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  • ACHR brands Sri Lanka as worst Human Rights violator among SAARC countries

    Asian Center for Human Rights (ACHR), a New Delhi-based human rights watchdog, in a rights report covering the South Asian Association for Regional Cooporation (SAARC), released Friday, said "Sri Lanka ranks South Asia’s No.1 human rights violator," adding, "Sri Lanka’s human rights indicators must be considered within a context of very high levels of impunity which tend to suggest a worsening over the human rights picture over the long term."

     

    ACHR determination of ranking "is based on comparative assessment of records of the governments in 2007 on nine thematic issues crucial for enjoyment of human rights: political freedom, right to life, judiciary and administration of justice, status or effectiveness of National Human Rights Institutions, press freedom, violence against women, violations of the rights of the child, violations of the rights of the minorities and indigenous/tribal peoples and repression on human rights defenders," the report said.

    In ACHR's analysis, "Sri Lanka scored the highest negative points for the right to life, the rights of the child, attacks on human rights defenders and violations of the rights of the minorities."

    On press freedom, it [Sri Lanka] ranked No.2 violator only after Bhutan – which has no independent press – because of the systematic attacks on the freedom of expression and journalists, the report said.

    "Discrimination lies at the heart of the problem and the introduction of restrictions on Tamils travelling to Colombo are a powerful symbol of government intent. The political ramifications of the exclusion - not least in terms of prospects for a peaceful settlement of the conflict - of an entire ethnic group from the nation’s capital are of deep concern," the report added.

    Documenting that "540 persons disappeared across Sri Lanka from January to August 2007," the report pointed out that, "Tamils again suffered disproportionately from disappearances."

    Criticizing the judiciary and the endemic lawlessness, the report said, "[t]he rule of law had weakened since the appointment of Justice Sarath Nanda Silva, former Attorney General and Legal Advisor of former President Chandrika Kumaratunga as the Chief Justice. Justice Silva has a long legacy of political, rather than legal, judgements and has regularly interfered with political processes in Sri Lanka."

    Commenting generally on the worst rights violators that included, in the order of decreasing rank, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Pakistan, Maldives, Nepal, and India, the report said, "[d]iscrimination is endemic, institutionalised and in many cases legalised. Human rights violations are integral to counterinsurgency operations conducted by the military in the sub-region. Human rights are routinely violated in police detention including the routine use of torture. National security laws tend to be poorly framed, routinely abused and used as blanket cover to silence legitimate dissent rather than tackle security. These are not the assertions of one organisation but repeatedly confirmed by national and regional and international NGOs and the various UN bodies established to monitor human rights."

    Asian Centre for Human Rights is dedicated to promotion and protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms in the Asian region, according ACHR's website.
     

  • Tamil Nadu opinion poll calls for independent Eelam

    An independent Tamil Eelam is the solution to the Sri Lankan crisis, decided a majority of voters in a Tamil Nadu poll last week.

     

    54.25% of the respondents said that they have always supported the Tigers and their goal of a separate Tamil homeland in Sri Lanka, in the results of a survey published in last week's Ananda Vikadan, which tops the circulation among weeklies in Tamil Nadu, said that

     

    Although it is known that support for the Tigers is rising in Tamil Nadu, as seen from the large attendance of people, especially youths in meetings addressed by pro-Tiger leaders like Vaiko, the amount of support for the banned outfit, revealed in a survey conducted by a media group, which is considered respected for its neutrality is quiet stunning, reported The Statesman.

     

    The fact that the magazine chose to publish the results showing support for a banned organisation is itself surprising, the Indian published Statesman publication noted. The outcome of the poll and its appearance in an influential media, foretell shifting paradigms in Tamil Nadu scenario, assessed TamilNet.

    Out of 12 issues raised by the weekly, 4 gained absolute majority opinions: India to retrieve Kachchatheevu from Sri Lanka (65.76%), urging India to involve in Sri Lankan crisis (62.9%), independent Tamil Eelam as correct solution (55.44%) and support to LTTE (54.25%).

    To a question on continuing the ban on the LTTE, 47.65% respondents wanted the ban to be lifted, while 27.43% were for continuing it. The rest of the respondents said that the Centre should wait for some time before thinking of lifting the ban.

     

    83 percent of the respondents held LTTE chief Velupillai Pirapaharan responsible for the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi. However, about 50% of those convinced of LTTE's hand in the assassination felt that Pirapaharan should be condoned, the survey claimed.

     

    To a query on the growth of LTTE as an organisation with air capabilities, 46.24% of the people felt that it was a matter of pride for Tamils, while only 18.59% said that it was dangerous for India's security. The rest did not have any opinion.

    While 55.44% favoured a separate Tamil homeland for Sri Lankan Tamils as the only solution for the conflict in the island, 34.63% of respondents said that an autonomous state for Tamils within a federal structure would solve the problem.

     

    Only 13.61% of the respondents said that the pro-LTTE stand of Tamil Nadu leaders like Vaiko and Nedumaran was dangerous, while 49.36% of them felt that it was correct. About the stand of Tamil Nadu’s leading DMK on the Sri Lankan issue, 47.48% said the ruling party should support the Tigers without worrying about losing its government, while 22.71% of the people said that the DMK should oppose the Tigers.

     

    A considerable number of voters (43.14%) disagreed with LTTE's assassinations of dissenting Tamil politicians, while the remaining either felt that it was inevitable or that they were not in a position to pass a judgment.

    Most of the respondents, 62.59%, favoured India's intervention in the conflict. An overwhelming majority of 79.28% favoured release of Nalini, convicted in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case.

     

    The survey taken at a time when resentment against the Sri Lankan government was high due to the killing of Tamil Nadu fishermen by the Sri Lankan navy, found that a large number of people, 65.76%, supported the retrieval of Katchatheevu island, ceded to Sri Lanka, and 29.65% said the Indian navy should attack the Sri Lankan navy if Tamil Nadu fishermen were fired at.

     

    On the fishermen issue, 34.89% of people favoured a dialogue with the Sri Lankan government, while 35.44% said that India should raise the issue at the international forum.

     

    The weekly said that it approached 4195 people, selecting them from various areas and sections and asserted that it is a true reflection of the people's mood in Tamil Nadu about issues concerning Sri Lankan Tamils.

  • Early lessons from S Ossetia conflict

    Although the fighting over South Ossetia is not over, and fighting for another Georgian enclave, Abkhazia, looks like developing, it is perhaps not too early to learn some tentative lessons from the crisis.

    1. Do not punch a bear on the nose unless it is tied down.

    Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili must have thought that Russia would not react strongly when he sent his forces in on the eve of the Olympic games to regain control of a territory he had insisted must remain part of Georgia, albeit with some form of autonomy.

    Yet Russia was always likely to respond. It already had forces there, leading the peacekeeping force agreed back in the easier days of 1992 between President Boris Yeltsin of Russia and President Edward Shevardnadze of Georgia, himself the former Soviet foreign minister who helped bring the Cold War to an end.

    Russia has been supporting the separatists in South Ossetia and handed out Russian passports to the population, thereby enabling it to claim that it was defending its own citizens.

    The result of what many see as his miscalculation is that President Saakashvili might well lose any hope of reasserting Georgian power in the enclave.

    2. Russia is in a determined mood, to say the least.

    Russia, as it has so often done in the past, sees itself being encircled.

    In a revealing interview with former BBC Moscow correspondent Tim Whewell earlier this year, an adviser to the then President Vladimir Putin, Gleb Pavlosky, said that the Russian leadership had concluded after the Orange Revolution in Ukraine that "this is what we faced in Moscow, that they would try to export this to us, that we should prepare for this situation and very quickly strengthen our political system..."

