Diaspora

Taxonomy Color
red
  • ‘India gives full blessings to eliminate LTTE’

    Sri Lanka's Prime Minister Ratnasiri Wickramanayaka, in a special interview to Thinakkural, a Colombo based Tamil daily, claimed that the Indian government had given "full blessings" to the government of Mahinda Rajapaksa to "eliminate the LTTE."
     
    Mr. Wickramanayaka further proclaimed that there was no "ethnic conflict" in Sri Lanka.
     
    "The LTTE should lay their arms down if they want peace talks. We are not prepared for talks with them in the meantime," he further said.
     
    "How can Tamils live in Wellawatte in Colombo if such [ethnic] conflict prevails," Mr. Wikramanayaka asked, claiming that there was only a "terrorism problem," in Sri Lanka.
     
    "Hence, our government will destroy the LTTE very soon", said the Sri Lankan Prime Minister.
     
    "We are confident that we will defeat the LTTE in the war front. The victory against the LTTE is in the hand reach."
     
    However, the Sri Lankan Prime Minister was not prepared to fix a deadline to defeat the Tigers.
     
    "We have started attacking the LTTE from four sides. We are using modern sophisticated weapons," he said.
     
    "Thamileezham is not achievable," Wickremanayake was quoted as saying by the paper.
     
    "We are not worried if fifteen nations declare independence tomorrow. But our expectation is that no division is allowed in Sri Lanka."
     
    "We will stop that division at any cost. We will not stop the war."
  • Plea for Church rebuild
    Allaipiddy church damaged by Sri Lankan army rocket fire.
    Jaffna Bishop House and several Catholic organizations in Jaffna peninsula have again appealed to the Sinhala-dominated government of Sri Lanka (GoSL) to rebuild St. Philips Narrie’s church in Allaiappiddi in the islets of Jaffna which was destroyed in the Sri Lanka Army (SLA) rocket fire in August 2006.
     
    in August 2006, sources in Jaffna said. The church, which serves more than 80 resettled families in Allaipiddi, was blasted by Multi-barrel Rocket Launcher (MBRL) fire killing scores of people.
     
    Allaippiddi’s residents had sought protection in the above church during SLA offensives in August 2006.
     
    Rocket fire, launched at the church from several SLA bases in Jaffna peninsula, killed 40 and seriously injured more than hundred others who had sought protection in the above church during the offensive.
     
    The bodies of the dead were left abandoned and the injured brought to Jaffna and this incident triggered the displacement of the entire village to Jaffna where they were offered shelter in St. Our Lady of Refuge (OLR) and Navvaanththu'rai churches.
     
    Many were also placed in interim refugee camps in Jaffna.
     
    Rev. Fr. Jim Brown, Allaippiddi Parish Priest, went missing after he was last seen at the Sri Lanka Navy (SLN) check point, on his way to perform religious duties in St. Philips Narries church in Allaippiddi.
     
    He is believed to have been arrested and murdered by the security forces.
     
    An estimated 10 million rupees (US$100,000) will be needed to rebuild the church.
     
    The landmines sown in Allaippiddi village have been completely cleared with the assistance of Jaffna Secretariat and its former residents are gradually retuning to take up permanent residence again, civil society sources in Jaffna said.
  • Tamil rappers Little Empire raise awareness about turmoil in Sri Lanka
    Toronto-based Tamil hip hop group Little Empire, from left tha REAL, DNA Blitz, Sanskrit, 6ix Facist and Milan, say their lyrics aren’t always understood. Photo Ashley Hutcheson/Toronto Star
    Little Empire is more than just a music group. It's a movement spearheaded by five Canadians of Tamil descent committed to raising awareness about the oppression of Tamils in Sri Lanka, running a community basketball league and mixing hip hop, Tamil, rap and reggae.
     
    Sanskrit, tha REAL, Milan, 6ix Facist and DNA Blitz, the group's five members who range in age from 22 to 32, sing about religious strife, the impact of the tsunami on Sri Lanka and Tamil identity in Canada.
     
    While immigrants often leave their homelands in search of a more prosperous life, Mayuran Rajashivam, a.k.a. tha REAL, says his parents "were forced to relocate from paradise to Canada because of genocide."
     
    He speaks nostalgically about Nuwara Eliya, in the heart of Sri Lanka's hill country, with evergreens and rich tea estates, waterfalls, mountains, palm trees and quiet streams. But for Tamils, the natural beauty of the country can be overshadowed, he says.
     
    "When you're Tamil and moving around the island, you can be stopped and searched with no sense of safety. I felt and saw that first-hand at checkpoints, how vigorous and even vulgar they could be," says Rajashivam. "Generations of Tamils grew up in northern and eastern Sri Lanka (Tamil Eelam) owning their own property and not worrying about mortgages and other bills.
     
    "The new lifestyle in Canada and the pain and anguish of starting over has lead to a lot of growing pains for the Tamil community in Canada," he says. "Losing loved ones and various symptoms of war have left many of us distraught. After seeing paradise first-hand, I realize what my parents and many others like them felt."
     
    Little Empire combines various musical genres to forge its own style. The group views hip hop as the voice of the oppressed and a tool for empowerment. "Growing up, I had a lot of friends who were black," Rajashivam says. "Even from kindergarten my best friends were black. At many times, I felt very much the oppression that blacks felt, and (I felt) as a Tamil. This made the bond between me and my black friends even stronger."
     
    The track "No Country for Me" starts out with Martin Luther King's words: "I'm happy to join with you today in what will go down in history as the greatest demonstration for freedom in the history of our nation . . . "
     
    Rajashivam says Little Empire's lyrics about freedom are not always understood. While the group tries to shed light on the circumstances that lead some community members to extremist measures, some confuse the message as support for the Tamil Tigers.
     
    "We are just trying to show how innocent individuals, due to desperate circumstances, can get caught up in extremist means to fight oppression. We are not Tamil Tigers, we are freedom fighters," he says.
     
    Little Empire has received positive feedback from the local Sri Lankan community, from parents who buy their CDs for their children because of their educational message to youth who identify with their lyrics and rap.
     
    When they're not working on their music, tha REAL, Sanskrit and 6ix Facist run the Toronto Tamil Basketball Association to help build leadership skills among Tamil youth.
     
    What's next for Little Empire? The group is working on a new album, Hiplomacy, to follow up Eye of the Storm, a mixed tape available at HMV. Check out Little Empire's home page at myspace.com/littleempiremusic for more information.
     
    Amita Handa hosts and produces Masala Mixx (Saturdays 4-6 p.m. on CKLN 88.1 FM), and is resident DJ of Besharam, Canada's largest monthly Bollywood party.
  • Canada Tamils reject Police charges
    The president of the World Tamil Movement's Toronto branch is denying Canadian police allegations that his group is a front for the Tamil Tigers, which Canada deems a terrorist organization – though he supports their aim of an independent Tamil homeland.
     
    Earlier in May, an RCMP (Royal Canadian Mounted Police) affidavit was released in federal court detailing an investigation that involved a 2006 raid of the movement's office in Scarborough and accusing the group and its executives of several criminal code offences under the Anti-terrorism Act.
     
    The police accuse the World Tamil Movement of carrying out a well-organized system of extortion that forced local Tamil Canadians to donate to the LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) – a secessionist group that has been branded as a terrorist organization by Canada and 30 other countries.
     
    The affidavit's nearly 400 pages describe evidence seized in the raid and interviews with members of Toronto's Tamil community to make the case for a direct link between the two groups.
     
    Sitha Sittampalam (known as Sittampalam Sinnathamby in the RCMP affidavit), the movement's Toronto president since 2004, says that if formal charges are laid he will fight them in court.
     
    "We do not have any fundraising activities for terrorism," or any connection with the Tigers, Sittampalam told the Star yesterday during an interview in the Tamil movement's Scarborough office.
     
    However, he said: "We consider LTTE as a movement to fight and liberate our people. We don't consider the LTTE as a terrorist organization.
     
    "We feel that the (Canadian) government is really misplaced in doing this, in listing it as a terrorist organization.
     
