Diaspora

Taxonomy Color
red
  • Life in Jaffna: The seen and the unseen, the told and the untold

    When we visited Jaffna town last week, it appeared to be buzzing with life. People were attending to their New Year shopping while Tamil music blared in the background--probably from the shops that were being decorated for the festivities. Buses were plying and young girls were cycling to temple even as dusk fell.

    These are scenes that were rarely seen in the recent past. However, people still live in fear, although the government claims that troops have successfully eliminated rebels operating in the town area, ushering a sense of freedom for the people.

    A shopkeeper, who spoke on grounds of anonymity, said he and his family lived in constant fear in spite of the air of normality.“Things are normal compared to what it was. But some paramilitary groups still demand money from us. We have no choice but to give into their demands or else we would be abducted or killed. A few months ago a man who had not paid to a certain group, went missing the next day. We don’t complain to the authorities since they do little about it anyway.

    Although Jaffna peninsula was liberated during the December 1995 Operation Riviresa (Sun Rays), LTTE cells continued to operate in the region. It is argued that the 2002 Ceasefire Agreement gave the LTTE the opportunity to capitalize on the situation, by forcibly recruiting people, conscripting child soldiers, attacking government troops and organizing agitation campaigns that crippled the region.

    In the past few months the government has been claiming that troops had successfully eliminated many LTTE cells. But the ground situation tells another story. We were escorted amidst tight security in convoys of BTR armoured personnel carriers, even to the Jaffna town, which has been proclaimed safe by the government.

    In spite of government propaganda, Jaffna Security Forces commander Major General G.A Chandrasiri conceded that there were about 1000 to 1500 LTTE cadres still within the peninsula.“We have managed to bring the situation under control. People in Jaffna have started rebuilding their lives. We are in the process of clearing the region of the LTTE that has caused hardship to the people. We kill about 10-15 LTTE cadres, daily. Normality has returned to the region,” he said.

    But still the people have many woes, especially the consumers. While some traders say they are losing out on business others say they are even making profits. A merchant Arun Jayakumar said the prices of goods in Jaffna has sky rocketed due to the closure of the A-9 road and the high cost of sea transport.

    “People can no longer afford not to work even for one day. They have hardly any money, so they buy just a few essential items,” he complained. While the price of a kilo of rice at Rs. 90 and a coconut at Rs. 50 were similar to the going prices in the South now, sugar was an exorbitant Rs. 140, followed closely by dhal at Rs. 130 and flour at Rs. 120.

    With fuel rationed, black market sales were thriving openly in the market. A bottle of kerosene oil sold at Rs. 200, while petrol was sold at Rs. 300.“We have no choice but to sell essential items at high prices. We have to fight against the shortage of supplies,” a black market vendor said.

    Mohamed Raufi who is from Kathankudi, Batticaloa says he has started doing business in Jaffna as it was profitable.“In spite of the A 9 being closed I make a good profit. I buy material from Colombo and bring it here by ship. Sometimes of course I don’t make any money at all,” he said.

    However, S. Kandaiyah, a clothes shop owner said he was losing out on business. He said he is compelled to sell his goods at a high price because transport costs were high. However he lamented people were not buying clothes.

    “I have three schooling children and a mother who is sick. I don’t know how I will survive the next few weeks if I don’t get customers. People just don’t buy clothes or material anymore. If this trend continues I will have to close my shop,” he said.

    On visiting a fishing village, Gurunagar, we noticed there were no fishermen although boats had been moored. A senior military official explaining the situation said this was because fishermen avoided the scorching afternoon sun. He also added that fishing was done on a low key because the LTTE was firing artillery and mortar into the village from a locality identified as Kalmunai point (K-point). However, residents said it was the heavy security restrictions on fishermen that had virtually crippled the industry.

    The health sector in the peninsula is also facing a crisis with there being more than 1300,vacancies for nearly 86 hospitals and dispensaries.


    Muhamalai: A view from the FDL

    We are at the frontlines of Muhamalai, a deep rumbling sound of a blast is heard from the army Forward Defence Line (FDL). Seconds later thick black smoke rises into the air.“Sir do we retaliate,” a captain asks his commanding officer, a Lt. Colonel.

