• Associated Press: Tamils' hell two years after Sri Lanka’s war

    Extracts from Krishan Francis’ report for AP (see the full text here):

    Sri Lanka is again a palm-fringed tourist paradise, the government says. But for Tamils living in the former war zone, it is still a hell of haunted memories, military occupation and missing loved ones.

    Hundreds of thousands remain homeless, and no effort has been made to reunite families separated two years ago during the final bloody months of the war between the now-defeated Tamil separatists and the ethnic Sinhalese-dominated government.

    A power-sharing program that President Mahinda Rajapaksa promised to enact after the quarter-century war has gone nowhere.

    The International Crisis Group castigated the government in a July report that said "the country is yet to see any semblance of compromise or inclusiveness."

    In the meantime, the government has worked hard to project an image of peace and redemption to the world. It insists Tamils have embraced its plan to rebuild homes and shattered lives. It is playing up the Indian Ocean island's reputation as a tourist destination.

    But in the Tamil heartland in the north, resentment has been building.
     

  • What does the US debt crisis have to do with China's role in Sri Lanka?

    An article by Professsor Minxin Pei in The Diplomat provides some answers.

    Much of the world has been watching the debt crisis in the United States with trepidation in recent weeks, but one actor has been particularly nervous: China.

    Why? China is the world’s biggest lender to the US. Prof Pei writes:

    “China is the largest single holder of US Treasury debt (roughly $1.1 trillion). In a nightmarish scenario of an American debt default, the prices of the Treasury bonds China has accumulated are bound to decline significantly.

    “[Furthermore,] 60 percent of China’s $3.2 trillion in foreign exchange reserves consists of dollar-denominated assets (in addition to Treasury bonds, China has bought hundreds of billions of dollars in [US] mortgage-backed securities)

    “The paper losses from the price declines of dollar-denominated bonds, and the depreciation of the dollar itself, will likely be in at least the tens of billions of dollars.”

    “To Beijing’s credit, the Chinese government has kept relative silence [on the debt crisis]. .. China has maintained an ultra-low profile out of self-interest.  It will only hurt itself more if it raises alarm about a possible US default and spooks the financial markets.”

    As Prof. Pei points out, one obvious question, given the massive risks of holding trillions of dollars in US debt, shouldn't Beijing have diversified its forex investments? Why not invest in assets not denominated in the US dollar?

    “The answer is, sadly, China has tried practically every trick known to get into non-dollar assets. It has set up a $300 billion sovereign wealth fund to invest excess foreign reserves in foreign companies. It has encouraged state-owned companies to acquire assets abroad, such as natural resources and firms. It has launched an experimental scheme to settle foreign trade in the renminbi, instead of the dollar. It has dabbled in purchasing distressed European sovereign debt. The list goes on.”

    So perhaps it is not surprising that in recent years, China has been happy to lend to, and invest in Sri Lanka, too.

    China has famously bankrolled the new Hambantota harbour and other infrastructure projects.

    To be more precise, China lends to Sri Lanka, which in turn pays Chinese contractors to build.

    Whether these projects contribute to Sri Lanka or not, the contractors get paid immediately, and indebted Sri Lanka repays China over the coming years.

    A smart way to offset some of the risk.

    Interestingly, Sri Lanka is one of the countries participating in China’s experimental scheme to settle trade in the renminbi (see here).

    Meanwhile, how have China’s efforts vis-à-vis the dollar worked out? Prof. Pei, again:

    “Unfortunately, these efforts to diversify forex holdings have yielded disappointing results. Chinese attempts to acquire natural resources have met with strong resistance in most parts of the world (except in Africa).

    China’s sovereign wealth fund’s investments overseas haven’t been successful either, mostly due to political opposition. Chinese state-owned firms seem to have done better. But the tens of billions of dollars they have spent on projects may not generate economic benefits.” 