    "[LTTE] has the support of the people. It has a cause. It has an objective. It's not violence for the sake of it without any cause."
     
    The Tamil Tigers currently control much of northeastern Sri Lanka around the Jaffna peninsula, an area dominated by Tamils, an ethnic minority among Sri Lanka's mainly Sinhalese population.
     
    When asked about a letter included in the federal document from Tigers' head Velupillai Prabhakaran, requesting that Canadian Tamils raise more than $3 million by the summer of 2003 to help with a major offensive, Sittampalam said he had never heard of such a letter.
     
    He acknowledged that his organization, prior to the 2006 raid, received $30,000 to $40,000 a month in donations, but said almost all of it went to a relief organization in Sri Lanka called SEDOT (Social and Economic Development of Tamils).
     
    Asked if he knew of any connection between SEDOT and the Tamil Tigers, Sittampalam said he wasn't sure. Later, he said that because SEDOT is a registered non-profit non-governmental organization recognized by the Sri Lankan government, it could not have any ties to the Tigers.
     
    The affidavit describes how Tamils in the Toronto area were targeted with the use of Elections Canada voting lists, then approached to donate to the Tamil Tigers through the World Tamil Movement.
     
    From interviews with several GTA residents, the RCMP report details how people were coerced into a direct-deposit payment scheme while visiting Sri Lanka, where they were identified at Tamil Tiger checkpoints as Canadians who could afford to make regular donations.
     
    According to the Mounties, when these visitors returned to Toronto they would be visited by men representing the World Tamil Movement, asking for either a lump sum or regular monthly donations.
     
    In response to that allegation, Sittampalam said the World Tamil Movement publishes a newspaper delivered directly to subscriber's homes, and that people often voluntarily donate to the group at the door to help with the struggle back home.
     
    "It appears to us that almost 99 per cent of the (Tamil) population is behind them (the Tamil Tigers), from what we see and hear," Sittampalam said, describing what he called a violent government strategy of ethnic cleansing.
     
    "When the government deals with its own citizens like that, there is no surprise in an armed uprising as a last resort, thriving in that country supported by the entire (Tamil) population there. And almost all these people who were refugees when they came here, they were victims – they lost their property. They lost their land. They lost their relatives. We have no option. Politically we are in favour of that struggle – politically."
  • ‘A rapid downhill course’
    Noting that in the past year the relationship between Sri Lanka’s civil society actors and the State has continued to deteriorate, the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), protested this week at the persecution of the media by the Sinhala-nationalist regime.
     
    In a substantial report released earlier this month on “In the Balance: Press Freedom in South Asia 2007-2008,” the media watchdog, said:
     
    “Verbal and physical attacks, harassment, restrictions on access and vilification of media personnel have become a common feature in the lives of journalists, photographers and all those engaged in the gathering, publication and dissemination of information in Sri Lanka.”
     
    “Access to areas of the country’s north and east where the military conflict is ongoing is extremely restricted, and the state-created Media Centre for National Security (MCNS) has a monopoly on official information regarding the conflict.”
     
    “As a consequence of these restrictions, members of the media remain unable to provide an accurate picture of the conflict to their viewers and readers, and the people of Sri Lanka are deprived of their right to know exactly what kind of war is being carried out against the people of the north and east in the cause, supposedly, of their security.”
     
    “A range of emergency regulations has been promulgated that restrict access to conflict-affected areas for civil society actors, including humanitarian agencies and the media. The regulations enable arbitrary arrest and detention, and control dissemination of information considered to be contrary to the interests of national security.”
     
    “MCNS spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella declared that anyone who criticised the army at that juncture could be considered to be a traitor since he or she was undermining the morale of the security forces. This opinion was reiterated by military spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara”
     
    "Restrictions on journalists and media institutions are coupled with systematic and regular attacks on nongovernmental organisations (NGOs) and on individual members of civil society, including those engaged in media freedom issues. The Parliamentary Select Committee on NGOs continues to summon key officials of NGOs in order to inquire into the nature and scope of their activities and their funding portfolios."
     
    “In terms of media freedom, it is a matter of particular concern that government officials and politicians – including the President, Mahinda Rajapaksa, not to mention the government spokesman and the Minister of Information and Media – have at various times made speeches that have indiscriminately attacked journalists and media organisations. This is despite rhetorical commitments to media freedom and to ethical media practices.”
     
    "The lackadaisical approach of law enforcement agencies toward complaints made by media personnel about attacks and harassment has enhanced the culture of impunity for attacks on the media community. No progress has been made in any investigations into killings of journalists that have occurred during the period under review."
     
    "In addition, media personnel have filed complaints of being summoned to several provincial police stations for interrogation about the content of their news reports. These interrogations amount to intimidation and interference with the right of journalists and media workers to engage in their profession."
     
    The Sri Lankan airstrike on the Voice of Tigers radio station last November in which several media workers were killed or injured was amongst those singled out by the IFJ report:
     
    “Several statements were issued by media freedom organisations in Sri Lanka and outside, including by the head of UNESCO, condemning the deaths of Voice of Tigers workers during the air attacks on the station. Media and Information Minister Anura Priyadarshana Yapa challenged these sentiments on the grounds that none of those killed in the attacks had been issued with a media identity card from his ministry and therefore could not be considered to be media personnel.”
     
    “According to the ministry’s figures, using this criterion, only one journalist was killed in Sri Lanka in 2006-07.”
     
    Meanwhile, in another press release, the IFJ also condemned the continuing anti-media statements made by Sri Lanka's Defence Secretary, Gotabhaya Rajapaksa.
     
    IFJ joins its affiliate, the Free Media Movement (FMM), in calling on Sri Lanka’s Government to explain chilling and inflammatory statements by Sri Lanka’s Defence Secretary suggesting independent media should be prevented from running reports allegedly detrimental to the security forces," it said.
  • EU pledges GSP+ concessions, approves $100m for Sri Lanka
    The European Union wants Sri Lanka to receive GSP+ concession, the EU Ambassador in Sri Lanka Julian Wilson has said, according to recent press reports.
     
    The EU has also approved $100m in humanitarian and development funds for Sri Lanka, the Daily Mirror paper quoted him as saying.
     
    "I will only say that a lot of melodramatic rubbish has been written about the renewal of GSP+ in local press. The truth is simple if somewhat banal-the EU wants Sri Lanka to receive GSP+ again for the coming three years,” Mr. Wilson said at an EU event on May 8.
     
    Mr. Wilson also said that the EU has given substantial development assistance to Sri Lanka with over one billion US$ in grants and subsidized loans over the last few years, specially for conflict and tsunami reconstruction in the South, East and North of Sri Lanka .
     
    “We have approved this year a further instalment of over 100 million US$ in humanitarian and longer term development funds to be spent over the coming two years,” he said.
     
    Also speaking at the function, Sri Lankan Minister M. H. Mohamed said the outcome of the EU -Sri Lanka Joint Commission will have a positive impact on Sri Lanka’s application at the next revision of the EU GSP+ scheme scheduled to takeplace at the end of this year.
     
    Main opposition United National party (UNP) leader Ranil Wickremesinghe had on an earlier occasion said he is planning to meet with representatives of the European Union to secure a renewal of the GSP+ facility, the paper said.
     
    Mr. Wickremesinghe had said he will take up the responsibility after setting aside political differences for the betterment of the garments industry, despite the lackadaisical attitude of the President Mahinda Rajapakse and his United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA) government.
     
    The GSP+, preferential trade scheme from the EU allows Sri Lanka to export 7,200 items duty free into the EU and is credited with helping to boost Sri Lankan exports. The scheme is to be reviewed this year for its extension for another three years.
     
    For eligibility, recipient countries need to have ratified 27 international conventions on human rights, labour standards, environmental protection, and governance principles by 31 December 2008.
     
    Given the widespread allegations of human rights violations by the Rajapskse government, there has been much speculation recently that the European scheme may not be extended to Sri Lanka after the end of this year.
     
    However, the European Commission maintains that whilst the continuation of the GSP+ scheme depends on the implementation of the 27 conventions, it does not expect “absolute compliance.”
     
