• We must never forget what happened 15 years ago' - British MPs offer condolences on Tamil Genocide Remembrance Day

    On the 15th anniversary of the Mullivaikkal genocide, British MP, from across the political ailse, have gathered to call for accountability and justice for the attrocities committed against Tamils during the armed conflict.

    UK Foreign Secretary - Lord Cameron

    In his statement, Lord David Cameron, stressed Britain's focus on improving human rights on the island of Sri Lanka and supporting meaningful progress that will allow those on the island to "remember their loved ones freely".

    His statement further reflected on 2013 travel to Jaffna. The statement reads:

    “As we mark the 15th anniversary of the end of Sri Lanka’s armed conflict, my thoughts are with all those killed and disappeared, and with their loved ones who continue to search for answers [...] I heard first-hand about the devastating consequences of the war when I visited Northern Sri Lanka in 2013. There I made a commitment that the UK would support truth, justice, and accountability for all."

    The British High Commission in Colombo has also released the following statement:

    The UK must take a decisive stance in ensuring justice for the Tamils - Thangam Debbonaire, Shadow Secretary of State

    Thangam Debbonaire, the Shadow Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, said that as much as Mullivaikkal is a day to remember the ones we've lost, the perpetrators must be brought to justice. "The Sri Lankan government has had more than 15 years since the end of the conflict but has frustrated any meaningful investigation and failed to fulfil assurances it gave the international community to deliver justice for Tamil victims," she stressed. 

    Debbonaire called on the British government to support the Tamil community and take a decisive role in ensuring the Sri Lankan government takes immediate action to promote justice and accountability. She emphasised the importance of considering the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights recommendations to refer those responsible for these war crimes to the International Criminal Court.

    Politicians, including Rt Honorable Theresa Villiers, MP for Chipping Barnet and Vice Chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group for Tamils, Steve Tuckwell, MP for Uxbridge and South Ruislip, and Louie French, MP for Old Bexley and Sidcup, shared video messages expressing solidarity and offering condolences to Tamils on Mullivaikkal Remembrance Day. 

    MP for Chipping Barnet - Theresa Villiers

    MP Theresa Villiers marked the memorial reflected on the thousands of Tamils who were killed during the final phase of the armed conflict.

     

    MP for Old Bexley and Sidcup - Louise French

    MP for Uxbridge and South Ruislip - Steve Tuckwell

     

    MP for Harrow West - Gareth Thomas 

    MP for Harrow West, Gareth Thomas, also issued a statement pushing the government to follow the lead of the US and Canada and impose Magnitsky style sanctions on Sri Lankan officials credibly accused of war crimes, such as Shavendra Silva.

     

     

  • Tamil Genocide Remembrance Day marked in Kilinochchi

    Tamils gathered in Paranthan, Kilinochichi to mark the Tamil genocide in which Sri Lanka's military slaughtered tens of thousands of Tamils who were trapped in the No Fire Zones. 

  • Tamils in Batticaloa mark Tamil Genocide Remembrance Day

    Tamils laid flowers at Gandhi Park, Batticaloa, to mark 15 years since the Tamil genocide in which Sri Lanka's military slaughtered tens of thousands of Tamils who were trapped in the No Fire Zones. 

    Representatives from civil society members were present and a letter calling for justice for crimes committed against the Tamils by the government and the release of Tamil political prisoners was handed to the Batticaloa and Trincomalee regional coordinator for Human Rights.

    In Kokkaddicholai Batticaloa, commemoration events were held by members of ITAK at the South West Village office. 

     

  • Tamil families of disappeared demand justice for Mullivaikkal

    Marking the 15th anniversary of the Mullivaikal massacres, Tamil families of the disappeared in Vavuniya organised a poignant vigil today, May 18th, to demand justice for the atrocities committed during the final stages of the armed conflict in 2009.

    The vigil took place in front of the protest tent of the families of the disappeared, where they have been demonstrating for 2,645 days, seeking answers and justice for their loved ones. This enduring struggle was brought into sharper focus as participants joined in commemorating the Mullivaikal massacre and renewing their calls for accountability.

    Mothers of the disappeared were at the forefront of the vigil, carrying flags of the United States and the European Union, symbolising their plea for international intervention and support. Tearfully, they expressed their deep concerns and the ongoing pain of not knowing the fate of their missing family members.

  • Mannar MP leads local Mullivaikkal vigil

    The 15th annual commemoration of Mullivaikal, which remembers the lives lost in the final stages of the genocide, took place today, Saturday (18), across Tamil Eelam. Among the various events held to mark this solemn occasion, a commemorative event was organised by the Mannar branch of Ilankai Tamil Arasu Kadchi (ITAK) at 9:00 am.

    The event in Mannar was held at the Thanthai Chelva statue area in the town centre, under the leadership of Charles Nirmalanathan, the President of the Mannar Branch and a Member of Parliament. The ceremony began with the lighting of a commemorative flame, symbolising remembrance and hope, followed by a silent vigil in memory of those who were killed in the final onslaught.

    Participants were then served Mullivaikkal kanji, a rice porridge offered as a mark of respect and remembrance of survivors and victims of the genocide. The event saw the attendance of political representatives, members of civil society organisations, social activists, and the general public, all coming together to pay tribute to the victims of the genocide.

  • Kanji and calls for unity at Mullivaikkal commemoration in Mannar

    The 15th anniversary of the genocide at Mullivaikal was commemorated today in Mannar, organised by the Tamil National Right to Life Movement under the leadership of its president, V.S. Sivakaran.

    The commemoration started with the lighting of a memorial lamp and laying of a flower garland by local priest Father Avithappar. The event was held at the statue of Thanthai Chelva in the Mannar Bazaar area. Following the garland-laying, attendees were offered Mullivaikkal kanji, a commemorative gesture to honour the memory of those who perished, and the hardship faced by survivors in the final days of the genocide. The ceremony saw participation from political representatives, civil society representatives, social activists, and the general public.

    The Tamil National Right to Life Movement released a statement highlighting the continued struggles faced by the Tamil people since the end of the war. The statement underscored the persistent lack of justice and accountability for the atrocities committed, emphasising that various commissions and political efforts have failed to bring about meaningful change or justice.

    "Fifteen years have passed since the genocide of Tamils and nothing has changed," the statement reads. "Even after 15 years of genocide, no change has happened. Various commissions have become useless. Tamil politicians have not taken any orderly and systematic action to move the genocide issue forward."

    The statement further criticised the ongoing human rights abuses, repression of free speech, military intervention in civil matters, and other forms of aggression by the Sri Lankan government. It lamented the lack of progress on issues such as the fate of the forcibly disappeared and the ineffectiveness of international resolutions and human rights interventions.

    "They came here as human rights defenders from many parts of the world and watched us for fun but did not establish justice," the statement continued. "Those who pretended to be all the dreamers of the world together staged the genocide at Mullivaikal. How can we expect justice from them? There is no history anywhere that this world has ever established justice within the rules and regulations."

    The statement called for unity among Tamils to secure their ethnic, linguistic, natural, and self-determination rights. It emphasised the necessity of holding incompetent Tamil leaders accountable and urged the Tamil community to unite as one nation to achieve justice and honour the memory of those who died in Mullivaikal.

  • Tamils gather at Mullivaikkal to mark 15 years since genocide

    Thousands of Tamils have gathered in Mullivaikkal, Mullaitivu, the area where tens of thousands were massacred by the Sri Lankan government in the final days of the armed conflict fifteen years ago.

    Families of those killed in Mullivaikkal laid their photos around the commemoration ground, adorning flowers and lighting lamps in their memory.

    Govindarasan Punithavathy, who lost her husband in Mullivaikkal in May 2009 lights a lamp to begin the commemoration event.

    Eelam Tamil singer Kilmisha Yaazhisai, winner of last year's Sa Re Ga Ma Pa Lil' Champ competition in India pays tribute at Mullivaikkal

    Agnes Callamard, Secretary-General of Amnesty International lays flowers at Mullivaikkal.

    An installation at Mullivaikkal recreates the horrors of the final days.

  • Flowers scattered at Nandikadal lagoon to mark Tamil Genocide Remembrance Day

    Flowers were scattered at Nandikadal lagoon by Tamil activists including former Northern Provincial Council member Thurairasa Ravikaran to mark Tamil Genocide Remembrance Day. 

    This year marks 15 years since Sri Lanka's genocidal offensive that massacred tens of thousands of Tamils. 

    Ravikaran said that Nandikadal is "a silent witness of the sad final scenes of our glorious history and is filled with our tears and blood of our relatives." 

  • 15 years today - A massacre in Mullivaikkal

    To mark 15 years since the Sri Lankan military onslaught that massacred tens of thousands of Tamils, we revisit the final days leading up to the 18th of May 2009 – a date remembered around the world as ‘Tamil Genocide Remembrance Day’. 

    After providing an initial death toll of 40,000, the UN found evidence suggesting that 70,000 were killed. Local census records indicate that at least 146,679 people are unaccounted for and presumed to have been killed. By examining different sources, including the United Nations, census figures and World Bank data, the International Truth and Justice Project (ITJP) found that the highest estimate of those killed during that final phase could be as large as 169,796. 

    See more at www.RememberMay2009.com, a collaborative project launched in 2019, between the Adayaalam Centre for Policy Research, Tamil Guardian and 47 Roots.

     

    18th May 2009

    A massacre in Mullivaikkal

    The Sri Lankan military overruns the last remaining ‘No Fire Zone’.

    TamilNet receives a final phone call before it loses all communication with its correspondents in the field.

    A US State Department report says there are “accounts from witnesses in the NFZ of SLA soldiers throwing grenades into several civilian bunkers”.

    “Some civilians also reported seeing an army truck running over injured people lying on the road. Later in the day, the SLA brought in earth-moving equipment to bury the bodies that had been lying outside for two days or more. Civilians reported seeing among the corpses injured people who were asking for help, and believed that the SLA did not always attempt to separate the injured and the dying from those who had died.”

    The OISL says,

    “Multiple witnesses described scenes of devastation, with hundreds of bodies of people killed by shelling scattered across areas within the NFZs. Entire families had been killed as bombs landed in bunkers they were sheltering in. Witnesses talked of having to leave dead family members behind as they were further displaced by the shelling. Many witnesses were profoundly traumatized by their experiences and memories of the shelling and the devastation they witnessed.”

    A Sri Lankan soldier described to Channel 4 the grotesque humanitarian violations committed during the final days of the conflict. See a clip of his testimony below.

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    The UN Panel of Experts report says,

    “The dead were strewn everywhere; the wounded lay along the roadsides, begging for help from those still able to walk, but often not receiving it. Some had to be torn away from the bodies of their loved ones left behind. The smell of the dead and dying was overwhelming.”

    Executing the surrendered

    Hundreds of other LTTE cadres, their families and other Tamils civilians who surrendered to the Sri Lankan military were executed. Others have been forcibly disappeared.

    Last year the ITJP released the names of at least 293 people who were seen surrendering to the Sri Lankan military and have seen been disappeared. Among those is Father Joseph, who was last seen boarding a Sri Lankan military bus with several LTTE cadres whose surrender he had facilitated.

    The OISL states,

    “There are also reasonable grounds to believe that a number of LTTE cadres, such as those belonging to the political wing, and other individuals not or no longer taking direct part in hostilities, including children, were also extrajudicially executed.

    “Based on this forensic analysis of photographic as well as video material, witness testimonies and open sources, OISL concludes that there are reasonable grounds to believe that LTTE senior political wing leaders Balasingham Nadesan and Seevaratnam Puleedevan as well as Nadesan’s wife Vineetha Nadesan may have been executed by the security forces sometime after 06:00 on 18 May.”

    See more from the ITJP on this particular case – dubbed the White Flag incident - here.

