It's only an hour's airtime from
Suitcases in hand, heaving and sweating for hours under the blazing sun, passengers endure a gauntlet of checkpoints, where they are repeatedly stopped, questioned, frisked and hassled.
Most of the travellers are ethnic Tamils, a minority on the island, although they're the overwhelming majority in the battle-scarred north.
Some, without the necessary paperwork, are turned back. No one dares to protest.
The slightest disruption can halt air service at any time.
After five sweltering hours of queuing up, a Tamil passenger elbows me in the ribs and mutters: "This is how you're treated when you're taken to a prison camp."
The people of
For two years they've been cut off from overland access to the rest of the country by fierce combat in the swampy jungles of the Vanni region, just south of the peninsula.
That's where the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) have dug in as they continue to wage one of the oldest running insurgencies in the world.
The fighting has strangled
Now, however, the Sri Lankan army has made sweeping advances along the A9 to within a mile of the insurgents' capital, the town of
If that obstacle falls, and the A9 is reopened, life could get at least a little easier for
Their bullet-pocked homes and shrapnel-scarred temples bear witness to how bad their lives have been.
Today, 40,000 government soldiers stand guard over the peninsula's 600,000 Tamil inhabitants.
Crowds in the markets pay little attention to the occasional thud of artillery duels in the distance.
Troops wielding Chinese-made T-56 assault rifles operate checkpoints at practically every street corner.
Although fishing has traditionally been
Nights in
The streets go empty at sundown, and a curfew is strictly enforced through the night.
In the last two years, a wave of night-time civilian disappearances and killings has gripped the city.
Corpses of the disappeared sometimes turn up on the streets in the mornings, but mostly the victims are never seen again, dead or alive.
Townspeople say most of the killings and disappearances happen during the curfew hours, cautiously referring to the perpetrators as "armed groups."
People in fear for their lives can seek aid from the Human Rights Commission.
According to the Center for Policy Alternatives, a Colombo-based think tank, "surrendees" are sent to
Fliers regularly appear on the Jaffna University campus, says a 20-year-old Jaffna student, too scared to give out his name—hit lists of supposed LTTE sympathizers.
He says most of them are young people, between 18 and 35, adding that he has known several people who have suddenly vanished.
"If you are Tamil, you are always under pressure to prove you are not LTTE," he says. "We live in an open prison."
Earlier this year, the international watchdog group Human Rights Watch summarized its findings on Sri Lankan disappearances since 2006: "In the vast majority of the cases we documented, the evidence indicates the involvement of government security forces—army, navy or police. The victims are primarily young Tamil men who 'disappeared' in the country's embattled north and east, but also in the capital
In any case, he confidently predicts the killings in
"We are determined to eradicate terrorists," he says. "There will be no mercy for the LTTE."
But after 13 years of government control in
Many people in
An elderly Tamil man, a lifelong resident of
It seems almost every day, he says, he gets stopped.
A soldier sticks his gun through the car window and barks questions at him in the Sinhala language, not seeming to care that
"Will this attitude change, once the fighting ends?" the old man asks.
Many people in