    “No one expects absolute compliance. This would be unfair but we need to be clear that there would be an objective assessment on the implementation of these conventions,” said Peter Maher, Head of Operations of the Delegation of the European Commission to Sri Lanka and the Maldives, recently.
     
    Among the “core human and labour rights UN/ILO Conventions that must be ratified and effectively implemented for GSP Plus to apply” are the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural Rights and the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.
  • Diaspora children attend Europe-wide exams in Tamil
    Tamil children sitting for exams organised by the Tamil Education Development Council (TEDC), a European trans-national Tamil initiative.

    13,300 children and students from the Tamil Diaspora earlier this month attended annual exams in Tamil language across various countries in Europe and in New Zealand.
     
    The exams, conducted on May 4 by the Tamil Education Development Council (TEDC), a European trans-national Tamil initiative, are largely sustained through volunteer effort and from the contribution of Tamil educational institutions in Europe.
     
    The TEDC, with an expert panel, is responsible for the design of curricula, provides workshops to teachers in Tamil language and conducts the annual exams.
     
    The pass-out ratio last year was more than 90 percent, according to Administrative Coordinator of TEDC, Nakula Ariyaratnam.
     
    "The primary aim of the exams is to encourage Tamil language skills among the students who learn Tamil. However, we also focus on their ability to use the language as a means of gaining knowledge on other subjects such as the history of Tamils, and their ability to interrelate texts in Tamil with the mainstream languages in their countries," says Mrs. Ariyaratnam.
     
    5,557 students from Germany, 2,880 from France, 1993 from the United Kingdom, 1,330 from Norway, 1,030 from Denmark, 300 from the Netherlands, 170 from Italy, 95 from Sweden, 07 from Belgium and 35 from New Zealand sat for exams from grade 01 to grade 10 this year.
     
    90-minutes written exams were held for children between grade 01 and grade 04. two-hour exams for children in grade 05 and grade 06, 150-minutes papers for grades 07,08 and 09 and 3-hour exams were held for grade 10 students, Mrs. Ariyaratnam said.
     
    The trans-national education effort is supported by participating educational services in member countries and is largely sustained through volunteer effort by thousands of Tamil teachers in various cities and towns of Europe.
     
    35 teachers from various countries were on their way to correct the papers being dispatched from various schools to France, this year.
     
    Diaspora schools in Switzerland, with a large population of Tamils, also conducted their exams on Saturday with their own exams as they were following a different curricula introduced prior to the one designed by the TEDC.
     
    The TEDC has a Book Committee, Examinations Committee and an Expert Panel on Curricula Design.
     
    The exam paper for grades 09 and 10 also incorporated text from the native languages of the students' residing countries. Texts were provided in English, French, Danish, Norwegian and other languages for rendition in Tamil by the students.
     
    "So far, the TEDC has been conducting written exams. Fully aware of importance of the examinations for oral language skills among the students, we are examining ways and means for effectively incorporating oral exams for the next year," said the administrative coordinator of the institution.
  • Tutu: ‘Sri Lanka not fit to be in UN Rights Council’
    With a terrible record of torture and disappearance, Sri Lanka doesn't deserve a seat on the United Nations Human Rights Council and Colombo’s application should be voted out, argued the veteran South African human rights activist, Archbishop Tutu says.
     
     
    The full text of his letter follows:
     
    “It would seem self-evident that a country which tortures and kidnaps its own people has no place on the world's leading human rights body. Apparently not: Sri Lanka, despite repeated criticism for its human rights record, is running for re-election to the UN human rights council, with a vote to be held in New York on May 21.
     
    “Governments owe it to Sri Lankan human rights victims - and to victims of human rights abuses around the world - to ensure that the Sri Lankan bid fails. This will be an important test of the 47-member council, to show that the UN's standards for it will be honoured.
     
    “If Sri Lanka is defeated this year, that will be important not just for the Sri Lankan human rights leaders who, at great personal risk, have called for Sri Lanka's defeat, and for Sri Lankan civil society. In combination with the humiliating defeat last year of Belarus, it will send an important signal for the future: governments with track records of serious human rights abuses do not belong on a body set up to protect the victims of such abuses.
     
    “Sri Lanka has failed to honour its pledges of upholding human rights standards and cooperating with the UN since joining the council two years ago. Indeed, its human rights record has worsened during that time. The Sri Lankan idea of cooperation with the UN, meanwhile, has been to condemn senior UN officials (including the high commissioner for human rights, Louise Arbour, and the under secretary general for humanitarian affairs, John Holmes) as "terrorists" or "terrorist sympathisers."
     
    “The systematic abuses by Sri Lankan government forces are among the most serious imaginable. Government security forces summarily remove their own citizens from their homes and families in the middle of the night, never to be heard from again. Torture and extrajudicial killings are widespread. When the human rights council was established, UN members required that states elected must themselves "uphold the highest standards" of human rights. On that count, Sri Lanka is clearly disqualified.
     
    “The separatist Tamil Tigers have used despicable tactics in their war against the government, including frequent suicide bombings. But that can in no way excuse the scale of government abuses.
     
    “Fortunately, the news from the council is not all bad. Countries running from other regions of the world have credible claims to be leaders in promoting human rights. Argentina and Chile, which suffered terribly from torture, enforced disappearances and extrajudicial killings in the past, have become leading supporters of human rights, and now seek to join the council. On the African slate, there are some true human rights leaders, and - thankfully - no candidacy from Zimbabwe or Sudan.
     
    “In the entire world, Sri Lanka stands out as the most clearly unqualified state seeking election to the council this year, and the place where things are getting unambiguously worse.
     
    “Defeating the Sri Lankan candidacy would be a comfort to the people of Sri Lanka. It would place international pressure on the government to respect human rights, and to accept a UN human rights monitoring mission, which it has stubbornly refused. It would help make the council a place where true human rights leaders in all regions can help lead the world towards greater respect for human life and human dignity.
     
    “An outcome, in short, that would benefit those who care about human rights in the world. Any other result would be a travesty.”
  • Sea Tiger frogmen sink Navy supply ship
    A troop carrier cum supply ship of the Sri Lanka Navy was sunk by Sea Tiger naval commandos in the Trincomalee Harbour in the early hours of Saturday May 10.
     
    The underwater attack by Black Tigers was carried out when the supply vessel, A-520, named 'MV Invincible', was loaded with explosives to be transported to KKS Harbour in Jaffna, the LTTE said.
     
    The 80-meter long ship, which had lately been engaged in naval resupply service between KKS and Trincomalee, was sunk within the first 13-minutes of the attack, the Tigers said.
     
    The supply ship and troop carrier had also been deployed in the Sri Lanka Navy's deep sea operations against Tiger vessels in 2007.
     
    The Sri Lanka Navy seized the ship in 2003 when it was reportedly involved in a people-smuggling operations. Operated by a Russian or Georgian crew, it had 250 Pakistanis on board, who had flown legitimately to Colombo, the BBC reported.
     
    Commandos from Kangkai Amaran unit of the Sea Tigers took part in Saturday’s mission, the LTTE also said. The unit was named after a senior commander of the Sea Tigers killed by Sri Lankan Army Deep Penetration Unit on 29 June 2001 in an attack in the Mannaar district.
  • Slow advance amid heavy resistance
    Heavy fighting continues in the Mannar and Manal Aru areas as Sri Lankan forces attempt to move into Tamil Tiger-held areas amid heavy resistance. There have been sporadic clashes in the northern Jaffna peninsula also.
     
    Following the crushing of a Sri Lanka Army (SLA) offensive in Jaffna on April 23 which left 185 soldiers dead, according to press reports, the northern front has been relatively quiet with sporadic artillery exchanges and raid by both sides.
     
    However in one major clash, on May 5, eight SLA soldiers were killed and twenty wounded in Mukamaalai, the centre of the frontline in Jaffna.
     
    However, the Manal Aru and Mannar fronts have seen heavy battles. The SLA has been trying since mid-2007 to storm into these areas, but has made little progress. What advances have been made, especially in Mannar have been costly.
     
