with the LTTE and held several rounds of talks with the Tigers.

    The chief EU election monitor, John Cushnahan, says he is worried there could be trouble in eastern areas where the Karuna Group, named after the renegade LTTE commander who lead it, is operating under the aegis of the Army.

    And reporters in the garrison town of Jaffna say the paramilitary Eelam People’s Democratic Party (EPDP), which has a history of electoral fraud, is campaigning for Rajapakse, ironically the Sinhala nationalists’ candidate of choice.

    ‘What has happened in previous elections is that there was serious malpractice in a number of areas, but it wasn’t enough to affect the overall result,’ Cushnahan told Reuters.

    ‘[But] in a very close run presidential contest, it could make a very significant difference.’

    In previous years, government forces had set up checkpoints to slow the movement of voters from ethnic Tamil areas in the north and east to polling stations, Cushnahan said, adding LTTE pressure had reduced the vote for Tamil parties opposed to it.

    On November 17 there would be no polling in LTTE-held areas and government-sponsored buses will be deployed to bring voters in those areas to cast their votes at polling booths set up across the front line in Army-held areas, officials said.

    ‘I’m worried what will happen in the north and east. There’s been a lot of speculation over what Karuna will do,’ Cushnahan said referring to a former Tiger commander who defected to the Army after his rebellion against the LTTE leadership was crushed.

    Election Commissioner Dayananda Dissanayake says he will not hesitate to cancel voting in the North and East if any irregularities are reported.

    ‘If the numbers of cast votes are not tallying with the number of registered voters in specific locations in the North and East, I would definitely stop the counting of those votes in the respective polling center,’ Mr. Dissanayake said.

    Dissanayake says he will hold a re-run in affected areas two days later. Cushnahan said the EU was ready to monitor this too.

    The EU, one of Sri Lanka’s leading donors, has said that it will send 72 experts to join observers from Asia, the Commonwealth, and around 33,000 local officials in monitoring the election in the violence-prone island.

    ‘It is crucial for the peace process in Sri Lanka that forthcoming elections are seen as credible by all communities,’ EU External Relations Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner said in a statement.
  • Puthur simmers after rape protests
    Families near a Sri Lanka Army (SLA) camp in Puthur, Jaffna are fearful of returning home after weekend violence in which troops fired on villagers protesting the attempted rape of a local woman by a soldier, killing one person.

    Demonstrations continued this week as a day of mourning was observed for protestors injured during the protest demanding the removal of the SLA camp. Simmering anger at the Army’s violent reaction to the protests is mixed with fear of further violence against residents by soldiers.

    The trouble began last Friday, after over a hundred, mostly female, protesters gathered outside the SLA camp in Puthur to protest the attempted rape by at least one soldier of a local woman and to demand the attackers be brought to justice.

    As tensions rose, soldiers opened fire discharging at least 250 rounds. The Army insists it fired into the air, but several people were wounded, one fatally.

    At least six people were severely beaten by soldiers and, along with those wounded by gunfire, were delayed from receiving medical treatment.

    The Army blocked ambulances from reaching the area for over four hours. Nirojan Tharmarajah, a 20 year old, was pronounced dead when he finally arrived in hospital, succumbing to heavy internal bleeding.

    Some reports said four of the demonstrators were wounded while running away from the camp, after soldiers began shooting indiscriminately into the crowd. Details regarding three other injured are unknown since the Army has refused to let them be taken from the site.

    Residents reported soldiers using batons to beat up protestors as they fled from tear gas fired at them.

    The SLA initially denied having opened fire, but later military spokesman Brig. Nalin Witharanage said they were forced to fire in self-defense after suspected Tamil Tigers among the protesters threw six hand grenades into their camp, of which three exploded and injured one soldier.

    However, residents of the area denied any involvement by the Tamil Tigers, describing the tense climate in Jaffna due to recent killings by Army-backed paramilitaries.

    They said their protest was triggered by the attempted rape, but residents also said the tension is reflective of underlying hostility against the continuing Army occupation of the northern peninsula.

    Demonstrations continued on Monday after a day of mourning was observed outside the Sri Lankan Monitoring Mission (SLMM), the international observers overseeing the ceasefire between the Liberation Tigers and Sri Lankan security forces.

    The demonstrators, again predominantly women, called for the dismantlement of the Army base in Annamar Kovil and demanded the troops vacate the area and allow the residents to lead lives free from harassment.

    Hundreds of locals attended Sunday’s mourning service to pay respect to Tharmarajah, including several Tamil National Alliance (TNA) parliamentarians. The following day, protestors marched to the SLMM in Nallur and called attention to their fear of escalating Army violence upon returning to their homes.

    The incident which sparked the protests occurred Thursday night when three SLA soldiers in civilian clothing entered the house of four Tamil women while they were sleeping and reportedly attempted to rape a 16-year old girl.