    Amongst the other emblematic cases are those of LTTE leader Colonel Ramesh who was filmed in Sri Lankan custody, being interrogated by soldiers. Later photographs show he was shot dead. Balachandran Prabhakaran, the 12-year-old son of the LTTE leader Veluppillai Prabhakaran, was also photographed in military custody and then shot dead, as well as Tamil TV presenter Isaipriya.

    Photograph: Balachandran Prabhakaran pictured in Sri Lankan military custody. Later photographs show him dead, with several bullet wounds in his chest.

    Several videos have since emerged, captured by Sri Lankan soldiers on their mobile phones, as they execute naked and tied up Tamils. Some laugh as they shoot the blindfolded Tamils in the head.

    Rape and sexual violence

    The UN Panel of Experts found,

    “Rape and sexual violence against Tamil women during the final stages of the armed conflict and, in its aftermath, are greatly under-reported… Nonetheless, there are many indirect accounts reported by women of sexual violence and rape by members of Government forces and their Tamil-surrogate forces, during and in the aftermath of the final phases of the armed conflict."

    “Many photos and video footage, in particular the footage provided by Channel 4, depict dead female cadre. In these, women are repeatedly shown naked or with underwear withdrawn to expose breasts and genitalia. The Channel 4 images, with accompanying commentary in Sinhala by SLA soldiers, raise a strong inference that rape or sexual violence may have occurred, either prior to or after execution.”

    The OISL concluded,

    One of the most disturbing findings of the OISL investigation has been the extent to which sexual violence was committed, often extremely brutally, by the Sri Lanka security forces, with men as likely to be victims as women. The prevalence of rape, often on repeated occasions, was particularly shocking. OISL did not find any information to suggest that the LTTE was responsible for sexual violence, and different sources indicated that anyone found responsible for sexual abuse or violence risked harsh punishment by the LTTE.”

    “Several witnesses spoke of women being taken away “towards the jungle” by soldiers, allegedly for sexual abuse, as they crossed over into Government-controlled territory. Some said that they then heard screaming. One witness, for example, described a female cadre being taken behind a sentry post by two soldiers, and was visibly distraught and crying when brought back some 20 minutes later. In another case, the source recounted seeing soldiers dragging young women into the bushes and hearing screams. He said that he could also hear gunshots coming from the area. Another witness stated that she heard four or five “voices of girls screaming in the bushes” and calling to be saved as she approached a sentry point.”

    Human Rights Watch reported one woman’s experience.

    300,000 in camps

    At the time, it was thought to be the largest displacement camp in the world. Many Tamils would remain there for years.

    Arunachalam Camp, Menik Farm 19 Aug 2009​

     

    A cover up

    The OISL says it is “concerned by serious allegations that SLA may have destroyed evidence after the end of the conflict, including by digging up and burning bodies that had been buried in the conflict zone”.

    “In addition to those who died in hospitals, multiple witness testimonies recount burying civilian family members or seeing others bury individuals killed in the shelling before they hurriedly fled. There has been no systematic recording of the exhumation of graves since the war. Extensive forensic anthropological expertise will be required to examine those bodies that were buried and may be exhumed as part of investigations. “

    The OISL concluded,

    “The patterns of commission of gross human rights violations and serious violations of international humanitarian law, the indications of their systematic nature, combined with the widespread character of the attacks all point to the possible perpetration of international crimes. These allegations must be promptly, thoroughly and independently investigated and those responsible should be brought to justice.”

     

    17th May 2009 

    Photograph: In this image released by the military, a Tamil man waves a white cloth in the air as he is surrounded by Sri Lankan soldiers in Mullivaikkal on May 17th 2009.

    3,000 dead and 25,000 critically injured

    The Commander of the LTTE’s Sea Tigers Colonel Soosai sends out a message to journalists from Mullivaikkal. As he speaks, artillery shells can be heard landing in the background.

    Translated extracts reproduced below.

    “The last hours are happening, the last hours are happening… a lot of people are dying, heavy fighting is going on. A lot of people are dying… in all areas, corpses are heaping up… the people are not being allowed to leave”.

    “Yesterday, the day before yesterday, through the ICRC in Geneva, we got in direct contact with Geneva, through KP Padmanathan, we contacted Geneva, to ask whether they could, through Irattavaikkal, Mullaithivu Vadduvaakal or through Irattavaikkal, we will let the wounded 25,000 people leave for them to take. We asked them to take the 25,000 people…. But… 25,000.. over 25,000 are in here being wounded and dying… fighting is ongoing - artillery and so on are being used heavily… In the 2km area from all sides they are firing artillery. Civilians are dying.”

    “Until the end we won't cower… but our people are dying. The international community has turned a blind eye… we have been asking to evacuate the 25,000 people. Even now, without delaying further... but now 20-25,000 are wounded… They are in the bunkers which have been surrounded.”

    It was to be his last public message.

    Listen below.

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    Over 3,000 people have been killed over the last 24 hours, with another 25,000 critically injured.

     

    LTTE ‘remove last weak excuse… we have decided to silence our guns’

    The LTTE’s then head of International Diplomatic Relations issued a statement. Extracts below.

    “Despite our plea to the world to save the thousands of people in Vanni from the clutches of death, the silence of the international community has only encouraged the Sri Lankan military to execute the war to its bitter end. In the past 24 hours, over 3000 civilians lie dead on the streets while another 25,000 are critically injured with no medical attention. To save the lives of our people is the need of the hour.”

    “It is our people who are dying now from bombs, shells, illness and hunger. We cannot permit any more harm to befall them. We remain with one last choice – to remove the last weak excuse of the enemy for killing our people. We have decided to silence our guns.”

     

    ‘As many as 100,000 civilians trapped’

    Sri Lanka’s Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapksa announced publicly on May 17 that there were no civilians remaining in the conflict zone.

    However, a leaked US embassy cable reveals the Americans were told by current TNPF leader Gajen Ponnambalam and the Bishop of Mannar that a reported “tens of thousands” remain trapped.

    According to the cable,

    “The Bishop of Mannar… estimated that there were 60,000 to 75,000 civilian left in the zone.”

    “Ponnambalam estimated that there could still be as many as 100,000 civilians.”

    Photograph: In this image released by the military, wreckage is seen burning in Mullivaikkal on May 17th 2009.

    Sri Lanka refuses to accept mediated surrenders or evacuate the wounded

    A leaked US Embassy cable says,

    Ambassador spoke to Gothabaya Rajapaksa on the morning of May 17 to urge him to allow the ICRC into the conflict zone to mediate a surrender.

    Rajapaksa commented, "We're beyond that now".

    Ambassador contacted senior GSL officials throughout the day, including Secretary of Defense Gothabaya Rajapaksa and Foreign Minister Bogollagama, to urge acceptance of a mediated surrender of the remaining Tigers and maximum restraint on the part of the military to avoid further civilian casualties, particularly after the reports from the Bishop of Mannar of continued high numbers of civilians in the safe zone. 

    Rajapaksa refused to accept mediated surrender on the grounds that the fighting was all but over, but said troops had been instructed to accept anyone who wishes to surrender.

     

     

    A leaked US Embassy cable says,

    "Ambassador spoke to Presidential Advisor Basil Rajapaksa to request access for the ICRC to evacuate dead and wounded.  Rajapaksa refused, contending the GSL could manage on its own."

    "Ambassador called Basil Rajapaksa to note the reports of many dead and wounded lying in the conflict zone, and again requested access for the ICRC to the area to evacuate the wounded. Basil energetically refused… Rajapaksa noted that the Army was evacuating wounded civilians by air to Anuradhapura and could deal with the current situation by itself."

     

    Rajapaksa returns to Sri Lanka

    Then Sri Lankan president Mahinda Rajapaksa returns to Sri Lanka.

    Then acting defence minister, Maithripala Sirisena is the first to greet him as his plane lands, garlanding and hugging Rajapaksa. See video below.

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    Surrender negotiations continue

    Basil Rajapaksa is informed by a TNA parliamentarian in touch with the LTTE that there are 3,000 cadres (including the political wing) and 22,000 civilians who wanted to surrender as soon as possible.

    Photograph: LTTE political leader Pulidevan pictured inside Mullivaikkal. This is the last known photograph of him alive.

    See accounts from the day, as told by ITJP, below. See more on their website here.

     

     

    16th May 2009

     

    Photograph above: Sri Lankan Air Force drone footage showing tens of thousands of Tamil civilians in Mullivaikkal. May 16th 2009.

    Soldiers throw grenades into bunkers with surrendering families

    As Tamil civilians attempted to surrender to the oncoming Sri Lankan military, many were slaughtered.

    The US State department quoted an organization’s local sources as reporting,

    “that they attempted to escape the NFZ with a large group of children, coming out with white flags. The SLA started shooting at them and told them to go back to their bunkers.”

    “The sources reportedly saw soldiers throw grenades into two bunkers, and saw tanks going over bunkers and destroying everything inside.”

    The Sri Lankan military’s 58th and 59th Divisions link on the coastline.

    Wounded dying without treatment, doctors surrender

    All government doctors and senior health officials have crossed Sri Lankan military lines. 

    The US State Department reports,

    “… in the final weeks of the conflict, doctors in the Mullivaikkal hospital had to operate with butchers' knives and watered-down anesthetics due to the shortage of medical supplies.”

    “With replacement blood running out, staff filtered what they could from the patients through a cloth before feeding it back into their veins.”

    The doctors were detained and interrogated for several months by the Sri Lankan military.

    Photograph: Sri Lankan Air Force drone footage of the infamous No Fire Zone, where tens of thousands of Tamil civilians have endured heavy artilerry shelling. May 16th 2009.

    TamilNet reports that between 2,000 and 3,000 bodies litter the remaining No Fire Zone. "We need a pause from continued cannon and mortar fire to treat the wounded,” said one volunteer doctor who had remained. “There is a serious need for external medical crew to take care of the seriously wounded, who are allowed to die without medical attention."

    See more Sri Lankan drone footage of the No Fire Zone below.

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    Rajapaksa declares victory

    Sri Lankan president Mahinda Rajapaksa, who is currently in Jordan, declares victory over the LTTE.

    Extracts of his speech are below.

    "The freedom of the Tamil civilians held hostage by the LTTE is near at hand, and the rescue of all civilians in the small patch of land held by the LTTE will be done in 48 hours… my government with the total commitment of our Armed Forces, has in an unprecedented humanitarian operation, finally defeated the LTTE militarily.

    “My government’s precise and well coordinated humanitarian operation has so far succeeded in rescuing over 210,000 civilians”

    “It is worthwhile reminding ourselves over and over again that there are no good terrorists and bad terrorists. Terrorism anywhere is terrorism and should be treated in the manner it deserves.”

    “Pressure to contain military operations when terrorism is being eliminated can be very frustrating as terrorists through such interventions will get another lease of life. Countries that are successfully progressing to eliminate terrorism must be encouraged through assistance for purposes of development by international lending institutions without being ‘put on hold’.”

    See his full speech here

    Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara, the defence ministry spokesman, told Al Jazeera

    "The LTTE have no other choice but to surrender or commit suicide."

    Surrender negotiations continue

    The UN Secretary-General’s Chief of Staff Vijay Nambiar is on the island.

    The Petrie Report states,

    “In the second week of May, LTTE civilian political leaders were in contact… asking that they facilitate a surrender and be present when it took place”

    “When the Chef de Cabinet arrived back in Colombo on 16 May he indicated to the Government that he was willing to travel to the Wanni and be present at the surrender. His offer was refused. The Chef de Cabinet said he was nevertheless assured by senior Government officials that LTTE leaders bearing a white flag could surrender.”

    The LTTE meanwhile issued a statement saying it was “prepared to take all necessary measures that would immediately stop the current carnage” and restated “its categorical position to enter a political process facilitated by neutral international parties and find a meaningful solution to the ethnic crisis.”