    In a casual tone he says, “They must have learnt about the movement of armoured vehicles. They don’t usually attack in the afternoons, other than a bit of sporadic fire and maybe a few mortars falling in front of our FDL.” This time what we heard, we are told is a mortar fired from the FDL lines of the LTTE to the FDL lines of the Army. This is followed by sounds of some sporadic gun fire that dies down within minutes.

    We are asked to put on body armour and helmets before approaching the bunkers on the Army FDLs and are warned that LTTE snipers are scanning the area to target soldiers guarding the FDL. Later the Army shells the LTTE side of the FDL, a routine afternoon operation we are told.

    “The stretch between the Forward Defence Line of the armed forces in Muhamalai and that of the LTTE, designated as no-man’s land has been successfully infiltrated by the military. Our special units have reached the edge of the perimeter beyond which the LTTE stronghold lies,” Division-55 Commander, Brigadier Kamal Guneratne says.

    He says their movements are being hampered by anti personnel mines, improvised explosive devices strung together to form a high-impact cluster bomb and booby traps. Later we hear at the Jaffna Security Forces headquarters, that a soldier who had been part of the operation in the frontlines of Muhamalai, when we visited the area, had lost a leg to an improvised explosive device.


    Asif Fuard was a member of a media team taken on a conducted tour of Jaffna by the Media Centre for National Security (MCNS)



  • Muhamalai, Nagarkovil not part of peninsula: Army Spokesman
    Sri Lanka Army Media Director V.U.B Nanayakkara, USP has sent the following response to an article which appeared in The Sunday Times under the headline “Life in Jaffna: The seen and the unseen, the told and the untold”

    “Major General G.A. Chandrasiri, Security Forces Commander in Jaffna, contrary to what has been said in the article, stated in the referred press briefing that there are approximately 1000-1500 Tiger terrorists operating ahead of their own Forward Defence Line in Muhamalai and Nagarkovil - not within the peninsula - as stated in The Sunday Times report.

    “Similarly, the Jaffna Commander commenting on the operational activities taking place ahead of their own Forward Defence Lines in Muhamalai and Nagarkovil categorically stated that approximately 10-15 Tiger terrorists are killed daily as a result of limited operations carried out by troops in those areas.

    “On the contrary, the writer has stated about 10-15 Tiger terrorists are killed on a daily basis in the region; meaning the Jaffna peninsula where normality prevails, as the report itself stated.

    “This is totally misleading and factually incorrect. In other words, the report, while trying to state there prevails normalcy in the Government controlled area, also gives the wrong impression at the same time, in a subtle manner, that there does not exist normalcy in the region.

    “Likewise, efforts taken by this headquarters in Jaffna to provide maximum security to the visiting team of journalists have also been belittled and conveniently forgotten in this report. It is relevant to note here that these journalists were taken to specified areas close to Muhamalai and Nagarkovil where sporadic LTTE artillery attacks are taking place.

    “It is also pertinent to state here that such security measures were taken for the best interest of the visiting journalists and not for any other purpose as indicated in this writer’s report.”

    OUR REPORTER SAYS: The Brigadier has lost sight of the fact that Muhamalai and Nagarkovil areas are within the Jaffna peninsula. Instead, he has said that the two areas are not within. That is a misrepresentation of geographical facts. They do not change.

    Major General Chandrasiri did say during the news conference that 1000 to 1,500 Tiger guerrillas are still within the peninsula. He also said that 10 – 15 are killed per day. The Sunday Times reported Major Gen Chandrasiri’s comments. It quoted him saying that normalcy has returned to the region.

    Therefore the claim by the Brigadier that the report tries to give a wrong impression and that normalcy does not exist is not correct. That is clear to even the most dumb witted though the Military Spokesman is unable to comprehend.

    Contrary to claims made by Brigadier Nanayakkara, mention had not been made about the security provided to the team of journalists during their visit to Jaffna from April 5 to 7.

    The Sunday Times reported about the security provided to journalists during this conducted tour arranged by the Media Centre for National Security. Here again, unfortunately, Brig. Nanayakkara has been unable to comprehend the facts.

  • Norway urges India to play decisive peace role
    Norway last week urged India to play a more proactive role in the Sri Lankan conflict by mediating between the Government and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and said it stands ready to fully support such an initiative.