    Upon hearing her screams, neighbors rushed in and disturbed the soldiers, who then fled to the SLA camp according to residents.

    Civilians in the area gathered around the SLA camp in Puthur to demand the soldiers are brought to justice. The situation escalated as protestors began throwing stones and the Army opened fire. According to the security forces, the protestors set fire to tires and torched an Army vehicle, prompting soldiers to use their weapons to regain control.

    ‘I dropped to the ground, placed my hands together and pleaded, ‘don’t shoot!’ But they still shot at me and one bullet struck my fingers,’ Sabapathy Nagalingam, one of the injured protesters, said.

    Residents meanwhile complained although the SLMM was informed of the escalating tension and the planned demonstration at 9 am Friday morning, SLMM members only arrived after 12 noon. Protestors claim that if the SLMM had responded without delay, the death and injuries could have been averted.

    However, the SLMM stated the violence occurred while they were present at the scene, and protestors’ allegations were misleading.

    A day of mourning was called by the Tamil National Resurgence Convention as a sign of respect to the youth who was killed. Black flags were displayed while patriotic and somber music was played throughout the peninsular.

    The situation remains tense in Jaffna. The region has grown increasingly troubled in the past weeks, with escalating levels of violence and high levels of crime that many say are being deliberately ignored by the security forces.

    Sri Lankan military and the police ‘have not taken any constructive efforts to curb the incidence of violence and killings in Jaffna’ Mr. Rohitha Priyadarsana, Jaffna Coordinator for the National Human Rights Commission stated recently.

    ‘Many civilians are forced to live in hiding because of imminent threats to their life and the failure of the security forces to take meaningful steps to curb this trend of violence.’

    Latent anxieties of sexual violence against women by security forces are based on a history of attacks which have been a persistent feature of Sri Lanka’s conflict. There are an estimated 40,000 troops in the peninsula, which has a population of half a million.

    International human rights groups, including Amnesty International, have condemned the culture of impunity that allows Army and police officials engage is sexual assaults against civilians, particularly in conflict zones, without fear of reprisal.
  • All for one and one for all
    For the past few months, people across Sri Lanka’s Northeast have been attending a series of rallies under the ‘Tamil Resurgence’ slogan. A number of smaller events – and one major event in Brussels – have taken place in Diaspora centres also. Since July, major rallies have been held in Vavuniya, Kilinochchi, Mullaithivu, Mannar, Jaffna and Trincomalee. The last district with a significant Tamil population, Amparai will hold its event this month.

    There are common themes to the rallies, outlined in the first of the present series, held in Vavuniya in July. The participants demanded that “occupying Sinhala forces must vacate Tamil land and sea areas with immediate effect” and proclaimed that “an environment must be created to enable us to decide our destiny.” They asserted: “our people are continuing to rise as a force to procure the goal of a sacred and higher life of freedom”. Participants called on the international community to recognise their “basic rights to a life of freedom with peace” on the basis of their traditional homeland, nationhood and right to self-rule.

    Inevitably, some have dismissed these mass rallies as charades organised by the Liberation Tigers. They argue that the LTTE’s hegemonic presence in the Northeast leaves no room for civil political activity that is not influenced to a great degree by the LTTE. While it is true that the LTTE has significant sway in the Northeast, it is too simplistic to just ignore expressions of civil opinion on this basis. While the LTTE was undoubtedly in the background of the Resurgence rallies, the crowds were not mere rent-a-mobs or threatened into attending. Indeed, among the organising structures were prominent civil groups, including student bodies and community organisations and their attendant networks.

    On past occasions – during the ‘Pongu Thamil’ rallies, for example – some Sinhala newspapers dismissed those participating as doing so under duress. But the sheer number of attendees brings suggestions of force into question. Furthermore, counter-coercion by Sri Lankan security forces and army-backed paramilitaries is also very real – indeed, grenade attacks on organisers and harassment by troops of civilians travelling to the rallies have occurred frequently in the past weeks.

    And the issue of coercion definitely does not apply to the Diaspora events, where expatriate Tamils also turned out in significant numbers to back calls for self-determination - the only ‘coercion’ at play here is that by the governments of the host states in which they reside, underlined most forcefully by bans on supporting the LTTE, for example.

    Given Sri Lanka’s political dynamics, where issues of Tamil self-determination or collective rights cannot be discussed without triggering a violent reaction from the Sinhala polity, for many people these gatherings are the only practical means by which to express their sentiments (apart from the elections in which they backed the pro-LTTE Tamil National Alliance). Indeed, it is not only the ‘core’ political issues but day-to-day frustrations stemming from slow resettlement, the lack of rehabilitation aid and so on, that have driven participation.

    But then there is a question as to whether the gatherings will have the desired effect?