  • China state radio’s largest foreign audience is … Tamil

    China Radio International’s Tamil service enjoys the widest reach of all its channels and Tamils comprise the state-owned broadcaster’s fast-growing overseas fan base.

    See the reports by The Hindu newspaper here and (video) here.

    See CRI Tamil's website here.

    The Tamil station now has more than 25,000 registered listeners - besides thousands of others who tune in casually every day - in Tamil Nadu and the rest of India, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Singapore, South Africa, Germany, the United States and Japan.

    The Tamil station started broadcasting in 1963. Since then, it has continued to beam its shows uninterrupted, building up an almost cult following overseas, with its fans even organising themselves into a network of listeners' clubs.

    Leading the station is Zhu Juan Hua, from Shanghai, who prefers to go by the Tamil name Kalaiarasi.

    Speaking in fluent Tamil, she says the station receives more than 450,000 letters every year, accounting for 30 per cent of all the letters CRI's more than 60 channels receive.

    “When I joined CRI, the situation was far different,” said Ms. Zhu. “We had few speakers. Today, we have 15 highly trained Chinese Tamil-speaking staff, and plan to hire six more this year. We have been growing, and growing.

  • US wants LLRC report discussed at UN rights council next March

    The United States has formally told Sri Lanka that it wants the final report of the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) discussed at the 19th sessions of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva next March, the Sunday Times reported.

    After repeated extensions, the final report of the governemnt's LLRC is to be released in November. (See here what international rights groups think of the LLRC.)

    The demarche was delivered by the US Embassy in Colombo to the External Affairs Ministry last month but Sri Lanka has not yet responded officially, the paper said.

    An External Affairs Ministry source who spoke on grounds of anonymity said the government was most likely to reject the US request.

    “This is because we will be under the constant watch of the HRC if we agree to this move,” the source said, sounding a warning that a rejection may also force US to resort to other “measures against Sri Lanka”.

    On July 21 a US congressional committee voted to ban aid to Sri Lanka pending accountability over mass killings in the final months of the island's war in 2009.

    In April, a UN expert panel published its report on war crimes and crimes against humanity in Sri Lanka

    After Sri Lanka was not raised at the 17th sessions of the UN Human Rights Council in June, there was speculation that it would be taken up at the next one, in September.

    Although it is not altogether ruled out, both Britain and the United States have said that they would give time for Sri Lanka till the end of this year for the LLRC to produce its report.

  • Hope beyond reason

    The body of a prominent Sri Lankan human rights activist missing since February last year has been found, the United Nations said Friday.

    Pattani Razeek, managing trustee of non-governmental organisation the Community Trust Fund, was exhumed by police on Thursday after a tip-off from two suspects arrested in relation to the case, the UN said.

    See AFP’s report here.

    Bizarrely, Ravina Shamdasani, spokeswoman for the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, urged Sri Lanka's authorities to "expedite" investigations and prosecute those involved in the crime.

    Whom does she think ordered Razeek’s killing?

    "We hope that similar progress will be made in uncovering the truth behind the disappearance of several thousand individuals both during and since Sri Lanka’s conflict," she also said.

  • TNA: The Tamil people demand 'full self rule', international investigation of war crimes

    "The Tamil people’s demand is that they exercise full powers of self-rule within their homeland consisting of a merged North and East. Once again, the Tamil people have declared that they will not relinquish their political aspirations.

    "The Tamil people have – by ensuring the victory of the TNA – accepted and supported the recommendations of the UN [Panel’s report], which state that the government’s war crimes and human rights abuses require an impartial international investigation.

    "The TNA asks that this verdict of the Tamil people be respected and that the government accept and allow an international investigation.

    "The TNA requests that the international community continues to pressure the government to provide a political solution that allows the Tamil people to live in their homeland with dignity and freedom.

    "The TNA expresses its heartfelt gratitude to the Tamil people who in the midst of various threats and difficulties considered it their national duty to go to the polling booths in their numbers to cast their vote for the Tamil National Alliance."