    What applied after Ukraine moved towards the West also applied as Georgia did the same. Moscow wanted to prevent any such internal revolution in Russia itself and therefore saw Ukraine and Georgia as hostile influences.

    It is not clear how far Russia wants to push this, but given that it says it wants to re-establish order in South Ossetia, that probably means a permanent presence, with no return to a Georgian government role. Diplomats think it unlikely that Russia will invade Georgia 'proper'.

    3. Remember Kosovo.

    Russia was mightily displeased when the West supported the separation of Kosovo from Serbia and warned of consequences. This might be one of them. Of course, Russia has not argued in this crisis that it is simply doing what the West did in Kosovo - that would undermine its own argument that states should not be broken up without agreement. But everyone knows that underneath, Kosovo is not far from its mind.

    4. Georgia is unlikely to join Nato anytime soon.

    Georgia and Ukraine were denied membership of Nato in April, although they were allowed to develop an action plan that could lead to membership one day.

    The Americans argued for both countries to be accepted, but the Germans and others countered that the region was too unstable for these countries to join at the moment and that in particular Georgia, a state with a border dispute, should not be given formal Nato support.

    5. Vladmir Putin is still in charge.

    It was Mr Putin, prime minister not president these days, who went to Beijing for the Olympic opening ceremony and who then rushed to the crisis region to take control of the Russian response. His language was uncompromising - Russia was right to intervene, he stated.

    6. Do not allow a cuckoo to police the nest.

    Mr Shevardnadze's decision in 1992 to allow Russia into South Ossetia as part of the peacekeeping force enabled a later and very different Russian government from the one led by Boris Yeltsin to gradually extend its influence and control. It was not hard for Russia to justify its intervention. It simply stated that its citizens were not only at risk but under attack.

    7. The West still does not know how to deal with Russia.

    Some of the old Cold War arguments are resurfacing, with no consensus about what to do. There are the neo-conservatives, led by US Vice-President Dick Cheney (and supported by Republican presidential candidate John McCain) who see Georgia (and Ukraine) as flag bearers for freedom which must be supported. In due course, they argue, Russia will be forced to change, just as the old Soviet Union was.

    Against that is the argument, expressed to the BBC for example on Sunday by the former British Foreign Secretary Lord Owen, that it is "absurd" to treat Russia like the Soviet Union and that Georgia made a miscalculation in South Ossetia for which it is now paying.

    8. Are borders in Europe to be sacrosanct for ever?

    It has been one of the rules of post-war Europe - borders cannot be changed except by agreement, as say in Czechoslovakia. Perhaps this rule has been applied too inflexibly. Yet governments like that of Georgia are reluctant to give up any territory, even when the local population is so clearly hostile and might be in that state simply as a result of some past arbitrary decision. It was the Soviet Union that created a semi-autonomous region of South Ossetia in Georgia in 1922. Nikita Khrushchev gave Crimea to Ukraine in 1954. Will this lead to trouble one day?

    9. August is good month in which to reflect on alliances.

    In August 1914, the First World War broke out following the assassination in June of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo. It did so because alliances had been formed in Europe which came into play inexorably. Russia supported Serbia, Germany supported Austria, France supported Russia and Britain came in when Belgium was invaded.

    Alliances must not be entered into lightly or unadvisedly. If Georgia had been in Nato, what would have happened?

  • Georgia 'pulls out of S Ossetia'

    Georgia has said its troops have withdrawn from the breakaway region of South Ossetia and that Russian forces are in control of its capital, Tskhinvali.

    A government spokesman said it was not a military defeat but a necessary step to protect civilians. Russia said not all the Georgian forces had withdrawn.

    Georgian officials later accused Russia of escalating the conflict in Abkhazia, another breakaway region in the west.

    The US has described Russia's actions as "dangerous and disproportionate".

    US Deputy National Security Adviser James Jeffrey said that if the Russian escalation continued, it would have a "significant" long-term impact on relations between the Moscow and Washington.

    "We're alarmed by this situation," he told reporters in Beijing.

    Russian PM Vladimir Putin earlier suggested it was unlikely that South Ossetia would re-integrate with the rest of Georgia, saying the country's territorial integrity had "suffered a fatal blow".

    Meanwhile, Russian warships are being deployed to impose a naval blockade on Georgian ports on the Black Sea coast to prevent arms and military shipments, Russian media reports say.

    Georgia says an additional 10,000 Russian soldiers have crossed into South Ossetia and Abkhazia. The separatist authorities in Abkhazia have announced full military mobilisation.

    The BBC's Richard Galpin, who is on Georgia's crossing point into South Ossetia, says he has heard artillery fire between Georgian and Russian troops in the area.

    Local residents fleeing the area told him there was continued fighting on the outskirts of the Tskhinvali, although the city itself was said to be relatively quiet with Russian forces in full control.

    Earlier, Georgian officials said Russian jets had bombed a military airfield close to the Georgian capital, Tbilisi.

    Three bombs had been dropped on the airfield, where there is a factory producing Sukhoi Su-25 fighter jets, they said.

    There was no independent confirmation of the attack, although the BBC's Gabriel Gatehouse, who was in the city at the time, said he heard a loud explosion.

    The current fighting began four days ago when Georgian forces launched a surprise attack to regain control of South Ossetia, which has had de facto independence since the end of a civil war in 1992.

    The move followed days of exchanges of heavy fire with the Russian-backed separatists. In response to the Georgian crackdown, Moscow sent armoured units across the border frontier.

    On Saturday, Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili called for an immediate ceasefire after Russian planes carried out air strikes on the Georgian town of Gori, not far from South Ossetia. Scores of civilians were reported to have been killed.

    The Georgian parliament has approved a presidential decree declaring a "state of war" for 15 days.

    There are conflicting figures about the casualties suffered on both sides, and independent verification has not been possible, but the numbers appeared to rise sharply on Saturday.

    Russian and South Ossetian estimates put the death toll on the South Ossetian side at more than 1,500, mostly civilians. Georgian casualty figures ranged from 82 dead, including 37 civilians, to a figure of about 130 dead.

    Thousands of people are known to have fled into the neighbouring Russian region of North Ossetia and other parts of Georgia.

    The UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Antonio Guterres, called for civilians trapped in conflict areas to be granted safe passage out.

    Abkhazia concerns

    Speaking to the BBC, Georgian interior ministry spokesman Shota Utiashvili said Georgian troops had pulled back to positions at or south of those held before 6 August, when the hostilities began.

    From there, he said, they were engaged in fighting Russian forces.

    Mr Utiashvili told the BBC that the withdrawal was necessary because of the mass civilian and military casualties both within South Ossetia and elsewhere in Georgia.

    He said that Georgia was now facing a "humanitarian catastrophe", adding that 100 soldiers Georgian soldiers had been killed, and many more wounded.

    A spokesman for the Russian military said Georgia had not withdrawn and insisted Georgia had to do that before any kind of ceasefire could come into effect.

    A Russian commander in the conflict zone, Maj-Gen Marat Kulakhmetov, said the situation remained tense, and suggested both sides were preparing for further military action.

    Earlier, Georgia said Russia had brought an additional 10,000 troops across Georgia's frontiers - 6,000 by land into South Ossetia and 4,000 by sea into Abkhazia.

    The head of the pro-Russian separatist authorities in Abkhazia also said he had sent 1,000 troops to the Tbilisi-controlled Kodori gorge and announced the "full mobilisation" of reservists.