     

    15th May 2009

    Photograph : A Sri Lankan soldier, backed by heavy weaponry marches in to Mullivaikkal. May 15th 2009.

    TamilNet’s correspondent reported that the “entire safety zone area is in smoke” as the Sri Lankan military continued its bombardment.

    A volunteer doctor with the LTTE who was treating civilian casualties said,

    "Unless an external humanitarian intervention is carried out without delay, it would be difficult to avert an inhuman catastrophe,"

    "The ICRC has abandoned its missions, there is no food, no proper access to potable water to tens of thousands of civilians who are forced to stay under the bunkers, surrounded by dead bodies and wounded civilians who are dying without medical help,"

    The doctor said he alone had seen at least 800 bodies within the No Fire Zone.

    The Sri Lankan military meanwhile said that 6,000 civilians had crossed over into government-controlled territory.

     

    Photographs above: The Sri Lankan military releases photographs showing Tamil civilians in government controlled territory on May 15th 2009.

    A leaked US embassy cable says,

    “There is no remaining  health care available to the trapped population, and all food and  medical supplies are believed to be exhausted.”

    The cable also notes that the Sri Lankan military “asked if the US had any knowledge of Prabhakaran's whereabouts”.

    See the full text of the cable here.

     

    ICRC Ship turns back

    On 15 May 2009, an ICRC ship approached, but had to turn back “due to the intensity of the fighting” reports the UN Panel of Experts report on Sri Lanka.

    Watch Bernard Barret, Red Cross spokesperson, on Al Jazeera on this day below.

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    UK Secretary of State for International Development, Douglas Alexander, said,

    "I am utterly appalled that the ICRC is no longer able to continue its operations in northern Sri Lanka… Denying this life-saving evacuation and medical treatment is a fundamental violation of International Humanitarian Law… There is simply no justification for allowing such needless suffering."

     

    UN special advisor on prevention of genocide issues statement

    The Special Advisor of the Secretary-General on the Prevention of Genocide Francis Deng said,

    “The two sides should be reminded that individuals can be held personally responsible for war crimes and other international crimes committed in the course of conflict and which attract international jurisdiction”.

    “The Government should allow the United Nations, and other international humanitarian and aid organizations full and unfettered access to all civilians and detainees in places of detention and processing centers, including all sites for the internally displaced.”

    “It is not too late for the Government and the LTTE to put an end to an increasingly brutal conflict and pursue a reconciliatory and peaceful path with the ethnic Tamil population.”

    See his full statement here.

     

    14th May 2009 

    Last hospital stops functioning

    The last remaining makeshift hospital in the conflict zone, set up inside a school, ceases to function from this day as Sri Lankan military shelling becomes heavier.

    The OISL reports,

    “After 14 May 2009, the doctors could no longer go to the hospital due to the intensity of the shelling, and it had to be closed. Dozens of patients who could not be moved were left behind.”

    “Medical personnel were seen putting up a white flag and moved some patients to shelter, then, with the patients who were able to, they started to walk towards the Vadduvakal bridge to the south. Some 150 patients were left behind, as their injuries were too serious for them to be moved and they could not be evacuated by ship.”

    Photograph: Sri Lankan soldiers march into the final conflict zone backed by artillery fire on May 14th 2009.

    It adds that the LTTE gave orders on this day to ensure civilians fleeing the conflict zone would not be stopped.

    “From 14 May, tens of thousands civilians heeded the calls of SLA soldiers with megaphones and slowly walked along the A35 road lined with SLA positions towards the Vadduvakal bridge, which was one of the main crossing points. Most surviving LTTE fighters had discarded their uniforms, laid down weapons and other military equipment and donned civilian dress. Along with other LTTE political cadres, they walked amongst the crowds with their families.”

    The UN Petrie report stated that as “several thousand civilians continued to flee the NFZ, mostly south along the lagoon, some walking, some on small boats or clinging to inflated tyres… Artillery fire reportedly continued from Government forces”.

    Photographs: Above and right. Tamil civilians cross over into Sri Lankan military territory, many by wading across Nandikadal laggon amidst heavy artillery fire. May 14th 2009.

    No respite from the shelling

    The LTTE Peace Secretariat reported that the Sri Lankan military had continued shelling, killing thousands of civilians. Extracts reproduced below.

    “The local aid workers in Vanni Region estimated 1700 civilians have been killed and over 3000 injured in the last 48 hours due to the persistent use of heavy artillery and mortars by the Sri Lankan armed forces.”

    “We call upon the international community to protect the civilians from this ongoing carnage by taking whatever measure required. The LTTE is ready to engage with the International Community in its actions to bring an end to the humanitarian crisis.”

    See the full statement here.

    LTTE welcome Obama’s call for end to shelling

    Meanwhile the LTTE also welcomed a statement by US President Barack Obama made the day  before.

    "We thank and welcome the categorical calls by President Barack Obama for the Sri Lankan Government to take toward alleviating the humanitarian crisis," said B Nadesan, the political head of the LTTE who was inside the final conflict zone.

    "The United Nations Organization and the Security Council has held back in their traditional humanitarian leadership role to take prudent measures and bring about a truce and safeguard Eelam Tamils. Now, the Eelam Tamils earnestly look forward to President Barack Obama to lead the humanitarian intervention."

    “We thank and welcome the categorical calls by President Barack Obama for the Sri Lankan Government to take toward alleviating the humanitarian crisis. Presence and free access for independent humanitarian aid workers and media to all parts of this island, particularly in all areas of the Tamil Homeland, is urgently needed.”

    “We thank President Barack Obama once again, for taking time to shed light on the plight of Eelam Tamils.”

    See the full statement here.

     

    ‘Unimaginable humanitarian catastrophe’

    The US State Department reports that for the third consecutive day “a ferry carrying 25 MT of food was unable to evacuate patients because of continuous heavy fighting”. “The last time any food and medical supplies were offloaded or patients were evacuated was on May 9.”

    "Our staff are witnessing an unimaginable humanitarian catastrophe, " said the ICRC's director of operations, Pierre Krähenbühl.

    " Despite high-level assurances, the lack of security on the ground means that our sea operations continue to be stalled, and this is unacceptable… No humanitarian organization can help them in the current circumstances. People are left to their own devices."

     

    Plans for surrender

    The OISL reported that several senior political leaders within the LTTE had begun to initiate plans to surrender, alongside injured cadres and civilians. It states,

    “This intention was communicated the same day to Basil Rajapaksa, brother of the President.”

    “Later that day, Tamil MPs who were in contact with Nadesan and Puleedevan also reported to Basil Rajapaksa, that the LTTE had laid down arms and ceased fighting. Basil Rajapaksa responded that the army was already making announcements and dropping leaflets that people should hold up white flags and walk towards the military

     

    British parliament debate

    Parliamentarians held a debate on Sri Lanka inside the British House of Commons on this day. During the debate, then Minister of State at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office Bill Rammell said,

    “As the Foreign Secretary made clear in New York on Monday, we strongly believe that the civilian situation in Sri Lanka merits the attention of the United Nations at all levels, including formal discussions by the Security Council.”

    The former Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn stated,

    “There has to be isolation of Sri Lanka because of its refusal to undertake the ceasefire. There has to be a diplomatic and political way forward that brings about that ceasefire and a process of safety.”

    “Are we just going to allow satellite images of this killing to go on and no further action to be taken?... If we cannot act to impose economic sanctions now on Sri Lanka, shame on us.

    Former Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer John McDonnell said there should be “breaking off all diplomatic links, as talking to them (Sri Lankan government) is not working so what is the point of that?”. He added,

    “We should send back their representatives and bring back our diplomats. We should isolate them diplomatically, as has been said.”

    We should also isolate them economically. If that means imposing sanctions, then so be it, and if it comes down to sequestration of Sri Lankan money, wealth and industrial investments in this country, let us do that to show them we mean business.”

    Most members of my Tamil community believe genocide has taken place, and I must concur with themnow because of the numbers of those who have died and been injured, and because of the targeting, in this small area, of this community. We cannot stand by.”

    Former speaker of the House of Commons John Bercow said;

    “I was a member of the five-person delegation to Sri Lanka…Let me be clear… the Government of Sri Lanka are still fundamentally in denial." 

    "They were given to ostentatious and bellicose denunciations of all and sundry who had dared to criticise them. They were extraordinarily rude, and inappropriately so, about the Foreign Secretary. They took umbrage at our raising critical evidence against them. For example, when I mentioned, during a meeting with the President, the UN’s satellite photography, which appeared to repudiate the notion that they had stuck to their 12 February commitment not to deploy heavy weaponry, the President’s response was both to complain bitterly about UN spying and to rant at me about adopting a neo-colonialist posture.”

    allegations of war crimes, crimes against humanity or genocide must be investigated whenever… There can be no question of any amnesty for the Sri Lankan Government, at any time, from consideration of allegations of that kind.”

    See more from Hansard here.

     

    Conditions in camps worsen

    According to the World Health  Organization, cases of chicken pox in the IDP camps have increased  from 600 in February to over 8,000 at present.

    Diaspora protests continue

    Protests by the Tamil diaspora continued across the world.

    Photograph: Tamil protesters at the White House, Washington DC. May 14th 2009.

    In London, demonstrators had occupied Parliament Square for the 38th day in  succession.

    Photograph: Tamil protesters in London. May 14th 2009.

    Our Holocaust

    The Tamil Guardian editorial went to print on this day, 15 years ago. Extracts have been reproduced below.

    “…since January ‘genocide’ has not been some abstract concept. The world has witnessed it every single day since as first dozens, then scores, then hundreds of Tamils were killed and wounded. Even by Sri Lanka’s horrific standards, the rate at which our people have been slaughtered is stunning.”

    “What has also become clear is that the international community has knowingly and deliberately allowed this slaughter to proceed. The ideological fixation with ‘fighting terrorism’ and ‘ending armed conflict’ has meant that in the interests of destroying the Liberation Tigers, any number of Tamil civilians are expendable. Notice that even though it is the Sinhala state that is pounding the civilians, blocking food and medicine and repeatedly blasting the hospital, it is the LTTE that has drawn  the focus of the UN’s condemnation?”

    “Not one Sinhala political actor – not even the UNP, the darling of the liberal West – has condemned the slaughter. It is inescapable that whatever the international community does, the Sinhala state will continue to pose an existential threat to the Tamil people”

    “The sixty-year old struggle for Tamil liberation is entering a new phase.” 

    See the full text here.

     

    13th May 2009

    The same hospital hit again

    More than 100 civilians, including children, medical staff, a voluntary doctor and an Red Cross worker, were killed in Sri Lankan artillery attack that targeted a makeshift hospital for the second time in 24 hours. See more from TamilNet here.

    The ICRC confirmed that one its employees, identified as Sivakurunathan Majuran, was killed alongside his mother in the shelling. The organisation confirmed the hospital had been “hit by shell fire for a third time”.

    In another incident of shelling, at least 39 female patients were also killed at a counselling aid centre for mentally ill women located in the final conflict zone.

    The OISL reports that at the time, UN estimates said there were “more than 100,000 civilians remained trapped within three square kilometres”.

    It added,

    “By 13 May, with shells falling all around, sometimes into the compound, the only treatment that could be given was basic first aid and medication”

    “Letters seen by OISL, consistent with witness accounts, including from United Nations and humanitarian workers, indicate that GPS coordinates of most hospital and other humanitarian facilities, including when they were relocated due to fighting, were transmitted to the Government, the SFHQ in Vavuniya and other Sri Lankan security forces, as well as the LTTE, to ensure that these facilities would be protected from attack.”

    “During that time, the ICRC ship – which at that stage would have been the only possibility for taking patients for life-saving medical treatment - was not able to approach the shore because the shelling and gunfire was continuing.”