    - Suresh Premachandran, of the Tamil National Alliance's leadership. See his full statement here.

  • Orgy of massacre, rape, torture and mutilation in final days

    Below are extracts from a frontline Sri Lankan soldier’s eye witness account of what happened in the final days of the war in May 2009 (see Channel 4's report here):

    "When I look at it as an outsider I think they're simply brutal beasts. Their hearts are like that of animals, with no sense of humanity.”

    "They shoot people at random, stab people, rape them, cut their tongues out, cut women's breasts off. I have witnessed all this with my own eyes. I have seen small children laying dead," he continued.

    "I saw a lot of small children, who were so innocent, getting killed in large numbers. A large number of elders were also killed.

    "They were shooting when a large number of civilians were crossing through a lagoon, including women and children. The soldiers were shooting at them. They were not Tiger cadres, just normal civilians. So yes, I saw normal civilians getting killed with my own eyes.

    Rape amid impunity

    Even the wounded were shown no mercy: "When they were at the hospital, one day I saw a group of six soldiers raping a young Tamil girl. I saw this with my own eyes."

    Troops were allowed to act with impunity, the soldier told Channel 4.

    "If they wanted to rape a Tamil girl, they could just beat her and do it. If her parents tried to stop them, they could beat them or kill them. It was their empire.

    "For the soldiers at the battlefront, their hearts had turned to stone. Having seen blood, killings and death for so long, they had lost their sense of humanity. I would say they had turned into vampires."

    These inhumane acts, "Fernando" said, extended to acts of torture and mutilation.

    "I saw the naked dead bodies of women without heads and other parts of their bodies.

    "I saw a mother and child dead and the child's body was without its head."

    Mass graves

    "Massive numbers of children, women and men were killed in the final stages of the war. When I say massive, in Puthumathalan alone, over 1500 civilians were killed.

    "But they couldn't bury all of them. What they did was, they bought a bulldozer, they spread the dead bodies out and put sand on top of them, making it look like a bund.

    "I saw 1500 bodies only in Puthumathalan, but I saw the same happen to more than 50,000 people like that."

    Questioned on the accuracy of the numbers he cited, the soldier said: "In the final stage, all that I saw in Puthumathalan were dead bodies. When I entered the last place... it was totally full of dead bodies.

    "They wanted to clear them that's why they brought that big vehicle. All they could do was just put sand on them. In some areas you couldn't go because there was such a terrible smell of decomposing bodies."

    "They were just innocent Tamil civilians and did not belong to either warring party."

  • Killing spree after Gotabaya’s orders: Army eyewitness accounts

    A Sri Lanka Army officer has given Channel 4 his account of how, following orders from Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa, the commander of the 58 Division, Brigadier Shavendra Silva (now Major General) gathered his officers in the closing days of the war and ordered them to take no prisoners when capturing the remainder of the enclave in which thousands of Tamils civilians and fighters were surrounded.

    This is what Brig. Silva, now Sri Lanka’s representative to the UN in New York, told his gathered troops:

    “This is a very decisive day for us because last night I got a call from the defence secretary. He told me that we only have a small chunk of land left to capture. Do whatever it takes- finish it off the way it has to be done."

    The officer also told Channel 4: "We received orders from the top to kill some of those who surrendered. All regiments received the orders unofficially - from the top."

  • TYO marks Black July anniversary

    Tamil youths in London, Paris and Sydney marked the anniversary of ‘Black July’ with activities to raise public awareness of the mass killings of Tamils in Sri Lanka.

    In recent days members of the Tamil Youth Organisation (TYO) in Sydney and London handed out leaflets at central locations, while in Paris they organised blood donations and participated in a march.

    See report and photos here.

  • British Tamils' remember 1983 pogrom victims

    British Tamils held a candle light vigil Saturday evening opposite the Prime Minister’s official residence, 10 Downing Street, to remember victims of Sri Lanka’s 1983 ‘Black July’ anti-Tamil pogrom.