    "We are ready to act independently," Sergei Bagapsh said. "We are ready to enforce order and go further if there is resistance from the Georgian side."

    A Georgian interior ministry official later told the BBC that Russia had launched what he called "all-out military aggression" against Georgia, including attacking areas outside the conflict zone in South Ossetia.

    He said Russian planes were now bombing the western town of Zugdidi and the Georgian-controlled enclave within Abkhazia. The claims could not be independently verified.

    The UN's Assistant Secretary-General for Peacekeeping, Edmond Mulet, said on Saturday that he feared the Abkhaz separatists were preparing to launch an offensive.

    "At this point we are particularly concerned that the conflict appears to be spreading beyond South Ossetia into Abkhazia," he said.

    Speaking on Saturday in the nearby city of Vladikavkaz, Mr Putin accused Georgia of seeking "bloody adventures" and trying to drag other countries into the conflict.

    In an outspoken attack, he referred directly to Georgia's aspirations to join Nato, a move which Moscow strongly opposes.

    Mr Putin described the actions of Georgian soldiers as genocide against the South Ossetian people and defended Moscow's military action to intervene directly.

    Redrawing the map

    Meanwhile, a joint delegation of the US, EU and the Organisation of Security and Co-operation in Europe is heading to Georgia in the hope of brokering a truce.

    It comes as a third emergency session of the UN Security Council ended without an agreement on the wording of a statement calling for a ceasefire.

    But emissaries from the US and Europe who are Nato members may not be seen as honest brokers by the Kremlin when it comes to Georgia, the BBC's diplomatic correspondent Bridget Kendall says.

    The danger now is that Russia will not only use this crisis to demonstrate its military power in the region, but argue it is time to redraw the map, she adds.

  • TYO-NZ goes green

    Tamil Youth Organization New Zealand (TYO-NZ) went green on Sunday July 13, planting some trees in Auckland as part of a mentoring program for young Tamil children.

     

    Youth from TYONZ took children from Poonga Tamil Community Education on a tree planting trip organized by the Auckland City Council. The tree planting session was a follow up in a series of mentoring sessions by the TYONZ around the various Tamil schools in the Auckland area.

     

    Many young Tamil people, including some Tamil community members, planted over 400 trees in a native bush area surrounding the Auckland Zoo. The participants increased their knowledge of the native trees, the wildlife and the importance of sustaining New Zealand's clean, green environment.

     

    TYONZ says it hopes to be able to run more mentoring programs throughout the year to give young Tamils good role models and positive outcomes to look forward to.  And to integrate them into the New Zealand way of life while sustaining their Tamil heritage and culture.

  • Landmark European ruling says Tamils risk torture if deported

    In a rebuke of Britain’s efforts to deport Tamil asylum seekers, the European Court of Human Rights allowed Thursday the appeal by one refugee, finding that he was at risk of torture by the Sri Lankan authorities if returned there.

    Immigration lawyers said the European Court’s ruling was ‘very significant’ as the forcible removal of hundreds of Tamils had been held up pending this judgment. The Court’s decision came as the British government praised the Sri Lankan government’s efforts on human rights.

     

    The Court’s decision Thursday in the case ‘NA vs. United Kingdom’ is intended to give guidance to national and European decision makers in assessing asylum claims by Tamils fleeing persecution by the Sri Lankan state.

     

    In short, it says that deporting NA to Sri Lanka would contravene Article 3 of the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“No one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”).

     

    The judgement noted: “The Court has taken note of the current climate of general violence in Sri Lanka. …It also notes that those considered by the authorities to be of interest in their efforts to combat the LTTE are systematically exposed to torture and ill-treatment.”

     

    In June 2007, NA appealed to the European Court of Human Rights, saying the UK’s deportations were contravening the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms.

     

    In response to the appeal, the Court decided to apply Rule 39 of the Rules of Court (interim measures), insisting the UK government not to expel NA till his case was heard.

     

    Thereafter, the Court received an increasing number of similar requests for interim measures from Tamils who were being forcibly returned to Sri Lanka from Britain and other European States.

     

    This stoppage has since been granted in respect of 342 Tamil applicants in the United Kingdom. Immigration lawyers say that many other Tamils who were not able to appeal in time, had been forcible deported.

     

    The UK protested against the interim measures in October 2007, saying the situation in Sri Lanka did not warrant the suspension of forcible removals and that it would not voluntarily assist the Court this way – the UK called for a lead judgment by the Court.

     

    That judgment came Thursday.

     

    The Court upheld NA’s appeal and also ordered the UK to pay NA in respect of costs and expenses incurred as a result of the case.

     

    NA, a Sri Lankan Tamil had claimed asylum in August 1999 on the grounds he feared both the Sri Lankan government and the LTTE.

     

    He had been arrested and detained by the Army six times between 1990 and 1997 on suspicion of involvement with the Tigers. Each time he was released without charge. Whilst in detention he had been ill-treated and his legs were scarred from being beaten. During the 1997 detention the applicant had been photographed and his fingerprints had been taken.

     

    NA said he also feared the LTTE because his father had done some work for the Army. He said they had also tried to recruit him in 1997 and 1998.

     

    NA claims were repeatedly rejected by the British Home Office and in April 2006, his deportation was ordered. The UK government argued the general situation in Sri Lanka did not indicate any personal risk of ill-treatment and there was no evidence that NA would be personally affected upon return.

     

    The UK argued, the fact NA had been released each time he was arrested was an assurance he was safe. The Court held otherwise.

     

    Meanwhile, British Foreign Minister Lord Malloch-Brown, who is visiting Sri Lanka, was quoted as telling President Mahinda Rajapaksa that Sri Lanka “had achieved something remarkable and impressive in establishing a process for the resolution of human rights issues.”

     

    Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Bogollagama told his British counterpart that Colombo appreciated the UK's understanding of the complexity of the issues in question, a government statement said.

  • Producing (In)Security

    As South Asia's political leaderships meet in Colombo this week and next, Sri Lanka's protracted conflict burns on. President Mahinda Rajapakse's government refused to reciprocate the Liberation Tigers' offer last week of a unilateral ceasefire and has instead continued its offensive. But the Tigers' diplomatic maneuver has served the purposes for which it was intended. To begin with, the LTTE's message of goodwill to the SAARC conference has further embarrassed Colombo. These are, in any case, not the conditions under which the Sinhala state had expected to play host to South Asia's leaders this year. There is no historic triumph over the Tamil rebellion to showcase to neighbours. Instead there is the ignominy of India not being prepared to entrust the safety of its delegation to the Sinhala armed forces. Despite Colombo's hysterics, Delhi does not envisage a threat from the Tamils. Rather, it is Sri Lanka's problematic dalliance with Pakistan and the shadowy Islamic radicalism which Islamabad is said to be stoking in the island's east which is at the forefront of India's concerns. That and, of course, Sri Lanka's heightened engagement with rising power China. If it needed underscoring, the two Indian warships off Colombo's shore will remind SAARC delegates on whose terms the future security of South Asia - and the Indian Ocean - will be based.

     

    Firstly, the Tigers' offer of a unilateral ceasefire has underscored yet again that it is the Sinhala state, not the LTTE, which is determined to pursue a military solution to the Tamil question. Some international actors have sought to blame 'both sides' while others have preferred to blame the 'terrorists' for the violence and to back the state. The refusal to pursue even a temporary cessation of hostilities - which plausibly could have led to a permanent ceasefire and perhaps international diplomatic efforts towards peace (indeed, the Norwegians have made it clear their good offices are still available) - has once again demonstrated, as many Tamil voices, including this newspaper, have repeatedly argued, that Sri Lanka has no interest in either negotiations or power-sharing with the Tamils.