    While the call at all the proceedings was for action by the international community, there has been complete silence in response. Either the international community is not listening or is not prepared to address the demands being made on it. The attitude is reflected in the non-Tamil press’s coverage: the first few events were ignored, and while the sheer scale and magnitude have prompted limited coverage of recent ones, it was dismissive and cynical.

    Even if the Resurgence events are being monitored by the international community, this is not say foreign governments either care or are prepared to consider the demands. The call of the first Pongu Thamil event four years ago was for the withdrawal of Sinhala troops from Tamil population centres and recognition of the Tamil right to self-determination. The same calls are still being made. Nothing has changed in the intervening years to suggest that the international community is now more willing to act.

    This inevitably leads to the suggestion that those participating in the rallies are living in a fool’s paradise. Why, as some have mockingly asked, do the Tamils continue to engage in these futile mobilisations when the reaction is uncompromisingly indifferent?

    But perhaps it is not that the Tamil people expect the international community to actually respond to their call. Perhaps the rallies can be viewed as having achieved their objective simply by being held.

    Local factors arguably drove participation at each event – be it the humanitarian needs of those on the ground, or the political constraints of those in the Diaspora. But the sense of community engendered as a result of the rally series transcends the value of each event on its own. People in Trincomalee might have been seeking resettlement and those in Brussels might have been trying to ward off punitive measures by their governments. The point is they did so as part of the wider Tamil body politic.

    The series of events taking place in every corner of the Tamil homeland and the Diaspora have contributed to the sense of a united community with one aim. Divided by geography but united by purpose. Diaspora Tamils are linked to ‘the ground’ while Tamils of the Northeast see their brethren abroad rising in support. As a result, the series as a whole has become the manifest expression of the Tamil national body. In this way, large numbers of people come to participate in their locality, in a national project.

    Both the sentiments expressed (the call for liberation of the Tamil lands) and the trappings (flags, anthems, silence, speeches) have served to reinforce the connection across the distances. It is in this process that the indifference of the international community and the non-Tamil press becomes a contributing factor. The common feeling of being isolated and ignored wherever we are protesting serves to unite us, forging even stronger ties of a distinct identity through a shared sense of alienation and neglect. The international community, both as the target of our various appeals and by impassively ignoring us, contributes to our national identity.

    This resulting reinforced sense of unity thus makes these events a success for the Tamil national struggle, irrespective of the response or otherwise of the international community. They suffice, therefore, as an expression of Tamil solidarity and a reaffirmation of intent to stand together as the only reliable support the Tamil people have known – each other. In this way, the rallies are a critical part of the Tamil nation building project.
  • India to build naval craft for Sri Lanka
    Sri Lanka is one of several countries which have approached a state-owned ship builder in India to construct naval vessels, report said this week.

    Taking first strides towards complete indigenisation of India’s defence armoury, the Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers (GRSE) have begun building country’s first completely indigenous warship.

    And enquiries for frigates and Fast Attack Craft are coming from Sri Lanka, ASEAN members and few African countries.

    "We are analysing their queries regarding how to meet the orders. We want to work on it. After completing our analysis, we have to bid for it in the global market and get the order," Ganeshan said.

    "On August 12 Defence Secretary Shekhar Dutt cut the steel, thus paving way for the construction of the country’s first indigenously built anti-submarine warship with stealth technology," GRSE Chairman and Managing Director Rear Admiral (retd) T S Ganeshan said.

    It is a 25,000 tonne corvette armed with stealth-mounted guns, the latest electronic warfare suite which, together with other key operational equipment, is shielded using stealth technology incorporated into the design of the bulwarks.

    The cost has not yet been ascertained but GRSE aims to deliver the corvette to Navy by first half of 2009.

    It is also expecting more orders from the Indian Navy, "which would materialise in a month’s time," he said. GRSE is executing orders valuing Rs 5000 crore.

    According to Admiral Superintendent Naval Dockyard Rear Admiral B K Kaul, this is the first step towards the Navy’s goal of attaining complete indigenisation within next 15 years. (PTI)
  • Sinhalese sought for intel officers’ killings
    Police investigating Saturday’s killing of senior Sri Lankan military intelligence officer have revealed that the shots were fired by a person who was travelling with him at the time of the killing.

    Lt. Colonel Rizvi Meedin, who reportedly commanded the army’s intelligence unit in Colombo, was found shot dead inside his official vehicle near his home in the Kiribathgoda housing scheme area on Saturday night.

    ‘The officer had gone out in the night for some work and his wife got a call around midnight with the caller telling her that her husband has been shot,’ Army spokesman Brig Nalin Witharanage said.

    Lt. Col. Meedin was found in the driver seat of his car with bullet wounds on his head and neck and was pronounced dead at hospital, he said.

    He is the second high-ranking military intelligence killed this year and, as in the previous assassination five months ago of another military intelligence commander Lt. Col. Nizam Muthaliff, the Liberation Tigers are suspected.