    See full report, photos here.

    A thousand people dressed in black and carrying black flags and Eelam national flags, held a vigil between 6 and 9 pm, with lit candles and banners commemorating the pogrom.

    For several hours before the vigil began, activists and supporters handed out leaflets in the surrounding Whitehall area.

    The events were organised by the British Tamil Forum (BTF).

  • Black July: part of Sri Lanka's past - and future

    "While Black July destroyed the Tamil economic base in the island, it created the now flourishing global Diasporic economic base. While it sought to silence Tamil political struggle ‘for once and for all’, it instead spread Tamil activism across the world. It sought to erase the Eelam Tamil cultural symbolism and identity, but instead rendered them globally recognised.

    The present is thus inextricably linked to the past. And the past will also define the future. Until there is accountability for the mass atrocities against the Tamil people, until justice – the bedrock for any lasting peace - emerges, until Tamils are recognised as a people with equal rights and a rightful place in their homeland, the island’s northeast, Sri Lanka will remain synonymous with ethnic strife."

    - Jan Janayagam. See her comment here.

    This iconic photograph of the July 1983 riots was taken by Chandragupta Amarasinghe.

    “Motorists were dragged from their cars to be stoned and beaten with sticks. Others were cut down with knives and axes. Mobs of Sinhala youth rampaged through the streets, ransacking homes, shops and offices, looting them and setting them ablaze, as they sought out members of the Tamil ethnic minority. A mob attacked a Tamil cyclist riding near Colombo’s eye hospital. The cyclist was hauled from his bike, drenched with petrol and set alight. As he ran screaming down the street, the mob set on him again and hacked him down with jungle knives.”

    - The Daily Telegraph, July 26, 1983.

    “Sri Lanka Army personnel actively encouraged arson and the looting of Tamil business establishments and homes in Colombo. … Absolutely no action was taken to apprehend or prevent the criminal elements involved in these activities. In many instances army personnel participated in the looting of shops.”

    - The Times August 4, 1983.

    “In Colombo at least 500 cars some with drivers and passengers inside were burnt. Tamil-owned buses, running between Colombo and Jaffna were burnt. Tamil patients in hospitals were attacked and killed. Some had their throats cut as they lay in their beds.”

    - N. Sanmugathasan, General Secretary of the Ceylon Communist Party.

    “The most shattering report came from a friend who was a civil servant; he told me that he had helped plan the riots at the orders of his superiors. When I heard him say this, I was so shocked I told him I simply couldn’t believe him, but he insisted he was telling the truth, and in fact he justified the Government’s decision to stage the riots. When I heard this, I telephoned an official in our own [US] State Department, and while he declined to discuss the matter, I got the impression that he already knew from our embassy in Colombo what I was telling him.”

    - George Immerwahr, a United Nations civil servant and US citizen who had worked in Sri Lanka in the 1950s.

    Also, see our feature articles:

    Anatomy of a pogrom

    Icon of 1983

    Deserving victims, just violence

    Eyes ‘gouged out’ in mockery (The Guardian, August 5, 1983)

     

  • What Black July means for the future

    Based on a speech at the  vigil in London on July 23, 2011 to remember the victims of Black July.

    Every year, for 28 years, the Tamil people and our friends across the world have come together in July to remember a crucial turning point in our history. Black July was the largest and most significant of Sri Lanka’s pogroms, more horrific and unrestrained in its violence than the Nazis’ Kristallnacht.

    In just six days starting on July 23, 1983, Sinhala mobs supported by police and troops attacked the Tamils in the island’s south, killing several thousand and driving the survivors into camps before they were internally deported to the northeast, thereby ethnically cleansing the capital Colombo and other parts of the south.

    Black July was, and remains, hugely symbolic for the island’s future. It was the first act of genocide in Sri Lanka to be internationally recognised - by the International Commission of Jurists, no less.