    However Sri Lanka dismissed any Norwegian involvement in future peace efforts and said it will not issue a special invitation to its ‘big brother’ to play the role of mediator.

    Speaking to Indian media on the sidelines of a Conference on Peace and Reconciliation in South Asia, organised in Oslo by Art of Living Foundation of Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, Norway's special envoy to Colombo Jon Hanssen-Bauer said that India was to be the "main partner" for Sri Lanka in the future, and that Oslo was in regular touch with New Delhi over the issue of peace process in its neighbouring country.

    India will play the "most decisive" role in the peace process in Sri Lanka being the "best-placed regional power" to help the island nation, Baur said.

    The top Norwegian diplomat, who was appointed the special envoy in 2006, said: "India is the main neighbour to Sri Lanka and they are always taking a keen interest in helping Sri Lanka. I think India will play the most decisive role in the peace process,"

    "India is Sri Lanka's big trade partner, it is also a political partner for a long time and they (India) would be the best-placed regional power to actually help Sri Lanka in the best way,"

    Stressing that Norway was having "very open communications" with India on the ethnic strife in Sri Lanka, the envoy said: "We are consulting with them very frequently because we think India has a lot of good advice to give."

    Norwegian peace role

    Bauer also insisted it is still not the end of the road for the Norwegian’s as facilitators to the conflict and says they will resume their mediation if an invitation is extended by the parties in Sri Lanka.

    Norway brokered the now-defunct ceasefire treaty between the Sri Lankan government and the rebel LTTE in 2002 and mediated six rounds of talks between the warring parties.

    “We have always supported the Sri Lankan government and are hopeful that an invitation will soon be extended to us by both parties to re-enter the facilitation process”, Bauer added.

    “It will turn out to be vital if India can mediate and get both the Government and the LTTE back to the peace table. Norway has never abandoned the Sri Lankan Government and if India mediates, we will fully support them”

    Bauer further said no “externally designed solution” would end Sri Lanka’s dragging ethnic conflict and Oslo would be more than happy to back “any solution endorsed by the Sri Lankan people. One should not be tempted to impose externally designed solutions to conflicts, but assist the parties in defining a domestic one.

    “The common understanding between the Government and the LTTE has been that talks are aimed at finding a political solution that is acceptable to all communities in the country.”

    “For Norway, any solution endorsed by the Sri Lankan people is acceptable” he claimed.

    Although Sri Lanka has withdrawn from the Norway-brokered ceasefire agreement of 2002 with the LTTE, Oslo remains the designated facilitator between the two sides.

    Sri Lanka rejects peace role

    Reacting to Norway’s offer to continue its mediating role, Government Defence Spokesperson, Minister Keheliya Rambukwella said the Sri Lankan government would not re-extend an invitation to Norway to enter the country as mediators.

    He also said that the Sri Lankan government will not issue a special invitation to India to play the role of mediator.

    “We do not need to offer any special invitation to India. The moment we get our friends involved in the Sri Lankan conflict, it turns out to be volatile as the LTTE does not want peace in this country,” Rambukwella told the Daily Mirror newspaper.

    Rambukwella added, India has always been involved in the Sri Lankan conflict by offering its assistance to the Sri Lankan government when required and as such there was no need to invite them for any direct involvement.

    Call for Indian involvement

    The two-day conference held in Oslo was attended by H.H. Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, one of the founders of the IAHV, Professor Rajiva Wijesinha, Secreatary General of the Secretariat for Coordinating the Peace Process (SCOOP), Ms. Erika Mann, General Secretary of Marumalarchchi Dravida Munneatta Kazhakam, Vaiko, Member of European Parliament, Arumugam Thondaman of Ceylon Workers Congress and a minister in the UPFA government, Jayalath Jayawardene, opposition UNP MP, Venerable Brahmanawatte Seevali Nayaka Thero from Amarapura Mahanikaya, Venerable Maduluvave Sobitha Nayaka Thero from the Nagavihara Kotte, Prof. Indra de Soysa from PRIO in Oslo and Nirj Deva, Member of European Parliament.

    Vaiko, Thondaman and Jayawardene also called for increased involvement from India to end the conflict in the island nation.

    “India is the regional superpower. Nothing can be done in Sri Lanka without the blessings of India. India needs to get involved,” Minister for Youth Empowerment and Socio-Economic Development Arumugam Thondaman said at the end of a two-day international conference held in Oslo last week.