    Photographs: The aftermath of a shell attack on May 13th 2009.

    Obama calls for an end to the shelling

    US President Barack Obama stepped out on to the White House lawn to make a statement on Sri Lanka. He called for “urgent action” and for the Sri Lankan government to “stop the indiscriminate shelling that has taken hundreds of innocent lives”.

    See extracts of his statement below.

    “As some of you know, we have a humanitarian crisis that's taking place in Sri Lanka, and I've been increasingly saddened by the desperate news in recent days. Tens of thousands of innocent civilians are trapped between the warring government forces and the Tamil Tigers in Sri Lanka with no means of escape, little access to food, water, shelter and medicine. This has led to widespread suffering and the loss of hundreds if not thousands of lives.”

    Without urgent action, this humanitarian crisis could turn into a catastrophe. Now is the time, I believe, to put aside some of the political issues that are involved and to put the lives of the men and women and children who are innocently caught in the crossfire, to put them first.”

    “I'm also calling on the Sri Lankan government to take several steps to alleviate this humanitarian crisis. First, the government should stop the indiscriminate shelling that has taken hundreds of innocent lives, including several hospitals, and the government should live up to its commitment to not use heavy weapons in the conflict zone.”

    “Second, the government should give United Nations humanitarian teams access to the civilians who are trapped between the warring parties so that they can receive the immediate assistance necessary to save lives.”

    I don't believe that we can delay. Now is the time for all of us to work together to avert further humanitarian suffering.”

    IFrame

    British Foreign Secretary David Miliband meanwhile called the conflict zone “as close to hell as you can get”.

    A Vice Ministerial Troika from the European Union (EU) visited Sri Lanka and visited the Menik Farm camp where tens of thousands of Tamil civilians were being detained.

    Though a statement said the EU is “deeply concerned about the high number of civilian casualties and deteriorating humanitarian situation in Northern Sri Lanka and reiterates its primary concern for the civilians in the conflict zone who are surviving under appalling conditions,” it went on to state,

    “The EU recognises that the current crisis is approaching a final phase with the defeat of the LTTE militarily. The EU acknowledges the efforts and welcomes the commitments made by the Government in assisting its citizens that have escaped the conflict zone.”

    See the full statement here.

     

    The UN Security Council speaks

    The UN Security Council released a press statement on Sri Lanka, its first official reaction on the issue.

    Extracts reproduced below. See the full statement here.

    “The members of the Security Council express grave concern over the worsening humanitarian crisis in north-east Sri Lanka, in particular the reports of hundreds of civilian casualties in recent days, and call for urgent action by all parties to ensure the safety of civilians.”

    “The members of the Security Council strongly condemn the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) for its acts of terrorism over many years, and for its continued use of civilians as human shields, and acknowledge the legitimate right of the Government of Sri Lanka to combat terrorism.

    “The members of the Security Council express deep concern at the reports of continued use of heavy calibre weapons in areas with high concentrations of civilians, and expect the Government of Sri Lanka to fulfil its commitment in this regard.”

    “The members of the Security Council demand that all parties respect their obligations under international humanitarian law.”

    “The members of the Security Council call on the Government of Sri Lanka to take the further necessary steps to facilitate the evacuation of the trapped civilians and the urgent delivery of humanitarian assistance to them.”

    Leaked US Embassy cables reveal the negotiations that took place behind the statement.

    “The UK, France and Austria circulated a draft Security  Council press statement on Sri Lanka in the evening of May  12, and formally introduced the text in Council consultations  under other matters May 13.  They stressed that the Security  Council must react in a formal way to the situation in Sri Lanka.  Strongly supported by the U.S., Croatia, Costa Rica,  Mexico, and for the first time, Uganda and Burkina Faso, the  text was negotiated throughout the day and adopted late on  May 13.”

    “China and Vietnam initially opposed any official  statement by the Council, but eventually joined the  negotiation.  In a change to its previous position, Russia  accepted the idea of a press statement, although it unhelpfully mentioned that the Security Council had not addressed "similar" issues such as Guantanamo, Afghanistan, Gaza, and the August 2008 conflict in Georgia. 

    Russia, China and Vietnam only accepted the press statement after references to reported violations of international humanitarian law and to welcoming the Secretary-General's intention to visit Sri Lanka were stricken from the draft.”

    See the full cable here.

    Also on 13 May, the UN Secretary-General made his fourth phone call since early April to Sri Lanka President Rajapaksa to “reiterate concerns over the protection of civilians”.

     

    UK Special Envoy meets India 

    A leaked US embassy cable from this day reveals that British Special Envoy for Sri Lanka Des Browne told diplomats in New Delhi,

    "I don't think anybody can change events over the next 10 or so days".

    Mr Browne had met with  India’s Foreign Secretary Menon and National Security Advisor Narayanan earlier that week. US Charge d'Affaires Peter Burleigh who was briefed by Browne wrote the cable, with extracts reproduced below.

    “Browne said he expected military operations would end soon and that he hoped a humanitarian catastrophe could be avoided.”

    “While the Sri Lanka government had openly opposed international interference in the conflict,  not least because of the political points it scored, Browne believed it would be willing to accept a role for the international community post-conflict.  "At the end of the day they'll want the money," he noted, adding that the government had expended vast resources conducting the war.”

    “Indian officials told Browne that it was useful to have Sri Lanka on the UNSC's agenda, and to issue periodic Presidential Statements, but that it would be counterproductive for the UN to "gang up" on Colombo; providing Rajapaksa with a rationale for fighting off international pressure would only serve to bolster his domestic political standing.”

    See the full text of the cable here.

    Diaspora protests continue

    Tamil protests continued in capitals around the world.

    In Toronto, thousands of Tamil Canadians took to the grounds of Queen's Park calling for an immediate end to the Sri Lankan military offensive.

    Photographs: Tamils protest in Toronto on May 13th 2009.

     

    12th May 2009

    Photographs: The aftermath of an attack on a makeshift hospital on May 12th 2009.

    Another hospital shelled

    Artillery shells were fired at a makeshift hospital set up at a school in Mullivaikkal, killing dozens.

    HRW reported that nearly 1,000 patients were in the hospital at the time of the attack, including many wounded during the May 9-10 attacks.

    The OISL reported,

    “According to witnesses, at around 8 a.m., on 12 May, shells fired by SLA fell directly in front of the admission ward of the facility, killing at least 20 people, including a district health administrator, medical volunteers, a nurse, and many patients. Many died instantly, others succumbing to injuries, some as a result of lack of medical care and medicine.

    “The shelling occurred at a busy time of the day, with many injured civilians from earlier attacks waiting for their treatment.”

    “(A) witness described how there were many injured patients and many dead bodies all together in one place, people crying all around. Medical supplies were almost exhausted.”     

    One witness said,

    “There were so many dead bodies that they could not be separated.  There were pieces of bodies everywhere…”

    Another said,

    “It was a terrible sight, with people dead and dying everywhere inside the hospital”

    The US State Department report said,

    “One shell landed in front of the admission ward, killing 26 people instantaneously.”

    “Among the casualties was the Administrative Officer of Mullaittivu Regional Director of Health Services (RDHS), who was killed while arranging a patient’s admission to the hospital.”

    “A witness at the hospital said that the shelling came from the direction of Iraddayvaikkal, which GSL forces had recently captured. Another source said that in addition to the 49 killed, scores of others were wounded, and he expected the death toll to rise. Shells were still hitting the area hours later, including one that landed about 150 yards from the hospital.”

    “the smaller NFZ unilaterally declared by the GSL continued to come under attack.”

    Photographs above and right: The aftermath of an attack on a makeshift hospital on May 12th 2009.

    Elements of Sri Lanka’s 58 Division have reportedly entered the new civilian safe zone.

     

    Chemical warfare

    The OISL reports that later the same day,

    “a shell landed near a tent accommodating hospital staff and volunteers, killing a nursing assistant and causing serious burns to six others”.

    “At least two witnesses indicated that at that time, patients were being brought in with unusual burns, one of them describing the different parts of the body of the patients being blackened, with skin like “black charcoal”.”  

    Several allegations of chemical weapons, including white phosphorus, being deployed by the Sri Lankan military have been made. The OISL continues,

    “Likewise, while OISL received allegations of the use of white phosphorous, and witnesses described such incidents, particularly in the last few weeks of the conflict where bombs caused intense burning and blackened skin, it was not able to gather enough information to confirm that white phosphorous was used. OISL therefore believes that these allegations should also be investigated further.”

    Dr Navaratnarajah Uyatchi, who was heading the last hospital in Mullivaikkal until the early hours of May 17thtold the British House of Commons in 2016 that he witnessed the Sri Lankan airforce drop chemical weapons within the vicinity of the hospital.

    Also see our earlier posts:

    Video of Sri Lankan soldier describing use of chemical weapons - India's News X (15 Mar 2014)

    Catholic bishops want international probe into chemical weapon use (09 Jan 2014)

    Phosphorus attacks covered up in hospitals (02 November 2013)

    UN team confirms cluster bomb use in Sri Lanka (26 April 2012)

    More evidence of Sri Lanka’s use of cluster munitions and white phosphorous bombs (27 April 2012)  

    Colombo uses chemical weapons: LTTE (14 April 2009)

                                                              

    US, UK want UN to facilitate 'safe evacuation' of civilians

    Then US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton met with then UK Foreign Secretary David Miliband. A joint statement issued after the meeting said the two, ‘’expressed their profound concern about the humanitarian crisis in northern Sri Lanka caused by the ongoing hostilities’’.

    “They expressed alarm at the large number of reported civilian causalities over the past several days in the designated 'safe' zone”.

    Photograph: Clinton and Miliband meet on May 12th 2009.

    See the full text below.

    “Secretary Clinton and Foreign Secretary Miliband call on all sides to end hostilities immediately and allow for the safe evacuation of the tens of thousands of civilians trapped within the safe zone. The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam must lay down their arms and allow civilians free passage out of the conflict zone. The government of Sri Lanka must abide by its commitment of April 27 to end major combat operations and the use of heavy weapons.”

    “Secretary Clinton and Foreign Secretary Miliband express their appreciation for the continued efforts of the United Nations and their staff on the ground in Sri Lanka. They call on the government of Sri Lanka and the Tamil Tigers to allow a UN humanitarian team to visit the conflict zone to facilitate the safe evacuation of civilians. They urge both sides to allow food and medical assistance to reach those trapped by fighting, cooperate with the ICRC to facilitate the evacuation of urgent medical cases, ensure the safety of aid and medical workers, and permit humanitarian access to all sites where displaced persons are being registered or being provided shelter.” 

    “Secretary Clinton and Foreign Secretary Miliband call for a political solution that reconciles all Sri Lankans, and establishes a meaningful role for Tamil and other minorities in national political life.”

     

    TNA says 150,000 trapped and warns of more bloodshed

    The Tamil National Alliance held a press conference stating more than 3,000 civilians had been killed in the last 3 days alone and warned of further massacre.

    All the TNA MPs in the country, with the exemption of one trapped inside the conflict zone, were present.

    TNA leader R Sampanthan said,

     “there is genocide taking place in Vanni; the entire international community is being silent; we don’t want just statements of condemnations and pledges without any action; the killings of civilians must immediately be stopped; this is our urgent request”.

    The MPs stated that there remain 120,000 to 150,000 civilians inside the conflict zone.

     

    IDPs dying in Menik Farm

    At least 61 elderly Tamil IDPs are reported to have died whilst captive at the Menik Farm IDP camp in Vavuniya, from May 1 to May 11.

    The OISL says,

    “Humanitarian workers reported sometimes seeing the bodies of elderly persons lying on the ground including two in different camps in June 2009. Many elderly were unaccompanied in the camps, in some cases separated from families who were in other camps and not able to reunite with them.  Many witnesses had also described the elderly as being particularly weakened by conditions in the conflict zone.”