    Whilst the Defence Ministry reports each day to have killed dozens of Tigers, its claims are not being taken seriously. Some media have started to mockingly publish the cumulative totals of the government’s claims in response.
     
    Since President Mahinda Rajapakse assumed office in November 2005, his government has claimed, through announcements and news releases, to have killed over 9,300 LTTE cadres to date, The Sunday Leader said.
     
    So far, according to a compilation of military data, about 360 Tigers have been killed in the fighting in May with the loss of 41 soldiers, Reuters said.
     
    Whilst commentators have questioned the painfully slow advance of the SLA, which is pitching two divisions against the LTTE in Mannar, the government has been announcing the hamlets and villages that it has reached as ‘key’ victories.
     
    Adampan town, for example, a small cluster of a few houses and town buildings and Palampiddy, have been turned in the Defence Ministry’s media briefings into strategic steps in its war to ‘liberate’ the north.
     
    With the government’s support amongst the Sinhala voters linked directly to progress in the war, especially amid the soaring cost of living, the propaganda efforts have been stepped up.
     
    Whilst a division is officially nine thousand men, but many of the newly formed SLA divisions tasked with capturing Mannar and Manal Aru are said to be under-strength due to desertion.
     
    Last Sunday May 18 the LTTE thwarted an SLA attempt to move deeper into Mannar region. At least 26 soldiers were killed and fifty wounded, the LTTE said.
     
    The bodies of six soldiers, along with several weapons and ammunition, were left behind by their retreating comrades. The Army said it lost fifteen soldiers and killed sixty Tigers.
     
    Earlier on May 9, the LTTE defeated another SLA advance towards Karukkaaykkulam, 2 km east of the hamlet of Adampan. Thirty soldiers were killed before the operation, launched with close-air-support from helicopter gunships, was halted. Seven SLA soldiers’ bodies were recovered in LTTE clearing operations.
     
    On May 6, another SLA push towards Vaddakkandal was defeated and nine soldiers killed when their armored personnel carrier (APC) blew up.
     
    Battles in both Mannar and Manal Aru routinely involve heavy exchanges of artillery and mortar fire. In Mannar the SLA has also been using tanks and APCs. Manal Aru is a region with thick jungle areas.
     
    Whilst the LTTE has put up fierce resistance in some locations, at other locations its fighters have melted away. In several places deep inside Army-occupied Mannar, LTTE infiltrators have been planting landmines and explosive devices.
      
  • India to build power plant on Tamils’ land
    Site proposed by the Sinhala government for the coal power plant.

    In a surprise development, India has agreed to build Sri Lanka’s proposed second coal power plant in Sampur, the site originally proposed the Sinhala government, partners in the joint-venture, the Sunday Times reported.
     
    Last week the Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB) and India’s National Thermal Power Corporation (NTPC) shook hands in New Delhi over India’s acceptance of the site, according to a well-placed CEB source.
     
    While NTPC Chairman Ram Charan Sharma told the media that the 500-MW thermal power project in Trincomalee district will be one of the largest infrastructure investment in Sri Lanka, residents and rights activists complained that the Indian decision to pick that site for the power project had added to the misery of Tamil people displaced from there.
     
    The controversial site is in the North Eastern province, across the Koddiyar Bay from Trincomalee. Sampur is a large and populous fishing village overlooking the famous port.
     
    The two countries signed an agreement in December 2006, after the Sri Lanka Army captured Sampur from the LTTE in September that year, driving thirty thousand Tamils from their homes.
     
    However, the location of the plant in Sampur became an issue, with the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) raising political and environmental objections.
     
    Under the agreement, NTPC is to soon launch a feasibility study on the proposed 500MW plant, estimated to cost US$500 million, while Sri Lanka will conduct a survey and secure 500 acres in Sampur for the project.
     
    Sources told the Sunday Times there was plenty of government land in Sampur to accommodate the project, adding that no persons would be displaced by the project because the area comes within a high security zone.
     
    Accommodation would be found for any persons who had been displaced earlier because of the proposed project, the government claims.
     
    However, the Tamil National Alliance alleged that there was a hidden agenda to the project to permanently evict Tamils from the Muttur east region.
     
    The TNA claims that about 30,000 Tamils were forced to leave the southern Trincomalee region when the military launched a major operation in 2006 to retake the area.
    The advocates of power plant in Sampoor region seem to think that a military victory alone would not be sufficient, in the long run, to evict Tamils permanently from the region.
     
    Up to as recently as March this year, the CEB was busy trying to secure Veloor, a site north of Trincomalee town, for the joint-venture power project.
     
    The NTPC had expressed a preference for a site that was near the Indian Oil Corporation complex. It is believed that Delhi’s sudden change of heart came after the CEB made it known that it would invite bids to build a third coal power plant at Sampur, where the Sri Lankan government was already making arrangements to build a jetty to unload coal for the second joint venture power project with the Indians.
     
    The Sunday Times’ sources believe the Indians, fearing the presence of other powers in the strategic port region, had quickly decided to accept the CEB designated location.
     
    The project, which is expected to be completed in May 2012, will see CEB and NTPC each taking an equity stake of US$75 million, while the balance money will be raised through borrowings, making a debt equity ratio of 70:30.
     
    "Indian arguments that the coal-based plant is meant to benefit locals in Trincomalee are having no effect on rights activists and the thousands who fled the region after fighting between the Tamil Tigers and the military," IANS reported.
     
    The NTPC project will affect a large number of people," the IANS report quoted K. Thurairatnasingham, a Tamil National Alliance (TNA) MP from Trincomalee, as saying.
     
    "We have conveyed our feelings to Indian diplomats. Our people cannot accept this," he added.
     
    "This is where our forefathers lived. It is the only land in a largely dry area with water resources suitable for cultivation.We are not saying we don't want the project. But why build it in an area that will force Tamils to give up for ever their ancestral land?"
  • Blunted Tool
    That Sri Lanka this week failed to garner enough votes at the United Nations to get on to the Human Rights Council will bring cheer to many, including a coalition of international human rights groups and the three Nobel laureates who had publicly called for Colombo’s bid to be rejected. However, this moment is neither some sort of watershed in the Sinhala state’s fortunes nor of any consequence to the ongoing suffering of the Tamil people. In short, whether Sri Lanka is on the council or not, is largely an irrelevancy.
     
    To begin with, it beggars belief that Sri Lanka could even be a credible candidate, given the brazen confidence with which the Sinhala military and its paramilitary allies murder, ‘disappear’, torture and, as news reports are beginning to acknowledge, rape - assuming, of course, that the HRC is taken seriously as site of human rights protection in the first place. Remember that Sri Lanka has actually been on the council for the past two years. Whilst the concept of ‘human rights’ has for almost two decades been promoted by powerful Western states and their associated institutions and organization as supposedly a key principle of modern governance, in practice it has proven remarkably brittle. Not because human rights are still violated, but because both Western states and their developing world favourites have been able to do so without real consequence.
     
    Thus, rather than some sort of ‘universal’ principle, the concept of ‘human rights’ has, in actuality, served mainly as a tool for the West-led international community to (re)order the world to their preference. This is not to say that human rights, in themselves, are not of moral value. As a people who have endured sixty years of oppression, including thirty years of militarized violence by the Sinhala state, the Tamils have long documented and protested their suffering in the language of human rights. Our problem, rather, is the manifest hypocrisy of the West which has, whilst lecturing us solemnly on the overarching morality of human rights, steadfastly backed the state that brutalizes us.
     
    This hypocrisy has become glaring in the past three years, as the Sinhala-supremacist regime of President Mahinda Rajapakse has enjoyed every practical assistance it requires from the West. This assistance has admittedly been rendered amid much admonishment. But harsh words won’t hurt a state like Sri Lanka. No matter how brazen Sri Lanka’s abuses against the Tamils are, concrete steps against the Sinhala state will not be forthcoming: the recent assurance by the EU – which in particular makes much about ‘human rights’ - to extend its trade concessions for three more years is a case in point.
     