    UNP MP Jayalath Jayawardene also called for an “active role” for India in Sri Lanka. “India is our big brother. We expect a very, very active role by India along with Norway to bring about peace in Sri Lanka,” he said.



  • TN leaders call for Indian peace role in Sri Lanka
    Tamil Nadu leaders, including Chief Minister of the state called on the Indian government to stop supplying weapons to the Sri Lankan state and assist in finding a last solution to decades long ethnic conflict.
    Tamil Nadu chief minister M Karunanidhi suggested that India organise negotiations between the warring parties in Sri Lanka to bring peace to the island nation.

    "To bring about peace in Sri Lanka, the Union government should come forward to organise useful negotiations so that a proper political solution is thrashed out," he said in an interview to The Times of India.
    Pattali Makkal Katchi (PMK) founder-leader S. Ramadoss, also reflected similar sentiments when met the Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in New Delhi.
    Ramadoss said he had also brought to Singh’s notice the genocide of innocent Tamils in Sri Lanka.
    “The Prime Minister sympathised with the plight of the Tamils and said the government would take all measures to restore peace and tranquility in Sri Lanka. India would not supply to Sri Lanka any arms and weapons which would be offensive in nature.”
    He also drew the attention of Singh on the frequent "attacks" on Tamil Nadu fishermen by the Sri Lankan Navy and asked the government to take measures to stop them.

    The general secretary of Tamil Nadu’s Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (MDMK), Vaiko on Thursday met Indian Premier Manmohan Singh in Delhi and requested the Indian government to mount diplomatic pressure on the Sri Lankan government to stop its military offensive and initiate peace talks for a workable solution to fulfill the aspirations of Sri Lankan Tamils.

    Vaiko met Indian PM to brief him on his meeting with Erik Solheim and Jon Hanssen-Bauer in Oslo and the outcome of the conference organised by the International Association for Human Values (IAHV) in Norway's capital last week.

    Vaiko told the Prime Minister that the situation in Sri Lanka was becoming grave day by day, endangering the life and security of Tamils. Innocent Tamils were being killed by the military. He explained the plight and misery of Tamils living in jungles without food and medicine. While seeking the government’s intervention, he requested that India should not provide arms to Sri Lanka.

    Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has told Vaiko who met him Thursday in New Delhi that there is no truth in reports on Indian supply of arms to Sri Lanka.

    Vaiko said the Prime Minister told him about India’s stand —that there could be no military solution to the problem. Singh assured him, saying: “We are not supplying arms to Sri Lanka. I will discuss the matter with the
    Foreign Minister and see what best can be done.”

    The MDMK leader also urged the Indian Prime Minister to prevail upon Colombo to abide by its earlier pledge to honor the contiguity of the traditional homeland of Tamil speaking people in a merged NorthEast.

    He also brought the grave human rights situation in Sri Lanka, where Tamils are subjected to a systematic genocide, to the attention of the Indian PM.

    He reminded the Indian PM on his earlier promise, in a meeting with him on March 10, 2007, to facilitate the transport of humanitarian supplies through the ICRC to Eelam Tamils who are heavily affected by the war and the blockade by the Government of Sri Lanka. The humanitarian supplies were collected from Tamils in Tamil Nadu.

    Urging the Indian Prime Minister to take immediate steps to dispatch humanitarian supplies he also requested Mr. Manmohan Singh to withdraw the radar equipments supplied by India to the Sri Lanka Air Force (SLAF), which has been responsible for many attacks on Tamil civilians. Many Tamil children have been killed and seriously injured in the attacks carried out by the SLAF, Vaiko told the Indian PM.

    He later met the External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee at his residence in Delhi.

    Mukherjee told Vaiko that India had repeatedly reminded Colombo that military solution was not the option to solve the Tamil question.

    Vaiko urged Mukherjee to prevail upon Colombo to cease all military hostilities as it was the Government of Sri Lanka (GoSL) which was responsible for the aggression.

    Prior to his visit to Delhi, Vaiko was in Oslo attending a conference, titled "Peace and Reconciliation in South Asia," organized by the International Association for Human Values.