    But Police say they believe Lt. Col. Meedin’s assassin was a close associate of the officer and Sinhalese.

    Police are looking at individuals in Sri Lanka’s notoriously violent underworld for the killers of both officers, press reports said this week.

    The Daily Mirror said Tuesday police had arrested underworld figure Chamila Roshan alias Chammi in connection with the killing.

    A senior police official told the paper Chamila was believed to have enticed Colonel Meedin out of his house before setting him up for the killing by Ice Manju, a Trincomalee based underworld leader ‘with links to the LTTE,’
  • Bloody Decade
    Whilst outgoing President Chandrika Kumaratunga has, throughout her decade in power, been frequently economical with the truth, some of her statements have been extraordinarily fallacious. A case in point is her musings this week about her term in office. “It gives me pride to say,” she declared, “that I have not stained my hands with mud or blood.” Most Sri Lankans would agree she is wrong on both counts. Her invectives against her political opponents, her own party members and even international figures have startled friend and foe alike – to say nothing of supplying this newspaper with some excellent copy. And rather than having clean hands, Kumaratunga’s term as President is stained with an extraordinary amount of blood, most, though not all, of it Tamil. And that is not to include the thousands of Sinhala soldiers she sent to their deaths.

    To begin with, Kumaratunga has presided over the bloodiest phase of Sri Lanka’s protracted ethnic conflict. Several thousand civilians and combatants from both sides perished in her self-styled ‘war for peace’ - a military adventure fuelled by Sinhala nationalism that laid waste to large, predominantly Tamil, parts of the island and brought the country to its knees economically. At the outset of her term she assaulted and occupied the Tamil cultural heartland of Jaffna, displacing its entire population (indeed as she leaves office, 1 in 4 Tamils is a refugee or internally displaced). She crowed with an archaic Sinhala victory ceremony in Colombo, even as the ‘disappearances’ began in the northern peninsula.

    Whilst she ingeniously engaged the international community in a discourse on human rights, her military cloaked in impunity, engaged in torture, extrajudicial killings and rape. Navaly, Nagerkoil, Chemmani, Binderenuwa - these are some of the iconic names of her term. Her human rights record made even her international allies blanch. Once, confronted by the BBC with a US State Department report on her rights record, she dismissed it as ‘lies, all lies.’ And she starved the Tamil north with a vengeance her predecessors could not match. The embargo - which remained in place, despite her promises, throughout her charade of negotiations with the LTTE - was tightened to excruciating levels during the war, ending only in 2001 when her government was toppled.

    Ultimately she failed in her objective - to crush the Tamil liberation struggle. Paradoxically, she instead gave it a test of fire which hardened both its steel and its resolve. As she exits, the LTTE stands dominant over much of the Northeast, with a standing army and an administration that can no longer be described as fledgling. She has made internal self-determination – co-existence of any form - a compromise, rather than an aspiration for the Tamil people. In doing so, she wrecked Sri Lanka’s much-vaunted sovereignty, however one may understand it, beyond repair and shredded the fabric of its society. Fractured, impoverished and crime ridden, even southern Sri Lanka, is no achievement. One wonders whether even the Sinhalese will laud her period of rule.
  • Birds of a feather
    With just over two weeks left before Sri Lanka’s Presidential elections, hectic campaigning is underway. Both the leading contenders, Premier Mahinda Rajapakse and Opposition Leader Ranil Wickremesinghe, are stepping up their efforts amid what is widely seen as a close run race. But in contrast to the feverish activity in the south, the selection of Mrs. Chandrika Kumaratunga’s successor is attracting marginal interest in Sri Lanka’s Tamil dominated north. It speaks volumes of the southern polity that amidst the acute rivalry between Mr. Rajapakse and Mr. Wickremesinghe, the Tamils argue they cannot discern a distinction between them on the ethnic question.

    Given the protracted conflict’s considerable impact on the lives of most Sri Lankans, the question of how to resolve the ethnic question ought to be a key differentiator amongst the contenders. On the face of it, it could be seen as one. As this newspaper and many others have argued, Mr. Rajapakse’s uncompromising electoral pacts with the Sinhala Buddhist nationalist parties appears to render Mr. Wickremesinghe the de-facto choice for the island’s minorities. Mr. Rajapakse has categorically ruled out a weakening of the unitary nature of the state and rejected the notions of homeland and self-determination – the cardinal principles, from a Tamil perspective, on which a permanent solution must be reached.

    The question then is why has Mr. Wickremesinghe not been able to galvanize the Tamils behind his candidacy? He has probably won the support of the Muslim community and the Estate Tamils. But these are premised more on promissory allocations of benefits to their political elites than anything else and the question of whether ministerial benefits will translate into votes remains to be seen – particularly amongst the divided Muslim community in the island’s war- and tsunami-ravaged east. But the Tamils’ apathetic response to what has until recently been seen by many, including this newspaper, as a referendum on the peace process, has everything to do with Mr. Wickremesinghe’s own stances on the ethnic question.