    Moreover, what is interesting about this week’s tussle over Sri Lanka the UN is the polarization between various state groupings. For example, whilst Sri Lanka was passionately opposed by Western human rights groups and some states, the Sinhala regime was actively supported by China, India and, according to some reports, Japan. Clearly, this is not to say these states either have no respect for ‘human rights’ nor that they believe Sri Lanka was actually qualified to be on the council. Rather, what we are seeing is interest-driven international politics at play. Indeed, amid such polarization amongst powerful states – not in the overarching sense of the West and the Soviet Union, but on selected issues – the term ‘international community’ is increasingly losing its coherence.
     
    We argued recently that, two decades after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the emergence of new poles (with their own interests and values) has raised serious challenges to the US-led West's interests, as well as the ideological values it has promoted in the service of those interests. We also argued the Sinhala state is making a deliberate shift to the East and away from the West and that the logic behind this realignment is that Sinhala majoritarianism will inevitably always remain in tension with West’s vision of global liberalism.
     
    Sri Lanka has long been on the frontline of the West’s efforts to expand this liberal order. The Norwegian-led peace process was the most ambitious effort yet to do this. The West mistakenly believed the UNP-led government of Ranil Wickremsinghe was a partner in the project. In reality, whilst the UNP regime was prepared to go along with the Western project (of which Japan, one of the Co-Chairs alongside the US, EU and Norway, was a reticent member), and shared the project’s free-market logic the UNP had no more commitment to liberal political values than the SLFP. Rather, both Sinhala parties are committed to Sinhala majoritarianism and communalism. This has been demonstrated by the lurch towards the Sinhala right the UNP has attempted in the past three years (the Sinhala voters, however, trust the SLFP more than the UNP to safeguard their privileged position).
     
    These dynamics are also at play in the Eastern Province, where, following the laughably unabashed rigging of the Provincial Council elections on May 10, Sivanesathurai Chandrakan, alias Pillayan, the leader of the Army-backed paramilitary group, the TMVP, has been appointed Chief Minister. It was clear that the Western states were clearly hoping for the UNP would win the elections, prompting the Sinhala ultra-nationalist Champika Ranawake, Sri Lanka's Environment minister, to mockingly declare the UPFA’s election victory as a defeat for the 'West-backed Eelamists.'
     
    The point here is that repeated insistence by powerful states, especially the United States, that Sri Lanka is not a strategic concern in no way diminishes their active involvement in the micro-dynamics of the island’s politics and conflict. From the very outset, in the early eighties, of the armed resistance phase of the Tamil liberation struggle, countries such as the United States and India, for example, have sought to pursue their interests through such localized involvement.
     
    What this means for the Tamils is that their grievances only matter when taking these up serves the geopolitical and geoeconomic interests of powerful states. The long-running efforts by the wider Tamil liberation movement to ‘internationalise’ the Tamil cause has therefore not been merely to seek sympathy abroad, but to make it clear that it is not the Tamil demand for independence that makes Sri Lanka a zone of instability and disruption in the international order, but, rather it is the ferocity of the Sinhala state’s efforts to maintain its chauvinistic domination of our people.
     
    The main point for Tamils to bear in mind is this: the world’s powerful states have no more commitment to sovereignty than to human rights. Sri Lanka’s territorial integrity is no more important to them than Tamils’ freedom. It’s just more useful at this point. And as the British Prime Minister Lord Palmerston put, ‘we have no permanent friends and we have no permanent enemies. We have permanent interests’. It is no different for any other state in today’s world.
     
    It is in this context the LTTE leader, Vellupillai Pirapaharan, observed in 1993: “Every country in this world advances its own interests. It is economic and trade interests that determine the order of the present world, not the moral law of justice nor the rights of people. International relations and diplomacy between countries are determined by such interests. Therefore we cannot expect an immediate recognition of the moral legitimacy of our cause by the international community. ... In reality, the success of our struggle depends on us, not on the world. Our success depends on our own efforts, on our own strength, on our own determination..."
  • Reserved hero: Brigadier Balraj

    In over two decades of service with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), Brig. Balraj, who passed away Tuesday after a heart attack, had been a courageous and skilled fighter and commander whose last years were spent institutionalizing the training of a new generation of LTTE field officers. 

    Although he joined the LTTE later than many of the other top commanders, Brig. Balraj had risen rapidly through the ranks on the strength of his shrewdness on the battlefield and courage under fire, fighters who served with him said this week.

    Brig. Balraj had been ailing for some time and had been hospitalised for two weeks three months ago. He had undergone a heart-related operation in 2003, during the Norwegian peace process. The operation was conducted in a Singapore hospital and he had spent several months recuperating in Vanni thereafter.

    Throughout his career, Brig. Balraj, one the LTTE commanders most feared by the Sri Lankan military, had always preferred to lead his troops from the front.

    LTTE fighters who served with him say he preferred to direct his battles from amidst the exploding shells and flying bullets of the frontline – a few hundred metres from the enemy positions - rather than the confines of a command-centre.

    He had been seriously wounded many times in his two decades of service, the healing often compounded by his diabetes.

    Brig. Balraj had twice commanded the LTTE’s crack Charles Anthony Regiment. He was its first commander for two years from when the unit, designed for conventional warfighting, was established in 1991 and had led it again for another two years from 1995.

    Brig. Balraj came to particular public prominence for his command of a daring operation in 2000 in which he led 1,200 LTTE fighters into the Sri Lanka Army (SLA) -held Jaffna peninsula to capture and hold a section of the key A9 highway linking the SLA base complex at Elephant Pass with the Jaffna rearbase areas.

    The large LTTE strike force slipped into the heavily fortified peninsula by sea and trekked inland from Thalaiyadi to the Puthukkaattu Junction on the A9. With complex defences manned by thousands of Sri Lankan troops, such a move had hitherto been considered an impossibility.

    It was also considered impossible for a lightly armed strike force, surrounded by thousands of Sri Lankan troops supported by artillery, tanks and airpower, to seriously disrupt the key highway for very long.

    However, holding what became called the ‘Vaththirayan Box’, a perimeter of a few kilometres deep inside the Jaffna High Security Zones, with no hope of resupply unless the Elephant Pass base fell to the LTTE, Brig. Balraj and his troops battled the Sri Lankan forces for 34 days with only the weapons they had carried with them.

    When the LTTE assault on the Elephant Pass base complex began, the SLA garrison there was unable to receive supplies from Jaffna due to Balraj’s ‘cut out’.

    The SLA therefore launched repeated onslaughts against Brig. Balraj’s position to clear the A9 and save the Elephant Pass base. As the situation became critical, top Sri Lankan commanders converged in Jaffna to mobilise the relief effort, but to no avail: the ‘Vaththirayan box’ held until the Elephant Pass garrison collapsed before a major LTTE offensive. At least 4 Sri Lankan commanders were put in charge, one by one, against the Tiger forces led by Balraj.

    Brig. Balraj’s raid gave lie to the assumption that no rear defence in depth of a state's conventional army could only be seriously threatened by an armed force supported by strategic air power.

    Balraj (Balasegaram Kandiah) was born on 27 November, 1965. He hails from Kokkuththoduvaay in Mullaiththeevu district.

    He joined the LTTE in 1983 as a part time member and became a full time member in 1984.

    Fellow fighters remark that he had been wounded in combat even before he received his military training: he was in the 9th batch of the LTTE training program in Tamil Nadu.

    In 1985 he departed for India from Vanni for military training. His batch, travelling under the supervision of a senior LTTE cadre, Kandeepan, was confronted by the SLA. Kandeepan and some of the other recruits were killed in the ensuing clash. Balraj was wounded.

    When Balraj came back to Vanni from training in 1986, he served with Major Pasilan.

    Colonel Theepan, the present Northern Forces Commander of the LTTE, recalled that in one heavy battle at Munthirikaikkulam, Balraj took part in an LTTE ambush in which fourteen SLA soldiers were killed and several weapons were seized.

    Balraj later took part in several ambushes on SLA forces in Vanni during that year, demonstrating considerable courage and battlefield acumen, Col. Theepan said in his tribute on Thursday.