     

    Secondly, the silence of the international community to both the LTTE's offer and Colombo's rejection of ceasefire speaks volumes of their own commitment to negotiations and a just peace. Had Sri Lanka made the offer of ceasefire and the LTTE refused it, the howls of protest from the self-styled peace-builders amongst the international community would have deafening. (Ironically, the silence which appears from a Tamil perspective to be unequivocal support for the Sinhala state will seem in the eyes of the Sinhala nationalists to be international complicity in the Tigers' treacherous ploy.) Either way, the pointed message for those Tamils still awaiting international intervention on their behalf is not to hold their breaths. In this regard too, the LTTE's ceasefire offer has served its purpose.

     

    The third aspect of the LTTE's offer is the message to the countries of South Asia. Sri Lankan leaders have long projected the Tamil resistance to their vicious repression of the Tamils as a threat to 'the region'. Nothing could be further from the truth. It is Sri Lanka's obsession with establishing Sinhala hegemony, rather, that has sparked and escalated war and insecurity off peninsula India. The LTTE does not pose a threat to any country except the chauvinistic Sinhala state. Indeed, the LTTE pointedly does not involve itself in the quarrels of the region. Nor is it a conduit for geopolitical tensions into the region.

     

    Moreover, the Tamil demand for independence will no more spur separatism in the region than would those of the Kosovans', say, or the East Timorese'. Indeed, the LTTE's message - enunciated recently in both the message to SAARC and LTTE leader Vellupillai Pirapaharan's Heroes Day addresses, including last year's - is that an independent Tamil Eelam would be a responsible member of the regional and international community of states.

     

    Which is more than can be said for Sri Lanka. For all its Buddhist pretensions, the Sinhala state is not identified with peace, non-violence and communal harmony, but with vicious violence towards its own citizens, with religious and ethnic persecution and contempt for the views of the international community. Certainly Sri Lanka has been able to enlist in the 'Global War on Terror', but, underlying the real undercurrents of that international project, which state has not been able to? Moreover, which state - in the region or elsewhere - can count the Sinhala state amongst its unswerving and loyal allies? This is not to deny that competing interests guide the actions of all states, but there are more or less principled ways for a state to pursue its own. The long-running Tamil rebellion, for example, pursues the safety of an independent state without interfering in the affairs of future neighbors and international allies. In short, it has consistently demonstrated, despite Sri Lanka's apocalyptic insistence to the contrary, that Tamil Eelam will be no threat to the region or spaces beyond.

  • Tamil Diaspora marks 25th anniversary of Black July

    Tamils across the world gathered to commemorate the 25th anniversary of Black July, the week in 1983 that saw a state sponsored pogrom kill over 3,000 of them killed in Sri Lanka.

     

    Events were held in the US, UK, Canada, South Africa, Netherlands, Australia, and New Zealand, among other countries.

     

    Over 2,000 British Tamils gathered in front of the parliament last Wednesday to commemorate the deaths during that week of violence in Sri Lanka in July 1983. Age, religion, and gender were no barrier as the whole spectrum of Tamils, from grandparents to babies in push chairs, attended the candlelight vigil between 8pm and 10pm.

     

    Although the British parliament was in recess, a few parliamentarians turned up to show their support. Leaflets were handed out during rush hour at various points to raise awareness among the British Public of the continuous human rights violations carried out by the Sri Lankan government.  

     

    In Canada approximately 350 people filled the Nepean City Hall, Ben Franklin Place, Ottawa, to capacity last Wednesday. The event was marked by a minute of silence for the victims who lost their lives in the pogrom and was followed by the Canadian national anthem sung by children.

     

    Thanks were given to the people and the countries that helped the victims of Black July and those displaced by the pogrom. Canada was thanked by many speakers for opening its doors to over 250,000 Tamils fleeing Sri Lanka after July 1983.

     

    Prayers were held by multi-faith religious leaders for those who lost their lives during the pogrom.

     

    An audio visual presentation on the Black July pogrom was made, in which the recorded footage of the actual events and testimonials from some of the victims were presented.

     

    Victim Testimonials were also presented by prominent community members on their personal harrowing experiences during those fateful days in July.

     

    Members of the Tamil community overwhelmingly signed up for blood donation under the "partner for life" national campaign in gratitude for the kindness offered by Canada in providing a safe haven for Tamils

     

    Also on Wednesday, Tamils in Netherlands gathered in Amsterdam to commemorate Black July. The event, jointly organised by the Tamil Women’s Organisation and the Tamil Youth Organisation, included a photo exhibition showing the suffering of Tamils at the hands of successive Sri Lankan governments and a street drama by the youth to provide further explanation to the locals who were observing.

     

    People for Equality and Relief in Lanka (PEARL), a US-based advocacy group, held a rally at Russell Senate Park, Washington, last Thursday and the rally was attended by over 600 participants from several U.S States.

     

    Two U.S. Congress members, through letters of support read at the rally, recognized the American Tamils' effort highlighting the human rights crisis in Sri Lanka.

     

    The rally was held in partnership with the U.S. Campaign for Burma (USCB), which commemorated the “8.8.88 Uprising” in Burma, in which thousands of peaceful protestors calling for the restoration of democracy were killed by that country’s armed forces.

     

    Participants called for the U.S. government’s help in ending the human rights crisis in Sri Lanka by advocating for U.N. human rights monitors on the ground.

     

    The rally concluded with a vigil to commemorate the victims of Black July, in which survivors of the pogrom shared their experiences.

     

    Others read the testimonials of survivors, performed commemorative songs and recited poems in honour of the victims.

     

    More than 600 South African Tamils assembled at the Kharwastan Temple Hall in Chatsworth,South Africa to observe the 25th anniversary of Black July on Friday, 25 July.

     

    African National Congress (ANC) Member of Parliament, Sisa Njikelana from Gauteng Province, delivered the key note speech, comparing developing situation in Sri Lanka to those in Rwanda and Brundi.

     

    An audio visual presentation of events that unfolded in July 1983, and clippings illustrating the human rights violations against the Tamil people were shown to the audience. South African Tamil youths gave dance and music programs that included Tamil Eelam songs.

     

    Asserting that South Africans are prepared to express their opinions publicly, Mr Sisa said: "[t]he looming tragedy of global inertia in situations such as Sri Lankan conflict is a matter of grave concern. The same occurred in Rwanda and Burundi – the world was just watching and dilly-dallying whilst humans were butchering each other. There are times whereby my observation leads to one conclusion i.e. the conflict in Sri Lanka is not a priority to some of the key global players and therefore may just have to be “shelved” for the time being."

     

    Australian Tamils held three events, beginning with a rally at the heart of Sydney Friday morning, followed by a protest meeting, and on Saturday afternoon a photographic exhibition in Melbourne at the State Library Forecourt, opposite the Melbourne Central Railway Station.

     

    More than 200 Australians assembled in Sydney City on Friday to protest the Sri Lankan State sponsored genocide towards Sri Lanka's Tamils.

     

    Police cordoned off main roads in the city as the demonstrators made their way beating drums at 10:30 a.m. Covering their mouths with black cloths to symbolise the oppressed cries of the Tamils' and participants finished the demonstration with the cries of "The charge is genocide; the struggle is for freedom!"

     

    The rally shut down several key transport arteries as it moved from State Parliament House towards Sydney Town Hall.