    This ‘event’, this act of genocide, changed the course of Tamil people’s lives and was a watershed in our history. Yet, amid the numerous ‘analyses’ of the Sri Lanka’s protracted ethnic crisis, this orchestrated project of targeted bloodletting is rarely paid attention beyond serving as a marker for the ‘start of the war’.

    Nonetheless, like the killing fields of 2009, Black July is also a milestone in another development; that of the critical role of accountability in shaping the future, not just of the Tamil nation, but peace and stability in South Asia.

    While there was a tremendous international outpouring of sympathy following the 1983 pogrom, international recognition of state-sponsored murder was not matched by substantive international action.

    To date, there has not been a single prosecution for the murders of thousands of Tamils, either in the domestic or international courts. Notwithstanding the pogrom being recognised as an act of genocide. Notwithstanding there being no limitation on time under the UN convention on prosecution for genocide.

    Black July remains a standing challenge to international commitment to accountability not just in Sri Lanka, but elsewhere.

    Black July is also a challenge to the fundamental core of the island’s ethnic relations. Accountability goes further than bringing one or more perpetrators to justice. It means also an unreserved admission and reform of the systemic factors and social structure that culminated in the pogrom. Recognition – or, rather, the refusal to recognise – is itself a fundamental reflection of Sinhala-Tamil relations, then and now.

    Reflection of societal racism

    For Black July was not the result of the efforts of an errant few thugs as some apologists for the Sri Lankan state insist. It was a result of state action and, above all, mass racism, institutionalised within the state, the political system, and in society.

    This racism was exemplified by the then President who gave state approval for the mobs’ participation with his infamous but astonishingly truthful remark a few days before the pogrom: “I am not worried about the opinion of the Tamil people.. now we cannot think of them, not about their lives or their opinion ... Really if I starve the Tamils out, the Sinhala people will be happy”.

    The state was a crucial enabler of this act of genocide. The Sinhala-dominated army transported and armed the mobs while the police stood by; ruling party cadres accompanied the mobs with voting lists so that no Tamil house or business escaped the torch.

    The ideological underpinnings, meanwhile, came from the Mahavamsa, a story of ageless holy war to be waged by the Sinhala against others, which is part of the curriculum for Sri Lanka’s schools.

    Black July is ultimately, like Kristallnacht and the Holocaust, a manifestation of an all pervasive mass xenophobia that is reproduced year after year by the state and majority polity. Until this dreadful truth about the Sri Lankan society, then and now, is acknowledged there will be no change.

    ‘Explanations’

    As Sri Lanka moves into another, now internationalised, phase of ethnopolitical strife, it is important to focus on the propagandist myths about Black July and earlier anti-Tamil pogroms.

    Firstly, Black July cannot be attributed, as some international analysts do, to popular majoritarian rage at the Tamil demand for secession. Though there were indeed anti-Tamil riots shortly after the 1976 Vaddukoddai resolution, Black July comes five years later. (Nor does this explain earlier anti-Tamils pogroms such as that of 58 that preceded the demand for secession and impunity for which arguably established the pattern for the future.)

    Neither was Black July, as is often claimed, simply mob retaliation for an LTTE attack that killed 13 soldiers – a myth Sri Lanka assiduously promotes and others reproduce. There were many devastating attacks by the LTTE in subsequent months and years as the war escalated, but there was no repeat pogrom.

    This was because following Black July and the rise in Tamil militancy, the state was able to retaliate directly with its armed forces under the guise of ‘counterinsurgency’, this time punishing the Tamils of the Northeast. The long list of government forces’ gratuitous massacres, of entire villages erased, of scores wiped out by a single aircraft, underlines this change from organised mob to official mass violence.

    To return to July 1983, even before the first Tamil was murdered, just as in Kristallnacht and the Rwandan genocide, the event had been planned, the weapons gathered, lists of target homes and business drawn up, and the killers recruited. Only the signal was required.