    To begin with, whilst Mr. Rajapakse has wrapped himself in the Lion flag, Mr. Wickremesinghe has tried hard not to distance himself too far from Sinhala nationalism. Indeed, he has surreptitiously sought to court the right wing vote, publicly interacting with Sri Lanka’s powerful and hardline Buddhist clergy, and positing ‘defeating separatism’ as his primary stance on the ethnic question. He has even won over a prominent member of the hardline monks’ party – a small gain perhaps, but a telling one in the north. Most importantly, however, Mr. Wickremesinghe has failed to outline a clear, unambiguous position on the ethnic question. Whereas Mr. Rajapakse has rejected self-determination and the notion of a Tamil homeland, Mr. Wickremesinghe has simply avoided comment on these. This is not merely political prudence, as far as the Tamils are concerned, but one underpinned by a shared view.

    In practical terms of the peace process, whilst Rajapakse has ruled out any accommodation of Tamil views, Mr. Wickremesinghe has gone the other way, promising to accommodate all opinions - a laudable notion in itself, but a wholly impractical one in Sri Lanka. The outlines of fiasco can already be discerned. Mr. Wickremesinghe has promised all to all and has said yes to diametrically opposed demands. Advocates of peace alarmed by Mr. Rajapakse’s unabashed Sinhala nationalism have rushed to pin their hopes on Mr. Wickremesinghe without seriously examining his policies and, above all, the practicality of his strategy.

    In short, the Tamil view is that for the conflict to be resolved, the Sinhala leadership must break irreconcilably with the Mahavamsa mindset and the political dynamics of the past half century and approach the ethnic question from a bold new position: a multi-national, not merely a multi-ethnic, one. But neither Rajapakse, certainly, nor even Wickremesinghe is prepared to do this. Whilst the former bristles against a Tamil political identity, the latter is avoiding controversy by refusing to come clean. This is what makes them indistinguishable to the Tamils and underpins the apathy in the north.
  • Sri Lanka's buttock brouhaha
    ‘It is the intention of Mr Ranil Wickramasinghe to generate a ‘mod’ farmer without hanging cheeks and whose buttocks are not visible as in the traditional clothing.’ So read a pre-election press release this month by one Dr Rajitha Senaratne, Sri Lankan MP and member of the leading opposition United National Party (UNP), whose leader, the aforementioned Mr Wickramasinghe, hopes to become president when the country goes to the polls in three weeks’ time.

    There are many important issues being contested: recovery from the tsunami, an uneasy ceasefire in the long-running civil war, arguments over corruption. But unwittingly, it seems, Mr Senaratne has touched on an issue equally close to many of his compatriots’ hearts.

    Sri Lanka is a conservative country. Westerners are advised to cover their shoulders and legs to avoid attracting attention, and Sri Lankan women bathing in rivers manage, in contravention of all laws of topology, to thoroughly clean themselves while barely ruffling their sari.

    But there are contradictions. Although the ‘wet sari’ scene is about as risque as local films will venture, these garments - even on portly elderly women - often happily expose the midriff. And workers in rice paddies still wear the traditional loincloth. Known as the amude, this clothing (as the MP was keen to point out) exposes the buttocks. Kind of like an agricultural version of the G-string.

    Farmers across the world are a notoriously militant bunch. When aggravated, they are prone to release sheep in inconvenient locations or drive tractors three abreast down motorways. So by wading into the great amude debate, Dr Senaratne was perhaps fortunate to get off with a mild roasting in the letters pages.

    ‘Dr Senaratne is talking nonsense,’ thundered a PB Godigamuwa from Maharagama. ‘In Sri Lanka, farmers work in a pool of muddy water. The loincloth is the most suitable attire. They get the wind blowing to their bare bodies, feet and buttocks to enable them to work hard the whole day.’

    Back-pedalling soon followed. Proving that the art of spin has successfully crossed the Indian ocean, Dr Senaratne explained that his remarks were actually praising the farmers for having already modernised: ‘The JVP [the Marxist nationalist opposition party] assume that farmers have to be dressed in the amude. But things have changed and today farmers are working in shorts and socialising in jeans and T-shirts.’

    It remains to be seen how this loincloth flip-flopping will ultimately play at the polls.
  • Remembering the Jaffna exodus
    Ten years ago, the entire town of Jaffna, the largest Tamil population centre in Sri Lanka, streamed out of their homes ahead of a major offensive by government troops against their town. On October 30, 1995, half a million men, women and children walked several miles east, crossing the Navatkuli bridge into the neck of the peninsula. Many then made the dangerous boat journey on to Kilinochchi in the Vanni as to the north of Jaffna, heavy fighting raged as the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) battled to keep the massed might of the Sri Lanka Army at bay.