    “On 27 April, the Vavuniya District Magistrate Court had ordered that all IDPs over the age of 60 who were sick and without relatives in the IDP camps were to be transferred to homes for elderly people.  The decision was based on his findings that there were more than five deaths each day of elderly persons in the IDP camps due to starvation and malnutrition, and that the deaths of 14 elderly people had been registered in Manik Farm the previous day.”

     

    11th May 2009

    More than 3,200 killed overnight

    The carnage continued in the No Fire Zone with more than 3,200 people killed overnight according to Lawrence Christy, the head of Tamils Rehabilitation Organisation (TRO) Field Office.

    He called on the international community “to intervene to stop the genocide and to provide food and medicine to the besieged civilians”.

    The SLA offensive formations were firing using cannons, 50 calibre machine guns, artilleries, mortar and Multi-Barrel Rocket Launcher (MBRL) guns reported TamilNet.

    The then LTTE head of international relations Selvarasa Pathmanathan released a statement saying,

    "The recent developments in Vanni are very disturbing because they express so vividly a deliberate intention on the part of Sri Lanka and its partners in this war to subject an entire human community to life-endangering conditions of utmost cruelty."

    "We are convinced that this pattern of conduct is a holocaust-in-the making and appeal to the governments of the world and to international public opinion to prevail upon the Sri Lankan Government so as to prevent these current genocidal tendencies from culminating in a collective tragedy."

    The United Nation’s OISL reports that there was only one health facility for all the civilians in the area”. It adds,

    “Between 8 and 12 May the facility was shelled on several occasions as the NFZ3 came under intense daily bombardment by SLA artillery, the air force and the navy.”

    The UN spokesman at the time Gordon Weiss said the shelling over the weekend had caused a “bloodbath”, stating,

    “The U.N. has consistently warned against the bloodbath scenario as we’ve watched the steady increase in civilian deaths over the last few months... The large-scale killing of civilians over the weekend, including the deaths of more than 100 children, shows that that bloodbath has become a reality.”

    Meanwhile Sri Lanka’s Foreign Secretary, Palitha Kohona, said the government took "serious offence" at the remarks by Mr Weiss and had lodged a formal protest. "It is not the role of the UN office to say anything in public to embarrass the host government," Mr Kohona said.

     

    Security Council continues to take no action

    The then British Foreign Minister David Miliband said he was “appalled by the reports that have come out of Sri Lanka over the weekend of mass civilian casualties”, at a press conference at the Untied Nations in New York.

    “No-one can be in any doubt that this is an issue that deserves the international community's attention,” he added, saying that “Our message is a simple one which is that the killing must stop”.

    However, Mr Miliband claimed that there were only “up to 50,000” people trapped in the final conflict zone. Later estimates revealed the actual number to be as many as three times that.

    He went on to state,

    “As you know, the issue [Sri Lanka] has not yet been allowed onto the formal UN Security Council agenda. That's why we will be having a range of meetings either side of today's formal meeting on the Middle East.”

    “I believe very very strongly that the civilian situation in the North East of Sri Lanka merits the attention of the United Nations at all levels.”

    leaked US embassy cable says that Mr Miliband referred to the government in Sri Lanka as "liars".

    IFrame

    Steve Crawshaw of Human Rights Watch commented,

    “If the Security Council stays silent on this issue any longer, it will be a failure of historic proportions… It is already late, but lives can still be saved”.

    A leaked US embassy cable highlights notes of the meeting, hosted by the UK and French Foreign Ministers with like-minded Security Council members. The UN Secretary-General and Council members discussed Sri Lanka during their monthly lunch, it adds.

    "The Foreign Ministers of the UK, France, Austria and Costa Rica, as well as the U.S. and Mexico all strongly supported SC action, with Russian FM Lavrov on the defensive. Lavrov said the situation in Sri Lanka is a humanitarian disaster, but not a threat to peace and security. He said other fora in the UN were better suited to address this issue. He added that there were plenty of similar instances when the Security Council did not act. China said that the Security Council's informal meetings on Sri Lanka had made a difference.

    Ambassador Rice disagreed, and said the meetings had not yet made a difference; displaced persons were not receiving help, and the shelling continued despite government assurances to the contrary. On the margins of the meeting, the French said they intend to bring Sri Lanka to the Security Council this week, and would push for a product."

    See the full text of the cable here.

     

    Joint Letter to Japanese Prime Minister on Sri Lanka

    Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, International Crisis Group and the Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect wrote a joint letter to Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso calling on his government “to support efforts for the [United Nations] Security Council to keep the situation in Sri Lanka under close and regular review and to consider the situation in Sri Lanka formally at the Security Council.”

    Extracts reproduced below.

    "If the world continues to look away from the suffering of civilians in Sri Lanka, as it has largely done until now, it will be a failure of historic proportions. We believe that Japan, a powerful player on the humanitarian stage and the largest international donor to Sri Lanka, has an important role to play in saving countless civilian lives, as well as to implement aid policies that ensure sustainable peace, human rights and development in Sri Lanka. It is time for Japan to show that it is prepared to shoulder its responsibilities." 

    "Meetings in recent weeks have been held only informally in basement rooms, deliberately kept out of the Council’s main chamber, because of the reluctance of some member states. We believe this must change and formal meetings of the Security Council must be held urgently so that the Council can take the necessary measures to address the humanitarian and human rights crisis." 

    "The Council should make clear that both the government and LTTE would be held accountable for their actions, and create a UN commission of inquiry to examine violations of international humanitarian law by both sides." 

     

    Tamil diaspora continues protests

    Protests continued in capitals across the world, where the Tamil diaspora had taken to the streets to demand a ceasefire.

    In Washington DC, more than two hundred American Tamils protested in front of the White House.

    Photographs: Tamils protest outside the White House on May 11th 2009.

     

    10th May 2009 

    Thousands killed in one day 

    As many as 2,000 civilians were reportedly killed in a barrage of artillery fire by the Sri Lankan military throughout the day, reports TamilNet.

    “Dead bodies are found in bunkers and inside the tarpaulin tents,” TamilNet added.

    Rescue workers had counted at least 1,200 bodies with fears that many more had been undiscovered.

    See more here. (Graphic images)

    Photographs: The aftermath of intense shelling by the Sri Lankan military on May 10th 2009.

    The US State Department quoted a local source in the NFZ as reporting that “a congested civilian area was under heavy shell attack with many houses and vehicles burning”.

    “Many civilians’ temporary tarpaulin houses were struck by shells, and many hundreds of civilians were killed.”

    “A local source for an organization also reported heavy shelling with an estimated 1,000 killed and another estimated 1,000 injured. Embassy Colombo also reported that heavy shelling occurred in the NFZ, killing at least 300 civilians.”

    “More bodies were on the beaches and along road sides. The source said that heavy arms appeared to have been fired from government-controlled territory into a mainly civilian area under LTTE… The death toll is thought to be closer to 1,000; many of those killed would have been buried in the bunkers where they were slain, and many of the gravely wounded never made it to the hospital for treatment.”

    A leaked US embassy cable notes,

    The Embassy has credible information that the Sri Lankan Air Force conducted an air strike south of the civilian safe zone yesterday afternoon, May 10. 

    Read the full cable here.

    Satellite evidence

    Satellite imagery analysed by the American Association for the Advancement of Science at the request of Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International showed evidence of bomb shell craters, destroyed permanent structures, mortar positions, and 1,346 individual graves, from May 6th to May 10th 2009.

    IDP tents inside the No Fire Zone on May 6th (left) and May 10th (right). There is almost complete removal of all structures that were present.

    Red arrows indicate craters from possible artillery or air fire from May 6th (left) and May 10th (right).

    Further analysis of crater morphology shows evidence of fire in a similar tactic to that described in a US Army field manual.

    Possible mortar craters landing in a 'Lazy W' formation (left) as detailed in a US military manual (right).

    Possible mortar craters landing in a 'Six Star' formation (left) as detailed in a US military manual (right).

     

    'The Tamil people are dismayed’

    The LTTE released a statement stating,

    “At this very moment (Sunday, May 10 2009), the Sri Lankan Government has unleashed its ferocious military aggression against the hapless Tamil civilians living in the so-called "Safe Zone" in Vanni, Sri Lanka. More than 2,000 innocent civilians have been killed in the last 24 hours. The wholesale bombardment by Sri Lankan planes and shelling on a densely populated, non combatant civilian safe zone is state terrorism and a war crime.”

    “The international community and UN have an obligation to protect the Tamil people facing genocidal aggression directed in a manner against all international humanitarian laws. It is clear that the Sri Lankan Government has prevented all aid agencies and humanitarian organisations from visiting the conflict zone. The Tamil people are dismayed that the United Nations and the International Community have failed in their obligations to protect the endangered civilians.”

    “Every passing day is resulting in the loss of countless number of civilian lives and alienation of the entire Tamil community.”

    'It is a genocidal war'

    Catholic Priest Father Francis Joseph writes to the Pope from inside the No Fire Zone, calling on the Church to break its silence on the massacre of Tamils. The father, who was later detained by Sri Lankan security forces after passing through a military checkpoint in May 2009, has not been seen since.

    Extracts of his letter are below.

    Last night’s toll of the dead is 3318 and of the injured more than 4000. It was a barrage of artillery, mortar, multi-barrel shelling and cluster bombs…

    The cries and woes of agony of babies and children, the women and the elderly fill the air that was polluted by poisonous and unhealthy gases…

    I deem it my duty to point my finger at the Church for its silence while some of the countries like USA, UK, France and some of the European Union countries and others, even the UN have voiced their dismay at the way the Sri Lankan Government is conducting a war to annihilate the Tamils…

    Let it be known that under the guise of eradicating terrorism, the Sri Lankan Government is waging the war to annihilate the Tamil nation. It is a genocidal war.

    See the full text of the letter here

    Tamil diaspora continues protests

    Protests continued in capitals across the world, where the Tamil diaspora had taken to the streets to demand a ceasefire.

    Photograph: Tamil Canadians protest on the Gardiner Expressway on May 10th 2009.

    Tamils in Canada including women and children, held a peaceful protest, blocking the main Gardiner Expressway that runs through the city.

    Sri Lanka deports 3 British journalists 

    "It's not often that the most powerful man in the country rings you," Channel 4's Nick Paton Walsh said. 

    "I'd spoken amicably to defence secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa 45 minutes earlier about getting some better access to Sri Lanka's 25 year war. But this time he was calling me, and seemed to have remembered something." 

    "Who is this? You rang me earlier? Is this Channel 4? You have been accusing my soldiers of raping civilians? Your visa is cancelled, you will be deported. You can report what you like about this country, but from your own country, not from here," Gotabaya told Walsh. 

    India Congress President Sonia says now 'people moved to safer places'

    India's Congress President Sonia Gandhi, is in Tamil Nadu, where she says, "our government had done everything possible to bring an end to the hostilities and it was due to our resolute efforts that Sri Lanka announced conclusion of combat operations and people moved to safer places."

    "Our ultimate goal, as Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had said and as has been the stand of the Congress in the last 30 years, is to secure for the Tamils equals rights and status within the framework of the 1987 Indo-Sri Lanka accord."

     

    9th May 2009 

    ‘Artillery from all directions’

    The US State Department quoted a local as stating that the No Fire zone “received artillery fire from all four directions for over 12 hours”.

    “He estimated that over 1,000 were killed and another 1,000 injured.”

    Human Rights Watch reported two witness testimonies from the day.