    Just as the Nazi regime used a shooting at the German embassy in Paris to unleash a pre-planned pogrom, President Jayawardene’s regime used the LTTE attack to unleash Sri Lanka’s most violent pogrom to-date

    Ethnic economics

    Black July is also a milestone in the destruction of Tamil economic capability.

    To quote from the Economist of August 1983, in its article titled the ‘Wages of Envy’: “Two weeks ago Tamils owned 80% of the retail trade and 60% of the wholesale trade in the capital Colombo. Today that trade is gone. Food shortages and inflated prices are one result. The Tamil industrial base, built up over generations, is no more.”

    As the Economist also observed, “Restoring Sinhalese rights is a code phrase for dislodging the Tamils from their disproportionate influence over large sectors of the Sri Lankan economy. This is what the Sinhalese mobs set out to do when they put their torches to thousands of carefully targeted Tamil factories and shops.”

    Since then, there is body of scholarly research that holds that Black July arose as a direct result of the liberalization of the Sri Lankan economy, as a direct result of international capital flows and connections that allowed Tamil businesses to compete and flourish without reliance on state patronage or inclusion in state- or Sinhala-owned businesses.

    Sri Lanka today visibly continues to resist further liberalisation, especially in the Tamil areas. Recognition of economic dynamics is important, because it demonstrates clearly why a mantra of economic development without structural judicial reform and political autonomy will result in nothing but failure.

    And it is important to remember that Sri Lanka, since well before the war began, had been destroyed the centuries-old Tami economic base on the island. Today’s reality is thus not simply a side effect of ‘armed conflict’ but rather a desired outcome of a xenophobic state.

    It is also important to remember that the destruction of the economic foundations of life of a society is part of Raphael Lemkin’s definition of genocide.

    The Nazis also gave by way of justification for their actions, the supposed ‘disproportionate’ economic power of European Jewry. And, not surprisingly, The Economist’s August 1983 article also referred to a familiar term, “a term on the tip of many Sinhalese tongues - the need for a ‘final solution’ to the Tamil problem.”

    Part of the past, and any future

    And, ironically, Black July is a milestone in another then unintended trajectory: the internationalisation of the Tamil struggle for self-rule. Because the pogrom generated the mass flight of Tamils from the island to form today’s global diaspora communities.

    While Black July destroyed the Tamil economic base in the island, it created the now flourishing global Diasporic economic base. While it sought to silence Tamil political struggle ‘for once and for all’, it instead spread Tamil activism across the world. It sought to erase the Eelam Tamil cultural symbolism and identity, but instead rendered them globally recognised. Say ‘Tamil’ anywhere in the world, and it is Sri Lanka, not India that first enters the hearer’s mind.

    The present is thus inextricably linked to the past. And the past will also define the future.

    Until there is accountability for the mass atrocities against the Tamil people, until justice – the bedrock for any lasting peace - emerges, until Tamils are recognised as a people with equal rights and a rightful place in their homeland, the island’s northeast, Sri Lanka will be synonymous with ethnic strife.

    Because despite the anti-Tamil pogroms - what the scholar Sankaran Krishna has rightly termed “annihilatory violence” – and Sri Lanka’s subsequent genocidal violence, the Tamil people have endured and globalised; as has our determination to overcome the violent constraints of the Sri Lankan state.

    Today, we again remember those who were slaughtered in July 1983. In doing so, we also steel ourselves for the long path ahead to freedom, security and the opportunity to reach their full potential for all our people.

  • Tamils endorse self-rule mandate - again

    “The resounding victory consolidates the Tamil National Alliance's status as an authentic representative of ethnic Tamils in negotiations with Rajapaksa's ethnic majority Sinhalese-controlled government in sharing political power and postwar rehabilitation. The party had appealed to voters to give it a mandate to demand self-rule in the Tamil-majority areas.”

    - Associated Press, July 23, 2011. See the report here.

    See the election results here.