    In Oslo, Vaiko met Norwegian International Development Minister Erik Solheim and Jon Hanssen-Bauer, the Norwegian Special Envoy and held discussion relating to the ongoing ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka.

    Expressing gratitude on behalf of the Tamils in India to the Royal Norwegian Government for its engagement as facilitator to the CFA and its continued interest in facilitating to resolve the ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka, his visit to Norway gave him a unique opportunity in bringing the concerns of more than 60 million Tamils in Tamil Nadu, to Norway.

    The International Community should be made aware that the Norwegian facilitated CFA had collapsed as the Sri Lankan Government seriously violated the CFA, clause by clause, and systematically scuttled it fully, before unilaterally withdrawing from the ceasefire, he said.

    The International Community, which had failed to apply timely pressure on the GoSL to honour the CFA, while the agreement was still in force, should now re-evaluate its approach to Sri Lanka based on the past experiences and adopt a strategy, which will result in restoring the diplomatic balance between the protagonists to the conflict so as to create and sustain a conducive environment for negotiations.
  • US provides aid to Sri Lanka despite abuses
    Despite continuing human rights violations including intimidation of media personnel, abductions and killings attributed to state security forces, the US has announced $ 12 million in aid to Sri Lanka.

    The U.S. government announcement comes, even as the U.S. congress ruled out Sri Lanka for a debt cancellation programme due to its human rights situation.

    The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) awarded a five-year, $12 million contract to support regional government in Sri Lanka's eastern and north central provinces.

    Prior to the Pradeshiya sabha elections, US Ambassador Robert Blake raised his concerns of a stage managed 'election' in the Batticaloa District and emphasized the urgent need to disarm all armed groups operating in the East. He also publicly warned that US aid to Batticaloa would not be forthcoming if the elections were not free and fair.

    The elections conducted under in an atmosphere of fear and violence were won by Tamil Makkal Viduthalai Pulikal (TMVP), an armed paramilitary group. However deviating from its initial position the U.S. has now decided to fund the regional government headed by the paramilitary group, accused of numerous rights abuses including torture, extortion, kidnapping, and killings.

    According to USAID, the investment will expand the agency's democracy and governance work by helping to improve the areas of security, local government accountability and conflict resolution.

    "USAID remains committed to its assistance programs in Sri Lanka despite the renewed conflict," said Rebecca Cohn, USAID/Sri Lanka mission director. "We're confident our new partnership with ARD will support our goal of helping Sri Lanka and apply the best governance practices from around the world."

    The program, called Supporting Regional Governance, will build on USAID/Sri Lanka's successful democracy and governance efforts, designed several years ago to address development needs resulting from the on-going ethnic conflict after the ceasefire agreement. The new program also aims to improve regional government in eastern Sri Lanka by increasing citizen participation.

    In the meantime, the United States Congress is expected to endorse a legislative proposal shortly urging for the cancellation of debts owed by some of the world’s poorest countries but nations including Bhutan, Sri Lanka and Laos have been singled out due to their human rights situation and other financial management standard issues.

    Sri Lanka’s debt to the United States alone amounts to a whopping Rs. 53 billion while the total foreign debt is a massive Rs. 1.3 trillion according to the Central Bank 2007 Annual Report released last week.

    Jubilee USA Network, a group representing more than 80 religious denominations, development agencies, and human rights organisations from across the United States are spearheading the campaign calling for the cancellations of the debts.

    The network is of the view that the lending practices of international financial institutions are responsible for the suffering of the poor in developing nations.

    “Twenty-two countries have already received close to 100 percent cancellation of their debts to the IMF, World Bank and regional development banks,” the network disclosed.

    Sri Lanka falls under the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) Heavily Indebted Poor Country (HIPC) programme but according to reports, the island does not meet the Jubilee Act standards in human rights and financial management standards.

    “The proposed legislation calls for ‘greater responsibility’ in lending and borrowing in the future. Supporters of the bill say current lending practices are hampering development initiatives in many countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin America,” a report filed in OneWorld stated.

    The legislation calls on the US Treasury Department to negotiate with the IMF and World Bank for an agreement for debt cancellation for several poor nations that need financial help to meet the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) set by world leaders in 2000, the report added.

  • GSP plus concessions at risk
    Sri Lanka’s garment industry is worried that the duty free access it enjoys to European markets will soon be cut due to the gross human rights violations related to the government’s pursuit of a military solution to the long-standing ethnic conflict.