    "K. Kanaga," a 35-year-old woman whose name is withheld for security reasons, said that around 7 p.m. on May 9, she and 15 others were hiding in a bunker that they had built under a tractor when a shell struck the tractor. "If it hadn't been for the tractor, we would have all been dead," she said. About eight to 10 shells struck the immediate area, which was populated with tents and improvised bunkers. Kanaga's 45-year-old cousin was staying in a tent nearby; she never reached the bunker and was killed in the attack. "Many other people were injured as well, but I don't know how many," Kanaga said. "I could hear their screams."

     

    "R. Raman," 29, said that he and his family had been hiding in their bunker in Mullaivaikal - a dug-out trench without any cover - for several days. "We were being attacked from all sides," he said. "My wife and I only left the bunker to get food and water for our three children."

    Early in the morning on May 9, a shell struck one of the tents closeby, killing Raman's 15-year-old nephew and wounding his nephew's older brother and sister. Raman believes that the shell came from Sri Lankan army positions and may have been targeting LTTE forces that were deployed in the jungle about 100 meters away. Several shells struck the tented area inhabited by displaced civilians.

    Photographs above: A makeshift hospital pictured on May 9th 2009.

    Barrage hits NFZ as last ICRC ship leaves

    The Sri Lankan military launched a barrage of heavy weapon fire in to the No Fire Zone as the last ICRC-chartered ferry that visits the conflict area leaves.

    “Fighting also made it impossible for the ferry to approach the shore on the previous day, 8 May,” said an ICRC press release.

    "The plight of the people remaining in the combat area is desperate, " said  ICRC's head of delegation in Sri Lanka, Paul Castella.

    "We need unimpeded access to them in order to save lives. "

    Head of Sri Lankan army visits Vanni

    Then Commander of the Army Lieutenant General Sarath Fonseka flew to Vavuniya to meet with senior military commanders and “review the latest developments of the security situation in Vanni areas,” reports the military.

    Photograph: Sarath Fonseka visits the Vanni, with other senior military officials on May 9th 2009.

    "Army Commander, after being received by Commander Security Forces Headquarters Wanni (SFHQ-W) Major General Jagath Jayasuriya, was conducted to the SFHQ auditorium where he met senior ground commanders and discussed the present security situation in Wanni. He also issued further instructions to his ground commanders," said an official  military website.

    British Channel 4 journalists arrested 

    Sri Lanka arrests three British journalists from Channel 4 News, after they compiled a report on the conditions of war refugees and alleged sexual abuse in camps for those who fled the northern war zone. 

     

    8th May 2009

     

    Photograph above: Shells land inside the No Fire Zone on May 8th 2009.

    With GPS co-ordinates, Sri Lanka attacks hospitals

    The Sri Lankan military stepped up its barrage of the No Fire Zone with heavy shelling reported, including with cluster munitions.

    The US State Department quotes a HRW source in the NFZ who “witnessed an SLA drone conduct reconnaissance above the Valayanmadam hospital”.

    “Shortly thereafter the hospital was attacked, killing four or five people including a doctor and wounding more than 30. Several sources informed HRW that each time a hospital was established in a new location, GPS coordinates of the facility were transmitted to the Sri Lankan government to ensure that the facility would be protected from military attack. Witnesses said that on several occasions, attacks occurred on the day after the coordinates had been transmitted.”

     

    Final ‘No Fire Zone’ declared

    The Sri Lankan government declared the third and final No Fire Zone.     

    The OISL reports “tens of thousands of civilians were squeezed into this tiny area”.

    “The SLA force now confronting the LTTE was probably in excess of 50,000 soldiers, with significant heavy weapons capability and air supremacy… The SLA was on one side of a large lagoon, the LTTE on the other, the civilians being at some distance behind the LTTE.

    However, witnesses, described to the OISL “continuous shelling and devastation as the shells hit the ground”. One source told the OISL,

    “Firing from the SLA would pass over the LTTE front line “and impact on the civilians behind it”.”

    “He said that everyone was squeezed into a small piece of land and practically each time a shell fell, people would be injured and killed. Another witness said he saw nine people being killed when a shell hit a mango tree by a well where they had gathered. One saw a woman killed when a shell hit her bunker… she had a sewing machine and used to make cloth bags to fill with sand for the bunker. “

    Often, people fled when family members were killed – they had no time to mourn or bury the dead…”  Another witness described seeing more than a 100 dead bodies, including children, near his bunker.”

    Meanwhile General Shavendra Silva, then Commander of the 58th Division stated,

    “At the last stages of the operation we just did not go blind, everything was planned through UAV pictures and where we exactly knew where the civilians and the LTTE were and where we found that at least a little bit of confusion whether the civilians are too close to the LTTE cadres we had to resort to other means and buy time to separate the two parties.”  

    No food, no medicine

    The US State Department reported said that “local sources in the NFZ reported that a supply ship had arrived but was forced by the GSL to return to Trincomalee with its cargo of food and medicine still on board. The sources reported that the SLN had refused to allow them to offload the cargo, and then began firing on the beach.”

    “An organization reported that shipments of food and medicine to the NFZ were grossly insufficient over the prior month and that the GSL reportedly delayed or denied timely shipment of life-saving medicines as well as chlorine tablets. A source in the NFZ reported that patients were brought to the hospital for fainting attacks attributed to their lack of food.”

    “Mothers were crying at the hospital and asking for milk powder. They had not eaten and were unable to feed their children, but the hospital did not have milk powder in stock.”

    Photographs: The aftermath of attacks inside the No Fire Zone on May 8th 2009.

    Heavy rains at internment camps

    Rains in Vavuniya, where hundreds of thousands of Tamils were being interned, cause mass flooding.

     

    7th May 2009

    Photograph from US State Department report of “characteristic cluster bomb smoke cloud from a shelling on May 7 in Mullivaikkal".
     

    More cluster bombs hit No Fire Zone

    The Sri Lankan army launches cluster bombs inside the No Fire Zone, one of several such attacks in the last few months.

    In the UN’s OISL report, witnesses “described the objects exploding in mid-air and releasing many smaller objects in the air before impacting the ground”.

    “Cluster munitions release bomblets over a wide area above a target that explode on impact. However, indirect fire munitions may also be configured to explode into fragments overhead.  OISL believes that given the persistent nature of the allegations of cluster munitions, further investigation needs to be carried out to determine whether or not they were used.”

    Photographs leaked in 2016 appear to confirm the use of cluster bombs by the Sri Lankan government. The photographs showed demining teams excavating cluster munitions from Kilinochchi and Chalai in Mullaitivu, sites of heavy bombardment by Sri Lankan forces.

    Deminers unearth an RBK-500 AO-2.5RT cluster bomb near Chalai. Photograph: The Guardian/Together Against Genocide

    A former Mines Advisory Group (MAG) employee told the Guardian that cluster bombs had been found in a “densely civilian-populated area” in one of the ‘No Fire Zones’ near Puthukudiyiruppu.

    Previously the Sri Lanka Campaign for Peace and Justice released a series of witness stories from the final war zone, which included testimony of a cluster bomb attack.

    “The main bomb explodes in the air and splits into many pieces,” the witness said. “One kind of cluster bomb, used in Iranaipalai, produced colorful ribbons. Children were attracted and picked pieces up; as they handled the pieces they exploded.”

    In a statement released weeks earlier, the Tamil National Alliance said,

    “The use by the Sri Lankan State of internationally banned weapons, such as cluster bombs and chemical weapons, has been a characteristic feature of the current phase of the war being waged against the Tamil people.”

    “The Tamil people in the island of Sri Lanka are clearly being subjected to Genocide.”

    Also, see more in our feature: Leaked photos confirm cluster bomb use in Sri Lanka (19 Jun 2016)

     

    LTTE commits to full support of ICRC

    The LTTE released a letter from its Political Head Quarters, stating that it “reiterates its full commitment and support to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)”.

    “We also wish to reiterate our organisation’s total commitment to the safety and security of the members of the ICRC in carrying out its humanitarian work and its other mandated activities,” it added. “Please take this letter as the necessary security guarantees from the LTTE for performing the work of the ICRC.”

    “We are aware of the GOSL and its armed forces’ attempts at deliberately launching military manoeuvres in LTTE controlled areas to thwart the activities of the ICRC. We take this opportunity to express our deep appreciation of all the invaluable work done by the ICRC with regards to the immensely suffering Tamil civilian population due to the genocidal war waged against the Tamil people by the Government of Sri Lanka (GOSL).”

    Photographs: A crater from a shell attack on May 8th 2009.

    Small scale ICRC evacuations continue

    Meanwhile, the ICRC said that "heavy fighting is taking place near the medical assembly point at Mullavaikkal, which puts the lives of patients, medical workers and ICRC staff at great risk."

    495 Tamils were evacuated from the final conflict zone by boat to Trincomalee and Pulmoddai.

    An ICRC evacuation taking place in April 2009.

    Jacques de Maio, the ICRC head of operations for South Asia, in Geneva said, "not all the wounded could be evacuated today, and it is of the utmost importance that more evacuations take place over the coming days".

    "The food and medical supplies that have been delivered remain insufficient to cover the basic needs of the people there."

     

    Tamil human rights activist abducted in Colombo

    Stephen Sunthararaj was abducted by five men whilst travelling in his lawyer’s car in the Sri Lankan capital, Colombo. Stephen, an activist with the Centre for Human Rights and Development, is a father of three children who were all under ten years of age when he was abducted.

    Diaspora protests continue

    British Tamil students protest in London in 2009.

    Meanwhile, protests in capitals across the world by the Tamil diaspora continue. In London, a student protester Siva told TamilNet.

    “The whole world is now well aware of the plight of the Tamils under the chauvinistic Sinhala-dominated Sri Lankan state. Hundreds of Tamils being massacred or starving to death each week, Sri Lanka’s slow genocide has is accelerating. Yet the continued inaction by some powerful states, while other states support Sri Lanka, is allowing this to continue.”

    British Tamil students added,

    “what is needed right now is action by the international community, not merely words of sympathy.”

     

    6th May 2009

    Hospitals hit by Sri Lankan army 

    Photograph taken on May 6th 2009 inside the No Fire Zone.

    A US State Department report says that on the 6th of May,

    A local source reported that the remaining hospital facilities were continually hit by SLA shelling, even though their locations had been carefully reported to the government.

    Mano Ganesan, the leader of the Democratic People's Front (DPF), also responded to a statement from the UNP’s Palitharanga Bandara who called for the continued use of heavy weapons, including inside the No Fire Zone, where tens of thousands of Tamil civilians were sheltering.

    “News from Vanni show that heavy weapons are being used in the war on the ‘safe zone’ in Vanni,” he said.

    “Why should Palitharanga Bandara urge the government to use heavy weapons on the ‘safe zone’? Is UNP unaware of the presence of innocent Tamils there? Why this racism against the Tamils? This is something utterly shameful. The UNP will lose its Tamil votes in the future polls.”

    Photograph: A woman who was evacuated from the conflict zone, receives medical attention on May 6th 2009.

     

    More deaths from starvation

    Dozens of people are reported to have died from starvation in the preceding weeks, particularly the elderly.

    The US State Department says that,

    "An organization’s sources expressed their belief that the GSL was deliberately preventing delivery of medicine to the NFZ and reported that ―over the last week, at least 20 people have died due to starvation and lack of medication"

    Deaths are occurring not just inside the No Fire Zone, but also at detention centres in Vavuniya, where on May 4th, ten elderly persons reportedly died.

                           

     

     

    5th May 2009

    Photograph: Inside the final conflict zone, pictured on May 5th 2009.

    Deaths from starvation add to crisis

    As the Sri Lankan military continued its shelling of the No Fire Zone, the LTTE called on the international community to facilitate the delivery of urgent humanitarian aid.

    Extracts from their press release follow:

    Faced with imminent deaths by starvation directly attributable to the Sri Lankan regime’s deliberate denial of food and humanitarian assistance to the Tamil people, the Tamil Diaspora has initiated measures to deliver humanitarian aid direct to the Tamil people in the Vanni/Mullaitivu region. The LTTE calls on the international community to support these actions to deliver humanitarian aid.