    "The military-intimidated elections that took place in the country of Eezham Tamils are a despicable way of exercising democracy or probing public opinion. It was a further torture inflicted on a genocide-affected population. Many were intimidated in contesting and voting. Yet the near-50 per cent that has determinedly voted and overwhelmingly supported the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), has shown what the Tamil nation in the island has in its mind."

    - TamilNet, July 24, 2011. See the full comment here.

  • Reuters: Jaffna Tamils sceptical of development, voting

    Jaffna is still Sri Lanka's most militarised region. Photo AFP

    Extracts from a Reuters report from Jaffna Saturday:

    Tamils say President Mahinda Rajapaksa's post-war development and infrastructure projects in the former war zone in the island's north have yet to address their real concerns and have excluded their participation.

    Voting in Jaffna, as it did in war time, will take place with a heavy military presence.

    Tamils in Jaffna are reluctant to speak in public due to the presence of government intelligence officers and soldiers, and many Reuters approached gave a brusque "No comment."

    "There were a number of elections like this and a change has never happened. I have little doubt that this is also going to be the same," says Thuvaraki Nakeswaran, 22, a journalism student.

    "I will vote for those who think to help Tamils."

    "There is a selfish motive behind the government's development programme and it's Sinhalisation that really has been taking place," a 59-year old man told Reuters on condition of anonymity because he feared reprisal.

    "All the jobs created through these projects are given to Sinhalese people. ... The government has never involved us in the development projects either through providing job opportunities or giving the contracts to Tamils here."

    T. Hariharan, a 55-year-old farmer, complained that the development has not helped bring down the high cost of living or created jobs for the unemployed.

    "Now some agricultural produce is brought here from the rest of the country despite being grown here. That has reduced our profit margins," he said.

    From another Reuters report:

    Citizens in Sri Lanka's old war zone voted for local leaders for the first time in at least a dozen years, in a poll marked by intimidation, vote-buying and skepticism by the mostly Tamil electorate of any kind of post-war political change.

    In at least 20 villages, uniformed men offered 1,000 Sri Lanka rupees (5.61 pounds) for people to sell their voting cards, and beat those who refused, the Campaign for Free and Fair Election (CaFFE) observer group said.

    Elsewhere, government supporters handed out free food near polling stations, and men linked to a government proxy group threatened others to vote for the ruling party.

  • ‘Elections’ in Kilinochchi

    From the Associated Press:

    Sri Lankan Minister Mahindananda Aluthgamage told AP while campaigning in Kilinochchi: This election victory "is of value to the government.  ..It will enable us to tell the world that we have won the confidence of the Tamil people after winning the war."

    The Tamil National Alliance complained to the elections commissioner that a group [it] believes was military, in uniforms and carrying rifles, forcibly collected polling cards used to identify eligible voters in many parts of Kilinochchi on Friday night.

    From TamilNet:

    Causing panic and instilling maximum fear among the voters in Vanni, the occupying Sri Lanka Army let loose its soldiers in civil cloths on house-to-house attack in many of the villages in Kilinochchi district in the early hours of Saturday, curbing the voters inside their houses.

    The armed men in civil, speaking broken Tamil, came in vehicles as early as 3:00 am and attacked the civilians instructing them to stay indoors on the election day.

    Widespread attacks were reported in the villages of Vaddakkachchi, Maayavanoor, Champukku'lam, Koa'naavil, Paarathipuram and Malayalapuram of Ki'linochchi district. Voters and candidates have been subjected to indiscriminate attacks causing injuries.

    Unformed soldiers were seen close to various election booths in Kilinochchi, effectively blocking the voters from entering the booths until noon.

    The SLA did not allow the TNA candidates to be present at the booths.

    Some voters were given 1,000 to 1,500 rupees at the gates of the booths and turned away by the troops in Kilinochchi. Their ballot papers were torn apart by the soldiers.

    23,913 voters are registered in Ki'linochchi. Recently, the SL government dropped more than 300,000 voters names from the list saying most of them had fled the country.

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