    However, Balraj's defining moment as a field commander came later during the India - LTTE war. He fought side by side with Major Pasilan and Major Maran in Jaffna when the conflict erupted between the LTTE and the Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF) in 1987. Armed with an AK-47 assault rifle and a Rocket-Propelled-Grenade launcher, Balraj fought Indian forces at Koapaay, destroying battle tanks.

    Later, as the LTTE shifted its base to Vanni moved and switched from urban- to jungle- warfare, Balraj was moved into the deep jungles of Ma'nalaa'ru, which is near his native place of Kokkuththoduvaay.

    Balraj was wounded three times during direct confrontations with the Indian Army.

    The Indian military launched its Operation Checkmate in several phases, once deploying the elite Gurkha regiment.

    In one critical battlefront, Balraj launched a surprise frontal assault on the Gurkhas located in open terrain. The ferocity of the LTTE attack forced the elite soldiers to scatter into booby-trapped jungles where they suffered heavy casualties. This battlefront defined Balraj as a fearless commander.

    When the conflict between the Sri Lankan state and the LTTE resumed after the withdrawal of the IPKF, in what became known as Eelam War II, Balraj led key fronts in several battles and sweeping operations against the SLA.

    In 1990 he was involved in the LTTE’s assault on SLA-held Maangku'lam – in the centre of the now LTTE-held Vanni region.

    Balraj also participated in the LTTE’s first assault on the Elephant Pass base in 1991. Although the LTTE operation failed to capture base, it defined the movement’s forces evolution into a conventional war-fighting force.

    Balraj commanded one of the four fronts in that battle, the only front in which the LTTE forces succeeded in capturing their assigned objective, in this case the barracks part of the base.

    Subsequently, the SLA expanded the EP base into a complex which was the largest SLA installation in the island. Ten years later, it was Balraj’s raid which ensured its fall to the LTTE.

    In 1993, the SLA launched a major offensive, Yarl Devi, against LTTE, under the command of Col. Sarath Fonseka, now a Lt. Gen. and overall commander of the SLA.

    LTTE forces, under the command of Balraj, with Theepan as deputy commander, led a counter-offensive against the advancing SLA forces.

    Taking up entrenched positions in unfavourable, open terrain at Puloappa'lai, the LTTE forces launched a surprise attack on the SLA, inflicting heavy casualties and destroying tanks and armoured vehicles.

    The SLA offensive was routed in six days. Col. Fonseka was amongst the wounded. Balraj was also badly wounded in his leg.

    Adele Balasingham, wife of the LTTE’s late theoretician, Anton Balasingham, recalls Balraj’s injuries in her book, ‘Will to Freedom’, based on her several years of experiences living with the LTTE.

    "A measure of Balraj’s courage revealed itself to us when shrapnel smashed his right leg in the Yarl Devi battle of 1993. A decision not to amputate the limb was made and Balraj suffered excruciating pain of limb repair. Compounding his healing problems was unstable diabetes. After many months in bed and a great deal of pain, Balraj eventually walked again on his leg, but the injury left him with a permanent limp and a recurrent wound infection."

    "Nevertheless, he viewed his injury a insignificant compared with the suffering and sacrifices of his cadres and continued to function as a field commander in the warzone."

    During Eelam War III, which followed the short-lived peace talks with the government of President Chandrika Kumaratunga, Balraj commanded important defensive battles against the massed formations of the SLA deployed to capture the Jaffna peninsula.

    He led LTTE forces deployed as part of Operation ‘Tiger Leap’, a counter offensive with operations in sea and land and using surface-to-air attack.

    After the mass civilian exodus from Jaffna compelled by the massive bombardment and ‘broad front’ assault by two divisions of SLA troops, the LTTE again shifted its rear base to Vanni.

    Balraj subsequently led, as Coordinating Commander, the LTTE’s Operation Unceasing Waves I, the assault on the SLA base at Mullaiththeevu in July 1996. The Tigers seized artillery in Mullaiththeevu for the first time.

    Later, in 1997 and 1998, he led several counter-attacks against the SLA’s Operation Jaya Sikirui, then the largest over offensive launched by the Sri Lankan forces.

    In 1998 Balraj led a lighting assault into the then SLA-controlled town of Ki'linochchi, whose residents had fled when the SLA captured it in 1996, soon after the Mullaiththeevu battle. Balraj’s assault was part of Operation Unceasing Waves II, in which Ki'linochchi was again brought under LTTE control.

    Operation Unceasing Waves III, the third in the series, was the massive LTTE counter-offensive in late 1999 and early 2000, which first recaptured in six days the vast territory the SLA had struggled for eighteen months to occupy and then overran the Elephant Pass base complex.

    In 2001, Balraj played a key role in crushing the SLA’s massive Operation ‘Agni Khiela’, in which thousands of soldiers were deployed from the Muhaimalai frontline to capture Elephant Pass from the Tigers.

    The abortive offensive was the last major engagement of Eelam War III as nine months later, the Norwegian-facilitated peace process began in earnest with a mutual ceasefire, later formalized into the Ceasefire Agreement (CFA) in February 2002.

    During the lengthy peace process, the LTTE embarked, as part of its state-building project, to institutionalize the training of field commanders at different levels of responsibility.

    Recognizing the unfolding generational shift in one of the world’s longest running liberation struggles, the LTTE sought to impart command knowledge and skills to talented and battle experienced soldiers.

    Balraj, with more than 20-years of combat experience and skilled in various war-fighting strategies, had the assignment of developing the training programs.

    In her book, ‘Will to Freedom’ Adele Balasingham notes her observations about several of the top LTTE figures, including Balraj.

    “Incredible as it may seem, this fighting hero is a reserved man,” she writes.

    “Balraj is known, loved and respected not only for his legendary military successes and undisputed and abounding courage, but also for his utter commitment and devotion to the cadres under his command. Sensitive and respectful of the sacrifice and tribulations they have endured, Balraj opts to spend as much time as possible in the camps with them.”

    In 2003 Balraj suffered a heart attack underwent surgery in Singapore.

    In 2004, Balraj was amongst the senior LTTE officers sent to the east. However, Balraj did not participate in the offensive operations and his exact role in the east remains a secret.

    He was still there in December 2004, when the Indian Ocean tsunami struck, killing thirty thousand people across the island’s northern, eastern and southern coasts.

    Balraj, based in Vakarai, narrowly escaped the crashing waves and soon after, returned to Vanni, with a number of LTTE fighters. In Vanni he resumed direction of training programs for LTTE officers.

    After the SLA launched major operations in the Eastern province in mid-2006, other top LTTE officers, including Col. Sornam, Col. Banu and Col. Jeyam, who had also been sent to the east, also returned in phases with their fighters.

    Whilst the Sri Lankan government of President Mahinda Rajapaksa said the LTTE had been routed in the east, observers now say the LTTE had opted not to fight in strategically unfavourable terrain and had instead gradually relocated its main forces to the Vanni to confront the SLA’s massed formations there.

    Reports say that even as he was forced to rest in hospital by bouts of illness in the past year, Brig. Balraj had continued to engage himself in the military campaign, often visiting the Mannaar and Ma'nalaa'ru fronts where LTTE fighters are presently putting up stiff resistance against the SLA.

    Speaking in May 2006, soon after the Sri Lankan government had launched its opening offensive against the LTTE in Champoor, in the Eastern Province, Brig (then Colonel) Balraj observed: "The Fourth Eelam War will be the final war, and a terrible war that will bring the long awaited liberation to our people and our homeland. We are certainly positioned to be victorious. The people are with us and our leader will lead us to victory."

  • Insecurity and the lessons of history
    At the heart of the Sri Lankan conflict is racism. And the insecurity, envy and hatred that always accompanies racism.
     
    A common explanatory adage for the bitter conflict today is that the Sinhala people suffer from ‘insecurity’; that they see themselves as a unique island people under perpetual threat.
     
    Apparently there are ‘only’ 17 million Sinhalese in the world, in fear of being swamped by the billion Indians across the Palk Straits, especially the 60 million Tamils – because there are ‘already’ 3 million Tamils on the island.
     