     

    The rally commenced with a testimony from Mrs Nalayini Santhra who shared her experience of Black July, where rioters supported by the government threw burning tyres upon her father and brother, burning them alive. She was 17 years old at the time.

     

    After the rally, participants moved to the Sydney suburb of Burwood, and assembled at Burwood Park, where many Tamil organisations of Sydney, under the leadership of the Australasian Federation of Tamil Associations, held a peaceful protest meeting held from 12 – 2 pm.

     

    Speaking at the event representing the Eelam Tamil Association, Dr. Victor Rajakulendran said, “Eelam Tamil association believes, a political solution, recognising the Tamils of Sri Lanka as a Nation, their entitlement to claim the territory they have historically occupied as their homeland and their right to self-determination can only, put an end to this, 60 years long suffering of the Tamil people in Sri Lanka. Therefore on this important day for the Tamils, I appeal to the Australian government and all the peace loving Australians, to make every effort to find that political solution and save the Tamils in Sri Lanka from State sponsored Terrorism.”

     

    On Saturday afternoon Tamils in Melbourne gathered at the State Library Four Court, in front of the Melbourne Central Railway Station to commemorate Black July and draw the attention of the Australian public to the plight of Tamil people in Sri Lanka.

     

    A photographic and video exhibition organised at the steps of the Library Four Court attracted the attention of the Australian public. A Tamil youth band provided the entertainment at the exhibition site.

     

    In New Zealand also the New Zealand Tamil Medical Association (NZTMA) and the Tamil Youth Organistion (TYO-New Zealand) organised a blood donation drive, and on Friday held a vigil marking the event.

  • Looming humanitarian crisis in Vanni

    Over 45,000 people have been displaced in the past four weeks due to shelling and aerial bombardment by Sri Lankan Security forces, a Sri Lankan based NGO said. 

     

    45,338 additional persons have been displaced in Mannar, Vavuniyaa, Kilinochchi, and Mullaitivu districts, due to the shelling and aerial bombardment by the Sri Lanka Security Forces in the last four weeks, adding to the Internally Displaced People (IDP) population of 107,048 in Vanni, said a report released by the Tamils Rehabilitation Organization (TRO).

     

    Already schools and public buildings are overflowing with people seeking shelter, while those unable to find accommodation are gathered under trees and along the streets in large numbers.

     

    The TRO report warned that the restrictions imposed by the Government of Sri Lanka to humanitarian agencies to attend to the IDP needs have created conditions for an imminent humanitarian crisis in Vanni.

     

    "Prior to the recent displacement most sectors had the minimum stocks necessary to address the needs of the IDPs but there was limited amount of contingency stocks available for any new IDPs. Stocks available in the Vanni are now dangerously low, especially in the food, shelter, water & sanitation and health (WASH) sectors," the report said.

     

    "The ability of all humanitarian organizations operating in the Vanni to provide humanitarian assistance to IDPs and other vulnerable populations is greatly compromised by the GoSL fuel quotas," it added.

     

    The embargoes and restrictions are violations of International Humanitarian Law (IHL), International Human Rights Law (IHRL) and the Geneva Conventions, the report pointed out.

     

    "Entire schools have also been displaced as a result of the return to war. The teachers and principals of these schools have also been displaced and have had to leave without their educational items (books, chairs, desks etc.) These schools are, where possible, functioning on the premises of existing schools in the areas into which the IDP population has displaced.

     

    "Classes are conducted under the trees and in temporary classrooms constructed from locally available natural materials. Due to the parents’ fear of shelling and bombing many parents are reluctant to send their children to school and as a result attendance is down in many schools," the report said.

     

    TRO urged the International Community to "hold the GoSL accountable for violations of IHL and IHRL and ensure that humanitarian assistance and access are unimpeded," and thanked the Tamil Diaspora for "its ongoing support."

     

    The report also requested the Diaspora to continued to provide necessary support, and to raise awareness among the developed nations of the suffering of the people of the NorthEast.

  • Sri Lanka rejects LTTE truce offer

    A unilateral ceasefire offer by the Liberation Tigers, to cover the period of the SAARC conference in Colombo, was rejected by the Sri Lankan government, a day after it was made.

     

    But senior officials of the Colombo government gave different responses as to the government stance on the truce offer, announced formally by the LTTE Political Wing on July 21.

     

    "The Government of Sri Lanka is not prepared for ceasefire with the LTTE", the state controlled Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation (SLBC) announced in all three languages on July 22, quoting Gotabhaya Rajapakse, the Defense Secretary and brother of Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse.

     

    "The ceasefire announcement is a ploy by the LTTE when it is being militarily weakened in the war front, to strengthen it militarily under the guise of holding negotiation. There is no need for the government to enter into a ceasefire agreement with the LTTE" the SLBC quoted as Gothabaya Rajapakse as saying.

     

    "If we have to believe the LTTE they should first disarm themselves and then surrender," the Defense Secretary was also quoted as saying in the government media.

     

    Meanwhile Dr. Rajiva Wijesinghe, Secretary General of the Government Peace Secretariat (SCOPP) was quoted as saying that the government would wait and see if the LTTE’s offer would come through peace-facilitator Norway.

     

    "We need peace. We will wait and see if they will make the offer to us directly or through Norway (the peace facilitator), if they (LTTE) are serious about it," Wijesinghe told AFP.

     

    "They (LTTE) has offered similar things in the past and militarily beefed up their capabilities. We need to be careful," Wijesinghe said.

     

    The day after the public announcement, Norway officially passed on the unilateral ceasefire offer.

     

    The Rajapakse government had earlier rejected continued involvement in the Sri Lankan conflict by Norway and had denounced Oslo’s six year peace facilitation.

     

    Meanwhile Foreign Miister Rohitha Bogollegama vowed in parliament that the government would not even respond to the LTTE’s offer of a ceasefire.

     

    "We will not respond to it," Bogollegama told parliament, AFP reported. "It has no binding on us."

     

    The government would not enter into any agreement with the LTTE, the Sunday Time squotes him as saying.

     

    The leader of the House Nimal Siripala de Silva said the guerrillas would have to lay down arms and then come for talks. He added that the Government would not fall into "an LTTE trap" which was intended to buy time, re-arm and re-group.

     

    At least two similar truce offers were made by the Tigers between 1994 and 2001, which were rejected by the then Sri Lankan governments.

     

    In 2002, the LTTE made another offer, which was accepted and reciprocated by the then United National Party (UNP) led government, leading to negotiations which resulted in the landmark Ceasefire Agreement (CFA) of 2002.

     

    The Rajapakse government formally abrogated the CFA in January 2008, two years after commencing full scale military offensives against the LTTE.

     

    The LTTE’s formal offer a ceasefire for the SAARC conference (between July 26 and August 4) comes after senior leaders of the movement gave assurances they would not disrupt the event, being held in Colombo amid the Rajapakse government’s all out war against the Tigers.

     

    “We believe that the other countries in the SAARC group will support us in our just struggle for the freedom of the Tamil people,” the Head of the LTTE Political Wing, P. Nadesan, told The Sunday Leader newspaper.

     

    Amid Sri Lankan government claims that the LTTE was hostile to India, the regional hegemon, senior LTTE leader K.V. Balakumaran, told the Australia-based Cheythi Alaikal radio:

     

    “We have said clearly Tamil Eelam is not against India; we will uphold Indian welfare as our own. There was a time, when India looked after our welfare as her own. India will change its current policy towards us one day. We believe firmly, our strong cultural ties to our brothers and sisters in India will help their policy makers to select a just and fair path towards our people. [But] we cannot wait for India’s change of mind to continue with our liberation. One fact should be clear, no one should doubt our friendship, and strong ties to India.”