    We draw attention to the nine deaths by starvation in the last few days and the real fear that the death toll could rise exponentially in the coming days. 

    The situation of the Tamil people who are being subject to shelling and bombings has been made much worse by the deliberate withholding of food and medicine. The UN and the rest of the International Community has a moral obligation to support this initiative by the Tamil Diaspora.

    Photograph: People queue for food inside the final conflict zone, pictured May 5th 2009.

    The Tamil Rehabilitation Organisation reported that of the estimated 2500MT of food that was needed per month, only 60MT was allowed through by the government for the whole of April.

    It went on to add,

    "Dead bodies are being taken by TRO volunteers for burial or cremation. Dead bodies have to be collected from shelters and bunkers. When dead bodies are brought to the hospitals or when the wounded people died in the hospital as the treatment failed they also have to be picked up. 

     

    A State Department report quoted sources as stating “various sections of Mullivaikkal were subject to air attack, artillery fire and cluster bombs”.

    It added, “a source in the NFZ reported that there were no antibiotics available to treat illnesses”.

    Prof Francis Boyle writes that "since the outset of this latest crisis in January, the GOSL has exterminated about 7000 Tamils in Vanni, certainly a "substantial part" of the Tamil population in Vanni and Sri Lanka.”

    “If not stopped now, the GOSL's toll of genocide against the Tamils could far exceed the recent horrors of Srebrenica."

    "A generation ago the world turned away from the Nazi genocide against the Jews--and lived to regret it. Humanity is at a similar crossroads today.”

     

    British MPs conclude trip to Sri Lanka

    A delegation of British MPs conclude their visit to Sri Lanka, with a press conference that slams the LTTE and calls on Sri Lanka to “use maximum restraint in their ongoing operations”.

    "The LTTE has ignored repeated calls for the release of these civilians," said Des Browne. "We welcome the Government's agreement to allow the UN to visit the conflict zone to assess the humanitarian needs of the people there and to plan the evacuation of the remaining civilians... We spoke to a number of people in the camps who expressed their genuine relief at having escaped the LTTE and reached a place of safety. It is clear that IDPs in camps are much better off than their friends and relatives who remain in the conflict zone."

    "The lack of independent reporting from the conflict zone is oxygen to LTTE propaganda and generates unhelpful speculation," said John Bercow. 

     

    Army advances into No Fire Zone 

    Wikileaks cables reveal “elements of the 53 Division” have entered the No Fire Zone. It adds “53 Division is advancing south on an axis west of the A35 road and east of the Nanthi Kadal Lagoon, while 58 Division is moving south on an axis east of the A35 and west of the coast.”

     

    4th May 2009

    The bombing continues

    A US State Department report noted a source inside the No Fire Zone as stating the Sri Lankan military was “engaged in daily shelling and bombing of the NFZ, killing an estimated minimum of 100 people per day”.

    Several attacks on Mullivaikkal Hospital led to patients not being able to receive surgery or any other forms of treatment, the State Department report added.

     

    Photographs: Above, civilians shelter from Sri Lankan military attacks pictured on May 4th 2009.

    Hundreds of Tamils arrested

    Meanwhile the Sri Lankan military continued its roundup of Tamils across the island. In Amparai 160 Tamils were arrested by Special Task Force (STF) commandos and taken into police custody. In Colombo the military arrested 6 further Tamils, whilst 76 Tamils held in detention centres in the Jaffna peninsula were taken by the military to the Thellippazhai ‘rehabilitation centre’.

     

    TAG calls for ICC investigation

    Tamils Against Genocide (TAG) wrote to then-Chief Prosecutor at the International Criminal Court (ICC) Luis Moreno-Ocampo, urging him to investigate senior Sri Lankan military and political officials for war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide.

    Bruce Fein, counsel for TAG, wrote

    I am writing to urge you to open investigations under the Rome Statute of Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa, Sri Lankan Defense Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa, Sri Lankan presidential adviser and Member of Parliament, Basil Rajapaksa, and Sri Lankan Army Commander Sarath Fonseka.

    The quartet should be investigated for war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide of Sri Lankan civilian Tamils unconnected with the conflict between the government and the LTTE.

    The Government of Sri Lanka is unwilling to investigate itself.

     

    Photograph supplied on 4th May 2009 inside Menik Farm, where hundreds of thousands of Tamils were to be detained by the Sri Lankan military.

    3rd May 2009

    Photographs: Above and below - Tamil children with signs of acute malnourishment, pictured inside the final conflict zone.

    Horrendous act of genocide’

    The LTTE’s Political Head B Nadesan accused the Sri Lankan government of deliberately carrying out a "horrendous act of genocide", with their restriction on food, medicines and humanitarian access to Tamil civilians in the final conflict zone.

    See more from TamilNet here.

    The OHCHR Investigation on Sri Lanka (OISL) found that,

    “Witness testimonies and other documentation refer to many dying of starvation, exhaustion or lack of medical care in addition to those killed by shelling and shooting”.

    “It remains to be investigated how many people - particularly the most vulnerable such as the elderly and children - died as a result of lack of access to food and medical care.”    

    A medical professional was quoted by the OISL as describing the situation in the final conflict zone.

    “One of the children who was 18 months old was suffering severe lethargy, she could not stand up or walk and had to be carried all the time. Even though we favoured the children with food, they showed signs of muscle wastage in their legs, they had distended stomachs and their ribs where showing through their skin where the normal layer of fat in a child of this age had disappeared.”

     Another witness said,

    “Everyone was starving. I could see the children were malnourished and the elderly were very weak.”

     

    The OISL went on to state,

    “A senior United Nations official said they were amongst the worst cases of malnutrition he had ever seen”.

     

    The attacks continue

    A US State Department report quotes a local source as reporting the Sri Lankan military, as part of a multi-barrel shell attack, launched over 40 shells in the vicinity of civilians living in an area between the Mullivaikkal Pillayar temple and the sea.

     

    Photographs taken on May 3rd 2009, in the aftermath of a Sri Lankan MBRL attack.

    2nd May 2009

    Hospital bombed twice

    The aftermath of a Sri Lankan military attack on a hospital, which was hit twice on the morning of 2nd May 2009.

    The only remaining hospital in Mullivaikkal was attacked twice by the Sri Lankan military on the morning of the 2nd of May 2009, with at least 64 people killed and a further 87 injured.

    A US State Department report quoted a local source as stating the hospital was shelled twice, once at 9 a.m. and again at 10.30 a.m. The main outpatient department was hit as well as a bunker in the immediate vicinity to the hospital. Human Rights Watch later reported these attacks, noting that the second attack also resulted in dozens of casualties.

    The OHCHR Investigation on Sri Lanka quoted a witness describing the scene:

    “There were many bodies everywhere and I could still smell the smoke from the shells hanging in the air. The smell of blood and the screaming from the injured was overwhelming. There were many women and children dead.”

    Human Rights Watch would go on to state that there were “at least 30 attacks on permanent and makeshift hospitals in the combat area since December 2008”.

    Photographs: Above - The aftermath of a Sri Lankan military attack on a hospital, which was hit twice on the morning of 2nd May 2009.

    LTTE calls once more for a ceasefire

    The LTTE released a statement calling once more for a ceasefire to end the humanitarian crisis. Extracts of their statement below.

    “May, I take this opportunity to draw attention to our unilateral announcement of a cease fire on 26th April and our position that only such a ceasefire can end the humanitarian crisis. We are ready to engage in the process to bring about a ceasefire and enter into negotiations for an enduring resolution to the conflict.”

    We call for an international monitoring mechanism that can ascertain for itself the plight of civilians who have sought sanctuary in the areas under our control.”

    “Given the political ideology that drives the Sri Lankan state, there is little reason to hope that it would, on its own accord, consider any accommodation with Tamil aspirations. Indeed this is the bitter lesson learnt by the Tamil people during the last 60 years following the departure of the British in 1948. We are convinced that this particular phase of the conflict is an attempt to eradicate a distinct Tamil identity. It is in the face of this situation that we seek the recognition and the support of the international community for our struggle. It is a struggle for democracy and an enduring peace based on our aspirations as a people. Should the Sri Lankan regime be permitted to continue with its ultimate objective of imposing a ‘final solution’ through military means, we have no doubt that it will destabilize the region.

    See more from TamilNet here.

     

    Protests in Tamil Nadu, Indian military vehicles attacked

    Indians in Tamil Nadu protested against the Sri Lankan military’s offensive and attacked a convoy of military trucks they accused of transporting weapons to the Sri Lankan government.

    IFrame

    Paramilitary operatives kill 8-year-old girl in Batticaloa

    Meanwhile, paramilitary cadres attached to the Pillaiyan and Karuna groups are accused of killing 8-year-old Thinusika Satheeskumar in Batticaloa, who was abducted whilst on her way home from school earlier in the week. Her body was found dumped in a well.

    Tamil paramilitary groups aligned with the government continue to operate with impunity in the region, with the Sri Lankan military providing them continued protection.

     

    1st May 2009

    A night of heavy shelling

    The No Fire Zone, photographed on 01 May 2009.

    Approximately 200 civilians sheltering at Mullivaikkal were rushed to the hospital as the Sri Lankan military bombarded the area on the night of the 30th of April. Dozens were killed.

    Earlier that week the LTTE said the Sri Lankan military had fired at least 5,600 shells in the space of 24 hours, killing hundreds.

    See more from TamilNet here.

    The aftermath of a shell attack took place on the night of 30th April 2009. 10 civilians were killed on the spot in this shelling.

    A young boy stands by a makeshift bunker that was hit by artillery fire on the night of April 30th.

    Makeshift bunkers made out of old sheets and saris.

     

    'Victory without humanity can be no triumph'

    Then British and French foreign ministers David Miliband and Bernard Kouchner wrote in The Times on the 30th of April 2009, after a visit to the island where they met with Mahinda Rajapaksa.

     “The Government of Sri Lanka’s announcement of a cessation of heavy military combat is a welcome step towards the protection of civilians. Similar announcements have been made in the past. This one must be implemented and kept to. The UN had an agreement with the Government to send a mission into the conflict zone to help to assess and address civilian needs. That agreement has not been implemented. It must be.”

    “Here the refusal to allow the UN, the aid agencies, and the media full and proper access is quite wrong.”

    “The gravity of the situation means that the international community has a duty to respond and to do all that we can to halt the suffering.

    As members of the UN Security Council we do not shy away from the responsibility of sovereign governments and the international community to protect civilians. Hillary Clinton, the US Secretary of State, has joined us in describing the failure to protect civilians in Sri Lanka as truly shocking. Yesterday we took our plea direct to the Sri Lankan Government. In its moment of triumph it must show the humanity and self-interest to find a way to win the peace.”

    See the full piece at The Times here.

    Current Tamil National Alliance leader R Sampanthan met with the visiting delegation and informed them that at least 7,000 Tamils in Vanni have been killed and 14,000 injured in the last three months alone.

    Meanwhile, Sinhala Buddhist monks in the south protested against the visiting ministers.

     

    Government admits it bombed ‘No Fire Zone’

    The Sri Lankan government meanwhile finally admitted that it had bombed the ‘No Fire Zone’ where it had instructed Tamil civilians to seek shelter.

    Confronted with leaked satellite footage of the region, which showed extensive crater marks from Sri Lankan military shelling, Sri Lankan Foreign Secretary Palitha Kohona made the admission in an interview with Al Jazeera despite earlier government denials.

    However, Sri Lanka's president Mahinda Rajapaksa contradicted his foreign secretary by continuing to categorically deny that the military had attacked civilian areas with heavy weapons.