    The exodus, as it came to be known amongst them, undeniably marked a turning point in Tamils’ self-understanding. The context in which the exodus took place was aptly summed by The Times of London, whose correspondent, Christopher Thomas, wrote on October 30: “Many civilians have been killed by government shelling and bombing, which has hit residential areas of the town. There is panic among the 600,000 Tamils on the Jaffna peninsula. The greatest humanitarian crisis of the war is in the making...Tamil civilians in Jaffna are evidently terrified by the advancing of the soldiers and are looking to the Tigers to save them from what they are convinced will be a massacre.”

    Despite claims by the Sri Lankan government and other critics of the Tigers that the LTTE had forcibly relocated the people of Jaffna, the simple fact was that as tens of thousands Sri Lankan troops blasted their way towards the town, its residents were desperate to get out. That they had to, and were able to, escape the onslaught, which an awed Indian Army general described in the anodyne term ‘broad front’ changed Tamil attitudes to the Sri Lankan state, the LTTE and the conflict.

    The senior professors and lecturers of Jaffna University observed in a letter to the UN Secretary General on November 28: “if lives have not been lost or people have not been injured on an even larger scale it is not because of the sensitivity and concern shown by the security forces for the safety of innocent civilians but because of the precaution taken by the people in evacuating quickly from areas where intense shelling and bombing were taking place and seeking shelter elsewhere.”

    Jaffna has been considered the cultural capital of Tamils in Sri Lanka for centuries. It was in the northern peninsula that the Tamil armed struggle against the Sinhala-dominated Sri Lankan state began in the late seventies, following decades of unsuccessful political campaigns. Following the 1983 pogrom, open conflict erupted between Tamil militants and the armed forces. In the 80’s the LTTE emerged through a series of clashes amongst the Tamil groups as the primary challenger to the state. The peninsula was the site of much of the fighting of the 80’s, first against the Sri Lanka Army (SLA) and in the late 80’s, the Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF).

    When the Indian army withdrew in 1990, the LTTE assumed control of Jaffna, except for the SLA base complexes along the peninsula’s northern cap and its neck. Following the second phase of the war (sometimes referred to as Eelam War 2), the LTTE entered into negotiations with the government of President Chandrika Kumaratunga. Those talks broke down in contentious circumstances. The government accused the LTTE of rebuffing its peace efforts. The LTTE said the government was insincere about the peace and was playing for time. What is clear is that when the war resumed in July 1995, the Sri Lankan armed forces had completely rearmed and expanded, acquiring helicopter gunships, heavier artillery and armour. Moreover, the SLA had gradually transferred substantial numbers of troops from the eastern province into the Jaffna peninsula ahead of a new military project.

    The first SLA assault on Jaffna, codenamed ‘Operation Leap Forward’ came on 9 July 1995. Despite rapid initial progress, it was stalled by a major LTTE counter-offensive. Despite the success of their ‘Operation Tiger Leap,’ the Tigers realised that Sri Lanka had prepared for an offensive of unprecedented proportions. The LTTE, it is understood, promptly began to prepare a rear area in the Vanni, relocating strategic resources, including arms factories, and supplies whilst bolstering their defences in Jaffna.

    But another lesson was quickly learnt by the Tamils: heavy loss of civilian life was to be expected. On the first day of ‘Leap Forward’ itself 65 civilians were killed and 150 seriously injured when St Peters Church and the neighbouring Murugamoorthy Hindu Temple in Navaly were bombed by the Sri Lanka Air Force (SLAF). Thousands of people from the Valigamam sector had fled their homes as they army advanced and most heeded notices dropped by the SLAF that they should seek shelter in places of worship to avoid being targeted. Hundreds had fled to the temple and church at Navaly.

    From late July, the Sri Lankan armed forces began a continuous artillery and air bombardment to soften up the Valigamam sector. Civilian losses mounted steadily with occasional spikes such as the killing of 22 children at Nagar Kovil High School, bombed on September 22. The all-out ground assault to recapture the Jaffna peninsula from the LTTE began on October 1. The first phase, ‘Operation Thunder,’ was intended to capture parts of Valigamam sector to the north of Jaffna town. After two weeks the SLA succeeded, despite heavy casualties, in capturing key towns including Atchuveli, Avarankal and Puttur. With the SLA’s strategy to cut off Jaffna town becoming clear, the LTTE deployed forces to prevent SLA columns from advancing to the Navatkuli bridge which linked Valigamam with Thenmaradchi to the east.