  • Sri Lanka's east in shadow of war

    The government called the victory the "dawn of the east" and held a nationwide celebration on 19 July 2007, days after the last Tiger stronghold fell.

     

    It announced a host of development measures, and in May this year provincial elections were held for the first time.

     

    A leader of a breakaway group from the Tigers was appointed chief minister after helping fight against the LTTE.

     

    But a year on, troops are still just as visible in major cities, towns and even in villages in the east.

     

    Military checkpoints and stop and search operations are aimed at preventing "infiltration" by the Tamil Tigers - locals say such massive troop deployments in civilian areas increase their feeling of insecurity.

     

    "All those who got training from the LTTE went with them to northern areas. Yet the military views all Tamils with suspicion," says one resident of Batticaloa.

     

    In some places the military are camped on private property. The army insist they pay compensation for using the land, but those affected say that is not the case.

     

    Locals say many people have been randomly picked up for interrogation, on suspicion of having links with the Tamil Tigers.

     

    Most are released after a day or two but some end up in prison.

     

    "They arrested my son on suspicion that he might have received armed training from the LTTE. He has been in prison for the past seven months," says one man in the village of Echilampattu in Batticaloa district.

     

    "All my efforts to bring him out have failed."

     

    Analysts believe the LTTE's intelligence wing and other elements continue to operate in the east - officials say that is why security needs to be so tight.

     

    Since last summer violence has continued.

     

    The chief secretary of the eastern province was assassinated last July and this May a naval transport ship was sunk in Trincomalee harbour, hours before the start of voting.

     

    Tamil political parties backed by the LTTE boycotted the election.

     

    The military's victory was achieved after months of heavy fighting resulting in huge human cost.

     

    In many cases entire villages were abandoned. More than 200,000 people became internally displaced refugees.

     

    According to the government, about 110,000 people have been resettled in Batticaloa district. Nearly 12,000 others are still waiting.

     

    In the district of Trincomalee the picture is similar.

     

    Internally displaced people living in the refugee camps say they lack basic facilities like toilets and clean drinking water.

     

    Those who have been resettled say they have still to receive support from the government.

     

    Most villagers in resettled areas now live without electricity. Many school buildings damaged or destroyed in the war are yet to be rebuilt.

     

    In many places students sit under temporary shelters made asbestos.

     

    "These sheets increase the intensity of the heat. As a result the students suffer from a number of health problems," one headmaster told the BBC.

     

    Damage to property has been immense.

     

    Many houses have been partly or totally damaged by different kinds of bombs, shells and bullets.

     

    Kavita Malar, a young mother who lives with her daughter, received a house worth 300,000 Sri Lankan rupees (about $2,900) as compensation after the 2004 tsunami.

     

    It was badly damaged in the fighting, with some holes created by shells big enough to allow a dog to pass through.

     

    "This house is not stable. Whenever there are strong winds I leave my house and go to my father's house which is nearby," she says.

     

    "I am scared the house may crumble - I am living with fear."

     

    According to the chief minister of the eastern province, Sivanesathurai Chandrakanth (better known as Pillaiyan), 130,000 houses are totally or partly damaged.

     

    He says the government has plans to repair and rebuild all these houses and to complete the rehabilitation work in the next 18 months.

     

    The government is giving 325,000 rupees (about $3,000) to rebuild completely ruined houses.

     

    But there is a widespread perception that not many in need actually receive this financial help.

     

    Sri Lanka's disaster and resettlement minister, Abdul Risath Bathiyutheen, told the BBC that $80m from the World Bank and $40m from the European Union had been used to build houses in areas affected by war.

     

     

    He added that talks were continuing to secure a further $43m from the World Bank. Yet he is not sure how many houses are being built.

     

    "There are a number of ministries and NGOs (non-governmental organisations) doing this work. So it is not possible to give an exact figure."

     

    A senior official from a local NGO says continuing insecurity is the major obstacle in the development process.

     

    "Fear of return of war prevails among the aid donors and it is preventing the flow of funds for large housing construction plans," he says.

     

    Apart from housing, fishing was also badly hit.

     

    Villages dotting the eastern coast were battered by the tsunami in December 2004 and most of the relief work since then has been undone by the war.

     

    Kantaiya Padmanahban is a fisherman from Vaharai in Batticaloa district whose mother died during the tsunami.

     

    He was given a new boat by an NGO but war erupted when he was rebuilding his life. He abandoned the boat and ran away.

     

    When he came back after a year in various refugee camps, his home was damaged and his boat was completely destroyed.

     

    "A shell might have fallen on top of it - a direct hit might have destroyed my boat. They have not given me any compensation to buy a new boat, nets etc, I have no work to do," he says.

     

    In some places the government has built roads and hospitals. But the operation to win hearts and minds, it seems, has a long way to go.

  • Kilinochchi, Mullaiththeevu, not far away, says President

    It is "not too far away," to "liberate the people of Kilinochchi and Mullaiththeevu" and make them live under a "democratic set up" now being "enjoyed by the people of the eastern province," declared Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa, addressing a provincial election campaign meeting in Anuradhapura on Saturday.

     

    The statement comes after Sri Lanka Army officials in Colombo told media that their forces were making "rapid progress" in Vanni, claiming that the SLA recovered 37 dead bodies of LTTE fighters together with arms as the Sri Lankan forces were engaged in consolidating an offensive line south of Mallaavi.

     

    "Like capturing the LTTE territory, the UPFA would also capture the power of the NCPC and Sabragamuwa Provincial Council," he said.

     

    The Sri Lanka Army is determined to free the peoples of the two districts under the LTTE control, Mr. Rajapaksa further said.

     

    According to the SLA claim, 33 LTTE dead bodies were recovered in Vavunikkulam, south of Mallaavi, with arms including a mortar, 23 T-56 assault rifles and one Rocket Propelled Gun (RPG).

     

    A further 4 bodies were recovered at Kalvizhaan, northwest of Vavuniykkulam, according to the SLA.

     

    Meanwhile, LTTE officials in Vanni said 26 Sri Lankan Special Forces commandos were killed Friday and that the Tigers had recovered one body of the SLA soldier.

     

    One RPG, one PK-LMG, two T-56 assault rifles were also seized by the Tigers at Kalvizhaan on Friday when heavy fighting ensued between the advancing SLA and the LTTE defensive units.

     

    More than 45 SLA soldiers sustained heavy wounds, according to the Tigers.

     

    The SLA was engaged in offensive attacks on Saturday, the first day of the unilateral ceasefire announced by the Tigers in connection with the SAARC conference being held in Colombo.

     

    Meanwhile, the Defence Secretary called on Army deserters to return to their posts.

     

    Gotabaya Rajapakse appealed to over 10,000 soldiers who had left the military for various personal reasons during the past four to five years to return to fight for their motherland, the Sunday Island newspaper reported.

     

    "This is a very decisive juncture when the security forces have got the upper hand and need all the help they can get", he told the Sunday Island during an interview on July 26.

     

    The Tigers are in disarray - they are falling apart like a pack of cards and fleeing for safety leaving behind heavy guns and artillery as never seen before, the Defence Secretary and brother of the President asserted.

     

    "We have spent a lot of money and time on training these soldiers professionally and they had subsequently left for personal reasons. We can expedite the process for them to return and all that they need to do is to come back", he assured.