    "If you are not willing to accept the fact that we are not using heavy weapons, I really can't help it," he said. "We are not using heavy weapons. When we say no, it means no. If we say we are doing something, we do it. We do exactly what we say, without confusion."

    See more from Al Jazeera at the time here.

     

    IMF loan opposition

    The International Monetary Fund is considering granting a $1.9 billion loan to Sri Lanka, despite massive opposition.

    Tamils Against Genocide (TAG) had filed a lawsuit against the Secretary of Treasury and United States Executive Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) seeking a declaratory judgment that United States law prohibited voting in favour of the loan.

     

    Diaspora protests continue

    Tens of thousands of Tamil protesters from around the world continued their protests, calling on international governments to pressure Sri Lanka into an immediate ceasefire and for urgent international humanitarian assistance.

    Tamil protesters in Norway, photographed April 2009

  • US Ambassador says Tamil families have the right to memorialise loved ones

    The US Ambassador to Sri Lanka Julie Chung met with Tamil families of the disappeared, former combatants, and former Prevention of Terrorism (PTA) detainees, where she reiterated the inherent right of the families to mourn and memorialise their dead.

    Chung who is currently touring Jaffna, said on X:

    “Even today many Sri Lankan citizens face continued intimidation. All families have the right to memorialize loved ones. Their stories are poignant reminders of the need for a peaceful, durable political solution.”

    The Ambassador also met the Northern Provincial Governor P.S.M Charles where she had inquired about the release of lands in the homeland and of access to those lands that have been freed. The Tamil Guardian recently pointed out that although the Sri Lankan government released a few parcels of land, their access was severely restricted. The Tamil residents mentioned they had to circumvent several roads to reach their lands or rely on dilapidated roads, undermining their efforts to clear and reside in those lands again. 

    During her visit, Chung also met with Tamil political party representatives where the discussions centered around their call for accountability and challenges faced by the Tamil people. 

    “During my meeting with representatives of the Tamil National Alliance we discussed the continued challenges faced by communities in the North, their calls for accountability, and their proposals for ensuring the voices of minority groups are heard to foster an inclusive Sri Lanka,” she tweeted. 

     

    Chung's visit comes as a landmark resolution was introduced to the US Congress calling on the United States to work towards an independence referendum for Eelam Tamils and recognise the genocide committed against them by the Sri Lankan state. The resolution, introduced by Representative Wiley Nickel, is the first of its kind to be brought to the US Congress. It comes as Tamils marked 15 years since the Mullivaikkal genocide this week, with May 18 commemorated as Tamil Genocide Remembrance Day worldwide.

  • Survivor stories and Mullivaikkal remnants at Adayaalam book launch

    Remnants from Mullivaikkal were on display as survivors spoke at the launch of the second edition of Mullivakkal Stories by Adayaalam Centre for Policy Research in Jaffna.

    Among some of the items shown were the limited options for food such as the Mullivaikkal Kanji, vaipan, rice and lentils, and fried roti. When food, aid, and medicines were cut off to Tamil Eelam during the last stages of the armed conflict, Tamils relied on these foods to sustain themselves. 

    The second edition of "Mullivaikkal Stories" is now available as hard copy in Tamil and English. Sinhala copies are to be ready by the end of the month. Stories of Mullivaikkal is a collection of stories showcasing the individual strength and resilience of survivors of the final phases of the war.

    “This series presents alternative narratives from survivors of Mullivaikkaal which does not narrow their lived experiences to helpless victimhood but rather promotes and accepts their agency. We hope that this series will raise awareness about the struggle and resilience of the survivors of the last phase of the war and broaden the conversation about assisting those who suffered mass atrocities during the end of the war.” (Adayaalam, Stories of Resilience)

    See here for the online versions of Stories of Mullivaikkal

  • University of Jaffna displays artwork ahead of Tamil Genocide Remembrance Day

    The University of Jaffna has displayed artwork on campus to mark 15 years since the Tamil genocide where tens of thousands of Tamils were brutally massacred at the hands of the Sri Lankan armed forces. 

    Some of artwork depict the atrocities, such as extrajudicial killings, carried out by Sri Lanka's military during the final months of the conflict. 

     

     

  • Sri Lankan police obstruct distribution of kanji in Batticaloa again

    Sri Lankan police officers obstructed Tamils in Pillaiyaradi, Batticaloa, from distributing kanji to mark the sixth day of Tamil Genocide Remembrance Week. 

    This is the second time this week that Tamils in Batticaloa have been blocked by Sri Lankan police from distributing kanji as part of their commemorations. 

    On Wednesday, Sri Lankan police officers surrounded the Tamil activists as they attempted to prepare and distribute Mullivaikkal Kanji, a tradition that Eelam Tamils have practised to remember the victims of the genocide committed by Sri Lankan security forces.

    Every year, in the lead up to and on May 18, Tamils in the North-East are subject to harassment and surveillance by Sri Lanka's security forces in an attempt to intimidate them. Despite the surveillance, Tamils have been defiant in commemorating those who were massacred in Mullivaikkal. 

  • 15 Years Since Sri Lanka’s Conflict Ended, No Justice for War Crimes'

    Writing in Scroll.In, Meenakshi Ganguly, the Deputy Asia Director at Human Rights Watch (HRW) stated that the "unaddressed legacy of war" has led to Sri Lanka's "abuse, impunity and misgovernance that still blight the country."

    Ganguly highlights that although 15 years have passed since the genocide at Mullivaikkal, there has been no justice or accountability for the Tamil community. 

    "Successive governments have appointed a series of commissions ostensibly to investigate reported abuses, while in practice blocking investigations and shielding the abusers. The fate of the thousands of 'disappeared' has never been revealed, while the mothers of the disappeared [...] have campaigned continuously to learn the truth – face surveillance, harassment and arrest from the authorities," she wrote. 

    "Meanwhile senior figures implicated in atrocities have been promoted. The current defense secretary, retired General Kamal Gunaratne, was one of the top commanders during the final offensive. He is barred from travelling to the United States due to allegations of serious abuses," Ganguly added. 

    "In Sri Lanka’s predominantly Tamil north and east, where most of the fighting took place, the highways are still dotted with army camps and checkpoints. The authorities violently suppress protests, and arrest people under draconian anti-terrorist legislation for social media posts or for commemorating Tamil victims of the war."

    Ganguly called on the international community to "engage with the office to prosecute cases at home for war crimes committed in Sri Lanka. And they need to support renewal of this critical office in September."

    Read the full piece here or here

  • US Congress members welcome historic resolution calling for Tamil Eelam independence referendum

    Members of the US Congress reiterated their support for a landmark resolution this week, calling for an independence referendum for Eelam Tamils and recognising the genocide committed against them by the Sri Lankan state.

    Shortly after introducing the resolution and speeches on the Congress floor, members addressed an event at the Library of Congress. Over 100 Tamils from across the United States and around the world were in attendance to mark the occasion.

    Read more: US Congress resolution calls for Tamil Eelam independence referendum

    The resolution was brought as Tamils around the world prepared to mark 15 years since the Mullivaikkal genocide. Addressing the crowd, US House Representative Wiley Nickel said the resolution commemorates that loss, but also aims to protect the Tamil people from “future violence and discrimination”.

    “My resolution recognises the genocide in Sri Lanka and affirms the right of Tamils to self-determination through a democratic process,” continued Nickel. “The resolution emphasises the need for a peaceful and democratic solution to ongoing tensions in Sri Lanka. It advocates for an independence referendum.”

    Such an approach had been used successfully to solve similar conflicts in other parts of the world, added Nickel.

    “As we remember the end of a dark chapter in Sri Lanka’s history, we should also look to the future,” he continued. “A future in which the rights and dignity of all people are upheld and respected. We can do this. Let's stand together and advocate for a peaceful democratic solution that respects the Tamil people's right to decide their own future.

    The Congress member went on to detail how “we're seeing recognition and support grow slowly but surely for this issue”. “Members of Congress are now beginning to take note,” he added, noting how there was bipartisan support for the Eelam Tamil cause.

    “I urge all my colleagues in the US House of Representatives to support this important legislation. It's an opportunity for us to lead by example, to champion the values of democracy and human rights and to make a meaningful difference in the lives of the Tamil people.”

    “The story of the Tamils in Sri Lanka is one of struggle,” said Congress member Don Davis. “I'm reminded today that the late Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. said that ‘injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere’,” he added to applause from the audience.

    “Injustice to the Tamil community is a threat to justice here and is a threat to justice around the world. The tragic events that unfolded, which led to the 2009 Tamil genocide, serve as a stark reminder of the horrors of discrimination.”

    “In spite of the efforts of the United Nations Human Rights Council to seek justice, Sri Lanka, with the backing of powerful allies, continues to evade accountability. There must be accountability… We will not turn a blind eye to genocide. We will not turn a blind eye to discrimination. We will not turn a blind eye to injustice.”

    “As a member of Congress, I have come to urge my colleagues, and all around the world, to do all we can to recognise and address the plight of the Tamil people. There must be a lasting peace. There must be a resolution and there must be self-determination.”

    Davis went on to reaffirm his lasting support for the Tamil cause.

    “As we come together today, I want everyone to know that our hopes and dreams are interconnected. We are in this together. We're standing united today, we must continue to stand united, and we will not back down.”

    “Here we are in the nation’s capital in the Library of Congress,” said Congressman Jeff Jackson from North Carolina. “We have real bipartisan support for this cause your work is paying off in an enormous way.”

    Jackson went on to outline how supporting this resolution is “the easiest thing in the world to do”.

    “This is not what we call a close,” he said. “This is not a hard decision whether or not to support this resolution and to support this cause. This is obviously the right thing to do. And sometimes especially in Congress, even when the right thing is obvious, it can take too long. This has taken too long. But we can see now that it's moving the right direction. And we can see that it's picking up speed. We should feel confident about our ability to get this across the finish line.

    Dr Madura Rasaratnam, the Executive Director for (People for Equality and Relief in Lanka (PEARL), spoke of how “15 years ago today, I was protesting the then ongoing genocide in Sri Lanka and asking the world to listen to us and ask for a ceasefire”.

    “I feel hope today. I sense a resilience. Whilst we remember and commemorate, look at what we achieved. 15 years ago we were sitting outside, now we are inside. And we are advancing our issues.”

    Lorenzo Fiorito outlined the history of Tamil sovereignty on the island and said, “It was national leader Velupillai Prabhakaran who stated that the world does not revolve around the wheel of human justice”.

    “Between 1983 and 2009 Tamils defended themselves their state and their sovereign territory from Sri Lankan aggression and occupation,” he said. “There is a right to self-determination in international law, which no national law or policy can legally override.”

    Dr Murugiah Muraleetharan, the vice-president of the Tamil Americans United Political Action Committee, said the right to self-determination is international law, and it must be applicable to the Tamils”.

    “In accordance with international law, the Eelam Tamils are eligible for self-determination and independence,” he added.

    “The Tamils’ issue is finally put on the right track. The British handed over the sovereignty of the Tamils to the Sinhalese in 1948 without the Tamils’ mandate. It was an improper and incomplete decolonization. The Independence Referendum is the most appropriate democratic, peaceful tool to exercise the self-determination of the Eelam Tamils.”

    Heralding the resolution as a milestone, the President of the Tamil Americans United Political Action Committee, Meena Ilancheyan, said “it is historic in that it is addressing the origin of the conflict”.

    “After 405 years since the Tamils lost their sovereignty to the European invasion, a new beginning towards correcting past injustice has begun. The Tamils are very hopeful now and thank the US Congress Members led by Congressman Nickel for this initiative to bring a permanent solution democratically, peacefully, and rightfully.”

    “Many similar conflicts around the world have been resolved via an independence referendum,” she added. “It’s the most appropriate way to resolve this long conflict that killed hundreds of thousands of people.”

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