    The assault on Jaffna town itself, codenamed ‘Operation Riviresa’ (Sun Ray), began on October 17. Heavy fighting raged at several locations. On October 29 Sri Lankan forces overran LTTE defences in Neervely after a pitched battle. Only one major defence line, in Kopay North, now lay between them and a relatively easy progress towards the Navatkuli Bridge. It was the SLA’s battlefield tactics which panicked residents most. As former IPKF commander Lt. Gen. Amarjit Singh Kalkut later put it “[the SLA] followed a strategy of broad front; [it] is a very secure method, but you need large forces, which they have got; it is more time consuming, but they’re in no hurry; and thirdly it causes a lot of destruction.”

    He explained: “You are actually steamrolling through the area. Step by step. Do a certain distance first, then clean up, and converge on the next one. Any building from which resistance comes or is likely, bring it down with air bombing or tank fire. You clean up. But then as you pass, you’re leaving rubble behind. So for that problem [the Sri Lankans] have resorted to censorship so that this doesn’t come out. … They have concentrated overwhelming force for a Broad Front and have made sure there is no adverse publicity. World opinion, the press, don’t know what is happening because it is all controlled.”

    On the morning of October 30, LTTE Political Wing cadres appeared on the streets and made public announcements urging civilians to seek shelter the other side of Navatkuli bridge in Thenmaradchi. Virtually the entire population, half a million people, massed in the centre of the town and started the long walk towards safety, taking only what they could carry. The narrow bridge at Navatkuli became a bottleneck as people pushed to cross over to the relative safety of Kaithady and then on towards Chavakachcheri, in the southern half of the peninsula.

    The Toronto Star’s Paul Watson, quoting Gerard Peytrignet, head of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in Sri Lanka reported: “About half of the … refugees are living and sleeping outdoors in heavy monsoon rains. The rest are holed up in churches, schools and relatives’ homes. The refugees have very little food or proper sanitation. Doctors are already seeing cases of dysentery and eye infections, and while cholera hasn’t struck yet, the conditions are perfect for a deadly epidemic.”

    Most of the refugees sought shelter in and around Chavakachcheri, a large market town few kilometres down the road from Navatkuli Bridge. The town was incapable of absorbing an influx many times own population and life quickly became a misery there with shortages of food, clean water, shelter and sanitation. Disease took hold quickly. The town also came under air attack. The Hindu, quoting Jaffna Government Agent, Mr. K. Ponnambalam, said 42 civilians were killed on October 31 alone.

    Many people moved on to the Vanni. Without a land route – the Elephant Pass causeway being dominated by an SLA base complex – they crossed the Kilali lagoon, buffeted by the elements and under increasing air attack. Reuters, reporting that “the Tigers have ferried civilians in boats across the lagoon to camps on the mainland,” quoted refugees as saying “a number are at the mainland ferry hoping they may be on the next boat to cross the lagoon.”

    AFP quoting Thillai Natarajah, a senior government official in Kilinochchi, reported that 60,000 refugees had poured into the area from Jaffna by November 4, and the total was expected reach 300,000 soon. “More than 10,000 people are streaming in every day. Most people are housed in school buildings and temples. But the situation is getting desperate,’ Natarajah told AFP. “Many of those were drenched in rain and without a second set of clothes.” He added that there were food shortages.

    Having rationalized the military assault on Jaffna as a mission to ‘liberate the Tamils from the LTTE’ the Sri Lankan government first claimed the Tamils “were deserting the LTTE” and then, realising what was unfolding, said the “LTTE was forcing them out.” Sri Lanka’s Foreign Minister Lakshman Kadirgmar also played down the scale of the displacement and rebuffed international offers of assistance for the victims.

    Meanwhile, as the Toronto Star noted: “Sri Lanka’s military won’t let journalist cross into areas controlled by the LTTE [while] relief workers are so afraid of making the government angry, they refuse to photograph or shoot video of the refugees suffering and smuggle the pictures out to reporters.”

    Nevertheless, observing that “reports of the massive displacement of the civilian population in northern Sri Lanka are a source of deep concern,” United Nations Secretary General. Boutros Boutros Ghali called for “humanitarian assistance on a significant scale to minimize the suffering.” The Belgian relief agency Medicines Sans Frontiers made a worldwide appeal for aid for an estimated 500,000 refugees, a figure the Sri Lanka government said was greatly exaggerated.

    However Foreign Minister Kadirgamar claimed that only about 150,000 people had been displaced. Saying the government will not allow foreign relief agencies to operate independently, and blamed the U.N. and the international community for rushing to conclusions “without knowing all the facts,” said Kadirgamar: “We can take care of our problem.”

    “We do not intend to permit any outside agencies, including the UN...to carry out independent operations”, Mr. Kadiragamar was quoted as saying by the BBC which reported on November 6: “Sri Lanka has banned international agencies from aiding Tamil refugees over fears that some are not impartial.”

    The Toronto Star reported: “While Sri Lanka’s army fights to crush Tamil rebels, it’s battling on another front against foreign relief workers trying to care for 400,000 war refugees. The refugees, including hundreds of wounded civilians, are caught behind the civil war’s front line. Western relief agencies accuse the military of blocking desperately needed aid. Tight restrictions are preventing the delivery of drugs, tents and blankets as well as equipment to build latrines, said frustrated aid officials, who spoke on condition they not be named.”