  • In Search of our roots

    The Tamil Youth Organization of Canada, in partnership with the Canadian Tamil Congress and The Academy of Tamil Arts and Technology, held a youth conference titled “In Search Of our roots” at the University of Toronto in Scarborough on July 27. The conference was as part of a series of events remembering the Black July riots of 1983. 

     

    “The event was a means for our youth to be better informed and educated about the ‘Past, Present and Future’ of the Tamil Community,” the TYO said.

    The keynote speakers included Dr. Yamuna Sangarasivam, Dr. Joseph Chandrakanthan, and Dr. Ellyn Shandler, who all shared their experiences and knowledge about the pre and post1983 riots that marked the lives of Tamil people so deeply..

     

    The TYO, supported by Toronto based lawyer Harini Sivalingam also facilitated the workshop titled “Addressing Negative Portrayal of Tamil Canadian Youth,” which tackled current issues that Tamil youth and the general Tamil community face with the media as well as within the Education and Justice system.

      

    The day wrapped up with Beate Arnestad’s documentary titled “My daughter the Terrorist” which was well received by the youth.  The conference came to a conclusion with the three partnering committees highlighting the importance of youth engagement and participation within the Canadian and Tamil communities.

  • Aware Colombo ‘fighting terrorism’ - Robert Evans MEP

    A visiting European Union delegation Friday came down hard on the government over alleged human rights abuses, but acknowledged that it was ‘involved in the fight against terrorism’.

     

    However, the EU delegation for South Asia relations also expressed confidence that Colombo would take the necessary steps to ensure its GSP+ status would be renewed.

     

    Reading out a press statement, delegation head Robert Evans said the EU Parliament is fully aware that Sri Lanka is involved in the fight against terrorism but still believes that more must be done to defend human rights and put an end to the abductions.

     

    “The European MPs are fully aware that Sri Lanka is involved in the fight against terrorism. It should be defeated for the development of the country,” he added.

     

    “Terrorism has no place. It must end and it must end sooner…We condemn LTTE violence and want them to come to the democratic process. We still believe in a peaceful solution for Sri Lanka. A situation of war is not good for anybody,” Evans said.

     

    The EU delegation, whilst welcoming the beginnings of the democratic process in the East, also expressed concerns about the lack of a timetable for weapons decommissioning adding that the former paramilitaries now running the Eastern Province are reported to still be using child soldiers.

     

    The delegation noted that in several meetings with the media, journalists spoke of continued harassment and the fear of being critical of the authorities. They said they also heard of many cases of media workers being arrested, and learnt that 12 have be killed in recent months, reported the Daily Mirror.

     

    The delegation intends to raise the case of Sunday Times columnist M. Tissainayagam and of his conditions of detention, in the European Parliament, the paper said.

     

    "The European parliament delegation urges the government of Sri Lanka, as a top priority, to organise investigations into these cases," the delegation said in a statement, describing the number of abductions as "frightening".

     

    "The widespread belief that the military and police enjoy impunity does nothing to set ordinary people at ease and may even fuel the LTTE," Reuters quoted the delegation as saying.

     

    Evans says they were informed officially that some 500 members of the military had been investigated for abuses and 100 had been prosecuted or convicted yet to date there is no evidence to substantiate the claims.

     

    “The Sri Lankan Government needs to pay more attention to the repeated tales of human rights violations. The military is immune from prosecution,” he said.

     

    “If the government wants to create a sense of security, it should take serious action against these HR violations,” he added.

     

    The delegation also commended Minister Tissa Vitarana for his attempts to make the All Party Representative Committee (APRC) live up to its name, by including all parties, but stressed that the APRC is incomplete without the participation of the Tamil National Alliance.

     

    In the light of apprehensions, the EU delegation remains extremely anxious about the impact a possible loss of GSP+ status would have on economy and employment in Sri Lanka and urges the Government to do everything possible to effective implement the international conventions that are required in order to address human rights concerns.

     

    “In my opinion, and this is not of the delegation, I don’t think Sri Lanka will qualify for the concession…but the door is not shut,” the Daily Mirror quoted him as saying.

     

    Evans, who lead the seven member delegation on its five day visit to the country, said that this is his personal opinion and no final decision has been made on whether to extend the GSP+ status further.

     

    “The solution is with the Government. It is aware of the issues that form the criteria for granting preferential trade status and it has to act on those issues,” Mr. Evans told reporters at a press briefing, the Sunday Time reported.

     

    However, the Daily News had a different take, quoting Evans as saying “The GSP+ issue is debatable but I am confident that Sri Lanka is capable of addressing the conventions and gaining the GSP+ to develop the economy and employment.”

     

    The trade concession, called the GSP+ scheme, expires in December. It helped Sri Lanka net a record $2.9 billion from EU markets last year, or 37.5 percent of total export income.

     

    "The European Parliament delegation remains extremely anxious about the impact a possible loss of GSP+ status would have on the economy and employment in Sri Lanka," the EU statement said.

     

    Sri Lanka was one of 15 countries granted GSP+ concessions in 2005 to help it recover from the Indian Ocean tsunami.

     

    The island's garment and textile industry, which employs hundreds of thousands of largely rural poor, would be hard hit if the special trade terms were axed.

     

    Speaking to the media after completing a visit to the country, the EU delegation also expressed disappointment as it could not visit Trincomalee, which was the main purpose of its tour to Sri Lanka, on the grounds of last minute security concerns.

     

    “The last minute cancellation and a catalogue of chaos and confusion meant that the delegation did not fly to Trincomalee, despite repeated assurances and endless complications resulted in the party being turned back from Ratmalana Airport destroying months of preparation, time and expense,” EU head of delegation for relations with South Asia, Robert Evans said.

     

    However, the Sri Lankan Foreign Ministry says the position articulated by a visiting EU Parliamentary delegation in its statement on not being able to visit Trincomalee is "regrettable" and is open to misinterpretation, citing logistical and procedural reasons on the part of the private aircraft operator for the trip failing to take place.

     

    However Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Rohitha Bogollagama had a different criticism of the EU delegation, saying it had taken hasty decisions on the human rights situation in Sri Lanka. He also declared that the EU delegation’s claim that it was prevented from visiting the east was a misinterpretation of what really occurred.

     

    “To know the real situation in a country, one has to visit areas and meet people. The EU delegation had confined itself to Colombo and only met people with their own political agendas,” the Minister said, addressing reporters in Colombo.

     

    “Since they have confined themselves to Colombo and seen the country situation through the eyes of others, they are in no position to make an accurate assessment of the situation,” The Nation newspaper reported him as saying.

  • ‘Neighbours’, but so what?

    One oft-asserted claim in reference to Sri Lanka’s ethnic crisis and especially the Tamil demand for independence on the grounds of persecution by the Sinhala-dominated is that most Tamils live outside the Northeast, i.e. “amongst” the Sinhalese.

     

    In short it is implied, Tamils and Sinhalese have basically amicable relations, because, firstly, Tamils are “happy” to live amongst Sinhalese and, secondly, there is no communal, majoritarian violence.

     

    But these assertions are wrong as they are based on untenable assumptions.

     

    To begin with, no communal violence today is no guarantee it will be so in future.

     

    Secondly, many Tamils have no choice but to accept the risk of communal violence and come to the south. Not only are the central mechanisms of administration and economic life in the south (Colombo) and not in the Tamil areas, but the conflict-stricken Northeastern areas are already dangerous for Tamils.

     

    Past Tense, Future Imperfect

     

    The first assertion that because they are presently living safely in the south amongst the Sinhalese the Tamils have nothing to fear is plainly challenged by the histories of communal violence in numerous places - including Sri Lanka, itself.