    ‘Surrounded’ by these ‘others’ in the region, the Sinhalese are reportedly a ‘majority with a minority complex’.
     
    International analysts and diplomats routinely accept this ‘insecurity.’ For example a report by the conflict think tank, International Crisis Group, worries that “the international community has struggled to come to terms with Sinhala nationalism, frequently misunderstanding its nature and legitimacy.”
     
    “Interventions, even including the Norwegian-sponsored 2002 ceasefire, which most Sinhalese ultimately judged as too favourable to the LTTE, have tended to stimulate xenophobic elements in the Sinhala community and help the extreme nationalist parties gain ground,” the ICG patiently spells out.
     
    A BBC survey of the mood on the street in Colombo quotes a middle class Sinhala professional explaining the historic insecurity of the Sinhalese, how they are a minority compared to neighbouring India and how this has fuelled the race ‘tension’ with the Tamils.
     
    Bear in mind that not once has India, the Indian Tamils or, for that matter, the Sri Lankan Tamils, laid claim to the Sinhala territories.
     
    The irrationality of this ‘minority while a majority’ complex struck me when a Dutch colleague expansively informed me, in a recent discussion about identity: “you know, there are almost 17 million of us Dutch.”
     
    Arguably, the ‘just’ 16.57 million Dutch in Holland are very much ‘surrounded’ by over 700 million “others” in Europe, including 82 million Germans who not so long ago invaded and occupied their homeland.
     
    But there is no minority complex, despite a resurgent Germany driving European fortunes. Indeed, Holland is an enthusiastic participant in the European project.
     
    Moreover, The Netherlands is the 25th most densely populated country in the world whereas Sri Lanka is 39th.
     
    Nonetheless, the Dutch do not think of themselves as a ‘small’ nation under threat of being swamped. But apparently, the Sinhalese are a to be seen as a fearful ‘small’ nation under siege.
     
    This alone is not enough for conflict, of course. Having found themselves an enemy without, the Sinhalese have also found an enemy within: the island’s Tamils.
     
    Of course, every nation has its bit of racism. In Europe, for example, far right groups in many states love to hate immigrants (usually, but not exclusively, the dark-skinned kind): “they are taking away our jobs”, “they don’t want to fit in”, “our identity will be lost” and so on. 17% of the French voted for the National Front in 2002.
     
    It shouldn’t be forgotten that the Sinhala people also had their form of ‘immigration angst’: immediately after independence, they enthusiastically supported the stripping of citizenship from a million ‘Indian’ Tamils who had been brought to the island by the British generations earlier to work on the plantations.
     
    What was served by this act of pure racism? What were these people who had been born on the island and knew no other home expected to do? The answer is the war cry of far rightists everywhere: “go back to your country!”
     
    But the deep-seated racism in Sri Lanka is different. For the Tamils of the Northeast are not recent or arriving immigrants and this is not the usual angst of ‘integration’.
     
    Rather, the Tamil people have lived on the island in their own contiguous, distinct, geographical territory for millennia. They lay claim only to the territory they have historically lived in. In fact, the 3 million Tamils constituted a nation with distinct self-governance until invaded and occupied by Colonial powers – who amalgamated them with the Sinhala nation and territory for pure administrative convenience.
     
    However, having accorded themselves an insecurity complex, the Sinhalese are now apparently entitled to dictate the fortunes of the Tamils. Hence their ‘legitimate fears and grievances’ in the conflict.
     
    The destruction of a people begins with the shattering of its identity. But to create the necessary conditions for the destruction of a minority, there needs to be not only an ‘insecurity complex’, but shared focus on the ‘enemy within’ – demonization necessarily precedes annihilation.
     
    The Tamils may have never claimed any Sinhala territory. Yet within years of independence in 1948 (at which point, both 3m Tamils and 17m Sinhalese inherited a reasonably healthy state), Sinhala ‘insecurity’ came to the fore as reality for them to contend with.
     
    Knowing that the island was home to two distinct, though not antagonistic, cultures, what could possibly be the Sinhala population’s rationale in opting for the ‘Sinhala Only’ Language Act in 1956?
     
    Except to deny that ‘other’, enemy, nation its identity and, ergo, its legitimate existence?
     
    What is the mind set of the civil service official, the teacher, the academic or other worker who casts his or her vote on the promise of such a chauvinistic act - knowing full well that it will require their Tamil colleagues to either learn Sinhalese and pass a fluency test or lose their jobs?
     
    And, 25 years later, what could possibly be the logic of Sinhala ministers and police torching the Jaffna library and its 97,000 (yes, ninety seven thousand) rare historical books and archival manuscripts in 1981?
     
    Why did this act of cultural vandalism provoke, not shock and dismay amongst the Sinhala nation, but quiet satisfaction?
     
    Sixty years after independence, the Tamils are still, apparently, a source of Sinhala ‘insecurity’. That is why all manner of violence can be unleashed against them – all in the name of the making the Sinhalese ‘secure’.
     
    Tamils are bombed, starved en masse, abducted, ‘disappeared’, driven from their towns and villages into refugee camps. The Toronto Star last week quoted a Western diplomat as saying: “nowhere in Sri Lanka are the Tamils safe. What's happening here is de facto ethnic cleansing.”
     
    And yet all this is apparently explainable through the logic of Sinhala ‘insecurity’.
     
    Amid racially-driven antagonism, minorities sometimes seek to camouflage themselves: integrating, lowering their profile and so on. But, ultimately, none of this will offer no protection against a chauvinistic adversary.
     
    And ‘democracy’ is no hindrance to racism. Indeed, democracy only serves to allow racism – on the basis of democratic will itself – to gain momentum.
     
    If this sounds familiar it should be; the story of such racism mobilising by winning elections and leading to genocide is not new. This is the 60th anniversary of the founding of Israel by the then long-persecuted Jewish people.
     
    The Nazis came to power though the elections of July 1932, as Germany’s single largest party, with 37.5% of the popular vote. They took over 13 million votes compared to their nearest rivals, the Social Democrats with 8 million votes.
     
    Moreover, the Nazis had increased their base from the previous elections in 1928 by appealing, not to the ignorant, but to middle class voters.
     
    The marginalisation and persecution of the Jews in Germany also started with legislation; in 1933 the Nazis passed a law purging the civil service of officials of Jewish descent. Admission to the legal profession was restricted, media was purged of Jews, as were artistic professions. The military was sine quo non.
     
    The parallels these dynamics have to Sri Lanka’s post-independence history are unmistakable.
     
    The conditions often cited for the rise of Nazism were the economic depression of the inter-war years and the grievances of the German people against the ‘peace’ that the Allies imposed following Germany’s defeat in the WW1.
     
    Herein was the ‘enemy without’. And the Jews were the ‘enemy within’
     
    In ‘Mein Kampf’ Hitler opines: “the strength of a nation lies first of all, not in its arms but its will, and before conquering the external enemy the enemy at home would have to be eliminated.”
     
    The Jews, according to Hitler, held unfair economic advantage; they were the cause of Germany’s ills.
     
    This, by the way, is the exact claim the Sinhalese made whilst justifying ‘Sinhala Only’; that Tamils had been ‘privileged’ by the British over the Sinhalese. There is no explanation for why, however.
     
    As early as 1925 Hitler had stressed to the Nazi party the need to focus on a single combined enemy: ‘Marxism and the Jew.’
     
    Today, replace “Marxism” with “Terrorism”. With this all purpose label, the demonization of the Tamils is complete.
     
    There is an interesting difference between Nazi Germany and Sri Lanka: unlike the Tamil people, the Jewish people did not live in contiguous territory where they were a majority. Indeed, the Jews were deeply integrated into the host German population for centuries. And many believed, quite erroneously, as we now know, that such integration would protect them.
     
    It is also known now that even as the Nazi intent unfolded, even as the racist legislation was passed and thereafter followed by mob violence, arbitrary arrests and detention, following Krisatallnacht, (when over 1000 Synagogues were burned as were Jewish shops and businesses, hundreds killed and 30,000 men imprisoned in concentration camps), just over 50% of the Jewish population of the Reich (Germany, Austria, the German Czech areas) emigrated.
     