    In an outraged editorial, the Boston Globe said “Because the war zone has been closed to reporters and cameras, the human calamity visited upon the Tamils has become a tree falling unheard in the forest. Yet their suffering is as grievous as that of refugees in the former Yugoslavia.”

    “The government of President Chandrika Kumaratunga has insisted that it be the entity to distribute international humanitarian aid … [But] since most of the refugees who fled the government forces closing in on the city of Jaffna are now in territory controlled by the Tigers, relief supplies channeled through the government could not help those in need, whatever the intentions of the government.”

    The paper demanded: “For the sake of a single humane standard, the United States and other governments should insist that humanitarian aid to refugees be delivered under international supervision. There is also a need for outside parties willing to help broker a ceasefire and a negotiated peace between the Tamil minority and the Sri Lankan government. As in Bosnia, millions of civilians must be saved from the madness of their leaders.”

    The people of Jaffna endured enormous suffering during the exodus and in its aftermath. But the Sri Lankan state’s reaction to the humanitarian crisis and the LTTE’s role in the battle for Jaffna has, despite criticism leveled against the movement, had a profound impact in the shaping of the Tamil national identity.

    The Jaffna university professors’ letter to the Mr. Boutros-Ghali stated: “Tamils have now been completely alienated from the mainstream of Sri Lankan polities. The present government by its activities has helped communalism to raise its ugly head again in the South on an unprecedented scale. No part of Sri Lanka is now safe for the Tamils to live. After the recent events there is hardly any Tamil in the North and East who thinks that a settlement of the ethnic problem under a single Sri Lankan polity is desirable or possible.”

    The point was inevitably made more forcefully by LTTE leader Vellupillai Pirapaharan in his Heroes Day address on November 27, 1995: “we see such tragic experience and suffering as a tremendous contribution by our people to the cause of national emancipation. This mass exodus proclaims to the world that our people are determined to live as free beings with self-dignity and that they are prepared to face any form of suffering to [do so].”

    “The invasion of Jaffna is a gigantic historical blunder made by Chandrika regime. As a consequence of this act the Colombo government has closed all avenues for peace,” Mr. Pirapaharan said. And then he made an impassioned call: “It is only by strengthening our military power we could live with security; we could gain our lost territories; we could return to our homes as free men. The task of building the military power of the Tamil Nation has become the inevitable historical necessity today.”
  • ‘Dual use’ targets and double standards
  • Partying youth killed by angry troops
    Seven youth killed by Sri Lanka Army (SLA) troops near their camp in Nelliyadi on May 4 were not Tamil Tiger cadres, but young revellers on their way to a birthday party, press reports said.

    The seven youth, travelling near Nelliyadi junction in Vadamaradchi, Jaffna, were killed when SLA troops fired rockets at the auto rickshaws in which they were travelling. The attack took place in a lane near the SLA Intelligence Camp in Navindil, 300 meters from Nelliyadi junction.

    Military officials claimed the men were shot dead by security forces when they tried to attack a military sentry point at Nelliyadi in the Jaffna peninsula. Other military officials said the youths lobbed grenades into a nearby paramilitary camp near an SLA checkpoint.

    However, Tamil parliamentarians and press reports said the youths, aged between 17 and 22, had been on their way to attend a birthday party in two rickshaws.

    They claim the youths were fired at after a grenade attack behind the Intelligence camp in which three SLA personnel, including an officer, were wounded.

    SLA soldiers used Rocket Propelled Grenade (RPG) launchers, killing all of them on the spot. Following the incident, the security forces launched a cordon and search operation in the area.

    The youths were all from Rajakiramam, a village 500 meters south of Nelliyadi, which had already been tense after the shootings of 2 auto rickshaw drivers earlier. The situation was further intensified when Sri Lankan troops at the Intelligence camp and policemen threatened the parents to provide statement that the youths were LTTE cadres.

    The government’s version was slightly different to that in the Tamil media.

    Military spokesman Prasad Samarasinghe said seven LTTE cadres armed with hand grenades arrived in two three-wheelers and launched an attack on the two soldiers at the military checkpoint near the filling station at Nelliyadi and fled the scene.

    However, the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), in a statement rejected this version of events, pointing out that the youths were in a bar at the time off the attack on the SLA camp.

    “The grenade attack on the Military Camp had taken place over 20 minutes prior to the killing of the seven civilians. There is absolutely no connection between the attack on the Military Camp and the seven civilians that were killed,” said the TNA. “In fact all seven civilians had been at a bar in Nelliyadi and were on their way to a private party for which they had to cross a Police Station and a Military Camp when they were targeted.”
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