     

    Here are a just few instances where once apparently ‘peaceful’ neighbours have turned on neighbours:

     

    -          India/Pakistan: Hindus and Muslims lived “amongst one another” under centuries of British rule, but the imminent formation of the independent states of India and Pakistan resulted in both mass movement and widespread communal violence between them;

     

    -          Yugoslavia: In post WW2 Yugoslavia, Serbs, Croats and Muslims lived “amongst each other” without major communal violence until the end of the Cold War. But ethnic and religious violence on a massive scale erupted within a couple of years (resulting, ultimately, in the formation – sometimes peacefully - of several new ethnically-defined independent states);

     

    -          Rwanda: In 1994, the Hutu majority turned on the Tutsi minority in genocidal violence – notably, shortly after a power-sharing pact had been signed;

     

    -          Iraq: Sunnis and Shiites lived ‘peacefully’ together under Saddam Hussein’s dictatorship – even though his Sunni-dominated regime was persecuting Shiites along with the (Sunni) ethnic Kurds. It didn’t take much, after the US invasion, for whole slaughter between Sunnis and Shiites to erupt, resulting in the present ethnic enclaves across the country. (Moreover, the present ‘peace’ has involved the US arming the Sunnis militia while the Shiites - and Kurds - dominate the new armed forces.);

     

    -          Kenya: earlier this year, simmering ethnic animosities erupted into violence that resulted several deaths (and ultimately required forceful international intervention to fashion even the present fragile accommodation);

     

    -          Tibet: China sent in the military this year to quell rioting by Tibetans. Their mobs’ target? Not the Chinese state apparatus, but ethnic Han Chinese who have been increasingly settling in Tibet over decades;

     

    -          South Africa: also in 2008, ethnic riots between South Africans and migrant workers erupted on a scale that has embarrassed the self-styled ‘Rainbow nation’.

     

    -          Germany: large numbers of Jews opted to remain “amongst the Germans” even as the Nazis assumed power and formalized their persecution.

     

    Whilst all these instances of communal bloodletting of course have different contexts and dynamics, on what basis of distinction can it be guaranteed mass violence against Tamils will not happen in Sri Lanka?

     

    Tamils in the South

     

    Whilst most Tamils originating from the Northeast (even many of the ‘Colombo Tamils’ have their familial roots there), large numbers have indeed lived in the south, amongst Sinhalese. But they have also suffered communal violence from the Sinhalese – condoned and sometimes openly supported by the Sinhala-dominated state.

     

    As Prof. Sankaran Krishna points out it, the period since independence in 1948 has been “punctuated by bouts of annihilatory violence, often called pogroms, directed against the Tamils in 1956, 1958, 1977, 1981 and 1983”.

     

    And in his seminal 1984 essay titled ‘The Open Economy and Its Impact on Ethnic Relations in Sri Lanka’, Sri Lankan academic Newton Gunesinghe described the period from 1977 to 1983, as “one of incessant ethnic rioting” by Sinhalese against Tamils.

     

    Prof. Krishna has written a key text on underlying dynamics of Tamil-Sinhala relations, titled ‘Post Colonial Insecurities: India, Sri Lanka and the Question of Nationhood’.

     

    He points out that, viewed against the Sinhala nationalist ideology of a majority-minorities hierarchy, these “periodic explosions of violence against Tamils represent efforts to put them back in their places on grounds they have become too assertive and need to be taught a lesson” (p54).

     

    This month marks the 25th anniversary of the 1983 anti-Tamil pogrom, when those Tamils ‘living amongst the Sinhalese’ were systematically massacred and driven from their homes in the south, including the capital, Colombo, often by their Sinhala neighbours.

     

    As has often been pointed out, the Sri Lankan state did nothing to stop the bloodletting. In fact, electoral lists were released to the rioters and army trucks moved groups of armed thugs from neighbourhood to neighbourhood.

     

    Six days after the mobs began their killing, President Junius Jayawardene made his first announcement in a radio broadcast.

     

    He did not apologise, comfort or promise protection to the Tamils. Instead he blamed the pogrom on the desire of the Tamil people for separation, which, he said, began in 1976.

     

    Ever present danger

     

    It has sometimes been pointed out that since 1983 there has been no repeat of such Sinhala-on-Tamil violence.

     

    But, firstly, that is to ignore the racial dynamics of the armed conflict in the Northeast: the Sri Lanka armed forces are overwhelmingly Sinhala-dominated. Today’s efforts to “teach the Tamils a lesson and put them in their place”, as Prof. Krishna puts it, is now the preserve of the Sinhala military.

     

    Secondly, it is to ignore the latent “threat” of Tamil self-defence or counter-violence: during the previous pogroms or riots, there was no sizeable organized Tamil militancy.

     

    In any case, the possibility of future communal violence cannot be discounted. Indeed, the threat is sometimes raised openly by Sinhala leaders and politicians.

     

    In early 2006, Sri Lanka’s Foreign Minister, Mangala Samaraweera, on a visit to the United States, told the press that if attacks on Sri Lankan troops by the Tamil Tigers continued, his government “may not be able to restrain” the Sinhala people.

     

    (Samaraweera, having split from the government of President Mahinda Rajapakse, has not styled himself as a champion of human rights.)

     

    Also, in early 2006, Champika Ranawake, a senior minister in the present ruling alliance declared: “in the event of a war, if the 40,000 government troops stationed in Jaffna are killed, then 400,000 Tamil civilians living in Colombo will be sent to Jaffna in coffins.”

     

    In Feb 2007, Ranawake, who is also the ideologue of the ultra-Sinhala nationalist monks’ party, the Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU), openly urged the murders of critics of his government’s critics, saying: “If they can't be dealt with existing laws we know how to do it. If we can't suppress those bastards with the law we need to use any other ways and means!”

     

    This attitude is reflected in a myriad of state practices when it comes to engaging with the Tamils; from the security forces at the checkpoints to the courts to the seeking of employment.

     

    Given all this, there is the question as to why Tamil “choose” to live in the south amongst Sinhalese. The answers are: escaping the warzone, pursuing basic economic life and transit.

     

    For many Tamils, the areas outside the Northeastern warzone are comparatively safer places.

     

    Whilst disappearances, indefinite detention, torture, etc are a risk in the south, the risks of these are far greater in their home towns and villages in the Northeast (consider the situation in Jaffna, for example, which has been under state control for 13 years). By the way, the imminence of (Sinhala) violence is referred to as ‘impunity’ by the international community.

     

    Secondly, following decades of state exclusion from investment, even by the early eighties, the Northeast had little prospect of economic life outside state employment.

     

    Which is why, despite, as Prof. Gunesinghe puts it, the period from 1977 to 1983, being described as “one of incessant ethnic rioting”, large numbers of Tamils remained in the south. Their luck ran out in 1983.

     

    Yet, there is little choice for Tamils trying to survive today. Attempting to secure a basic economic life, many accept the latent risks of living in the south. Their desperation is heightened by Sri Lanka’s rampaging inflation.

     

    Then there are those Tamils trying to get out of Sri Lanka, either for safety or to seek employment abroad to support families in the Northeast.

     

    But with the state administration (travel and other papers), international embassies (visas) and the island’s sole international airport being in Colombo, large numbers of Tamils have come to Colombo and languish in squalid ‘lodges’ or crowd relatives’ homes while they try to arrange their departures.

     

    Hardly the idyll of ethnic harmony claimed by those who abstractly point out that “most Tamils” – and that, incidentally, is also an uncorroborated claim – “live amongst the Sinhalese.”

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