    What is interesting is that he other half of the Jews stayed. As Lucille Eichengreen, a survivor interviewed by Laurance Rees for his book ‘Auschwitz’ says: “when we asked at home, the answer was “It’s a passing phase, it will normalise”.”
     
    And this too is part of the human psyche. The clinging to the familiar, the semblance of safety, even when cold logic says it is not be there. In short, a refusal to acknowledge what is unfolding.
     
    In the initial stages of the Holocaust, the Nazis were content to ‘cleanse’ Germany via the forced emigration of Jews. They even profited from it by taking money from those who left.
     
    Sounds familiar? In Sri Lanka, almost a quarter of the Tamils have been forced abroad. But over 400,000 live in Colombo, though many are awaiting visas or otherwise hoping to go abroad: Colombo’s high rental prices are sustained by these people ‘in transit’.
     
    In contrast to Kristallnacht, the July 1983 pogrom saw, not hundreds, but three thousand Tamils butchered.
     
    And in the pre-statehood history of the Jewish people is the answer to those who argue that there are Tamils who choose to remain in Colombo ‘amongst the Sinhalese’– despite the checkpoints, the midnight round ups and the occasional deportations to the Northeast.
     
    Indeed, as the Nazis marched through Europe, there were Jewish people in many of the occupied countries who stayed instead of fleeing, hoping that somehow they would be able to live through the ‘abnormality’.
     
    And the Jewish people were not the only ones who refused to see what was inescapable before them.
     
    Laurence Rees interviewed Germans on their attitudes towards the deportations of the Jews amongst them. Uwe Storjohann from Hamburg told him: “maybe around 20% [of Germans] welcomed this with huge joy (“They are only parasites”). But the vast majority bypassed what was happening with silence.”
     
    Moreover, Uwe recalled “the thought occurred: What will happen to these people. I knew of course that it couldn’t be anything positive. They would be sent off into a terrible world”.
     
    According to Rees: “Uwe Storjohann’s admission that he knew the Jews were being sent into a terrible world is probably close to the state of mind of most Germans at the time.”
     
    These two dynamics – the ‘insecure’ majority and the minority ‘enemy within’ – are visibly at play in Sri Lanka. For a quarter of a century, the Sinhala majority have supported the brutality of their governments – after all, it is about their ‘security’, isn’t it?
     
    Rees also interviewed middle level German officials who ran the concentration camps. Interestingly, he found few who relied on the excuse that they were following orders. On the contrary, the explanation often given to him by interviewees was that they believed they were doing the right thing. They believed the Jewish people were the enemy within. No different from the external enemy being fought in the war.
     
    They now accepted they may have been wrong in that belief, but the facts as they them knew at the time led them to that firm belief and, hence, to their murderous actions.
     
    Rees believes so many former Nazis (as an interesting aside, when does a Nazi become a ‘former’ Nazi?) found this self-justification because the Nazi regime built on strongly held prior prejudices against Jews.
     
    Just as in Sri Lanka, there is a solid foundation of existing anti-Tamil prejudices that have been drawn up by Sinhala nationalism – from the ‘privileged’ Tamil to the ‘threatening outsiders’ to ‘terrorist supporters’ and so on.
     
    Of course, it is easy – and convenient - to dismiss Hitler and the Nazis as an aberration, an extreme example, and therefore not a valid comparator.
     
    But historians such as Alan Bullock (author of ‘Hitler: A Study in Tyranny’) and Rees converge in the belief that the terrible outcome, the Holocaust, cannot be attributed only to the Nazi regime but also to the prevalent culture, both in Germany and, moreover, in wider Europe: a racist logic of animosity towards the Jewish people.
     
    As Alan Bullock notes, “Hitler indeed was a European no less a German phenomenon. The conditions and state of mind, which he exploited, the malaise of which he was the symptom were not confined to one country.”
     
    Rees concurs: “Indeed the view that the crime of extermination of the Jews was somehow imposed by a few mad people upon an unwilling Europe is the most dangerous of all.”
     
    Racism is a well known phenomenon now and the path that a racist ideology must trace when it comes to power via democratic government is predictable.
     
    Hitler was able to openly articulate his racial ideology due to the prevailing bigotry in Europe. However, amid the global expectations of the 21st century, Sinhala racism has to be more inhibited in its rhetoric.
     
    As A. Shastri notes, since the end of the Cold War, Sri Lanka’s main Sinhala political parties, increasingly sensitive to international opinion, were becoming ‘careful how they expressed themselves on the ethnic issue.’
     
    The racist process that culminated in the horror of the concentration camps took years to advance. And it evolved organically not through explicit directives from above, but from circulating sentiments amongst the German majority.
     
    “This notion that the Nazis proceeded incrementally against the Jews goes against the understandable desire to point to a single moment when one crucial decision was made for the final solution .. the Nazi regime was one that practised what one historian famously called ‘cumulative radicalisation’,” says Rees.
     
    Likewise, the racist radicalisation of Sri Lanka is also cumulative. It began with chauvinistic legislation and constitutions from 1956, accompanied by a series of increasingly violent pogroms, and culminated in a full frontal attack by the state against the Tamil people.
     
    Racism is the underlying logics of mass displacement, cleansing of historically habited Tamil land, bombing of schools and non-Buddhist places of worship, use of starvation and medical blockade.
     
    Racism fosters the culture of impunity in which disappearances, summary killings, torture and rape take place in Sri Lanka.
     
    The cumulative radicalisation against the Tamils, moreover, is achieved via the democratic process and sustained by it: the self-styled ‘insecurity’ of the Sinhalese is another word for racism.
     
    And as long as the Sinhalese are confident they are winning the war against the Tamils, this chauvinism will grow.
     
    As was the case amongst the German citizens of the Reich. As Rees puts it, “the central truth still holds that the majority of the German population, almost certainly right up until the moment where Germany started to lose the war, felt so personally secure and happy that they would have voted to keep Hitler in power if there had been free and fair elections.”
     
    Recently, The Economist magazine pointed out, that if the war is not being won, the Sinhalese may be restrained by consideration of their own comfortable standard of living: “with much else to complain about, including soaring corruption and inflation at 25%, even the Sinhalese will not back this painful war indefinitely.”
     
    It is in this context of economic comfort fostering tolerance of racism that the EU’s decusion to again extend its massive trade concessions and provide more aid to Sri Lanka must be considered.
     
    What is interesting is how many of the EU countries, whilst protecting of their own Tamil citizens at home are more than ready to sacrifice the Tamils in Sri Lanka.
     
    But Rees’ study of the attitudes amongst Germany’s European neighbours is instructive. When the Nazis invaded France and ordered the French authorities to hand over their Jews for deportation, the French complied. But they selected first, “foreign” Jews as opposed to “our” Jews. Similarly in the Channel Islands, “foreign” Jews were detained and handed over by the local authorities for deportation to Auschwitz.
  • LTTE must surrender arms before talks - Rajapakse
    Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa last Tuesday said his government was ready for talks with the LTTE, provided the latter is ready to give up arms and demonstrate “genuine intent” to evolve a political solution.
     
    Speaking at the Oxford Union, Mr. Rajapaksa referred to the recently-concluded elections for the Eastern Provincial Council (EPC) and said though many observers said the LTTE was invincible, the government had freed the province from “terror”.
     
    “As our forces seek to defeat and disarm the LTTE, we are firm in our resolve to have a negotiated solution to the crisis. I do not believe in a military solution. We have attempted talks with the LTTE on several occasions — thrice since my election as the President — but they have not reciprocated. They have always left the talks with lame excuses. We are still ready to talk, once we are certain of their genuine intent for a political solution and their readiness to give up arms,” he said.
     
    Mr. Rajapaksa said the fear psychosis created by the LTTE may cause some lapses in judgment, but by and large, independent observers always commended the efficiency, politeness and courtesy of Sri Lankan soldiers.
Subscribe to Diaspora