    An end to European Union (EU) trade concessions, known as Generalised System of Preferences Plus (GSP+), according to some estimates, will result in the direct loss of at least a 100,000 jobs in the pivotal garment industry and many more, indirectly.

    The GSP+ scheme allows duty free exports of almost all major Sri Lankan products, into the EU, but the garment industry has been the main beneficiary, which generates an annual revenue of $1.6 billion per year.

    Concessions linked to human rights record

    The existing concession comes up for review in later this year, in October and earlier this year a visiting EU delegation linked trade concessions to human rights record and said that the extension of the GSP+ concessions for Sri Lanka were yet to be considered.

    The EU has indicated that continuance of the GSP+ depends on how well the Sri Lankan government is seen to be implementing 27 international conventions on human rights, labour rights and environmental standards.

    "It is totally based on fulfilling these conventions. This (current review) is a technical exercise on compliance with these conventions. This means not just having the laws, but also implementing them," said Julian Wilson, head of the European Commission (EC) delegation to Sri Lanka.

    The EU has been severely critical of the government’s human rights record. There is fear that such issues as the harassment of journalists and rising political abductions, could be used as a reason to discontinue the GSP+ scheme.

    As one of the four Co-Chairs of the 2003 Tokyo Conference on the Reconstruction and Development of Sri Lanka, the EU helped raise pledges for post-conflict rehabilitation and development worth 4.5 billion US dollars -- but this was tied to progress in the peace process.

    Wilson denied that the EU is using the GSP+ as a political tool. "We have a commercial relationship with Sri Lanka that spans 300 years. This is not to be thrown out on a whim. So the entire exercise will be undertaken with absolute professionalism. There will be no political games.’’

    Government action

    “The extension of the GSP Plus scheme appears to be an uphill task since Sri Lanka did not fully satisfy the conditions set out by the EU such as Human Rights, good governance and environment,” according to Chairman of Sri Lanka Apparel Institute, Professor Lakdas Fernando.

    Whilst the garment industry is fearful of an end to concessions, the Sri Lankan president Mahinda Rajapakse is less worried and has taken the view that compliance with international human rights laws could lead to infringement of sovreighnity.

    Speaking at the launch of the Central Bank Annual Report 2007 the President insisted that although the government is taking every possible measure to receive the GSP+ concessions, compromising the sovereignty of the country is not one of its principles.

    “If the influences of the treacherous parties in the country succeed and the European Union rejects the concessions. Our private sector should be able to increase their productivity and face these external challenges as well”.

    However, worried about the prospect of losing the concessions, last month, the government appointed a four-member ministerial team to work with the garment industry and dispel some of the concerns raised by the EU.

    In mid-March, trade minister Prof. G.L. Peiris led delegation to Europe for a series of meetings, including one with Benita Ferrero-Waldner, European Commissioner for External Relations and European Neighbourhood Policy, Benita Ferrero-Waldner, on the issue.

    According to reports, Ferrero-Waldner, indicated to Pieris in no uncertain terms that Sri Lanka would qualify for GSP plus benefits only if the human rights record was put in order.

    She was also rather critical of the ongoing ethnic war and even told the Minister that; “the war will never solve any problem in Sri Lanka.”

    In January, the government unilaterally ended a Norwegian-brokered ceasefire accord with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and embarked on a military campaign to defeat the LTTE.

    According to Sri Lankan media, even as Peiris returned to the country after a failed mission in Brussels to convince the EU officials of Sri Lanka’s compliance to human rights laws and good governance, Governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka, Ajith Nivard Cabraal told the BBC that the GSP+ facility was not really necessary.

    He not only dismissed the concessions as disposable but also said he had personally advised the government the concessions were not essential to the garment industry.

    Non-compliance

    In 2005 when GSP+ came up for renewal, Sri Lanka made a plea for extension on compassionate grounds as the country had been badly hit by the December 2004 tsunami and was also recovering from the end of garment quotas offered by the United States.

    Under the original agreement between the EU and the government in 2003, Sri Lanka was obliged to 'ratify and fully implement' a set of 27 international conventions including the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR).

    While most or all of these convenants were ratified by Colombo, far ahead of countries like China or India, it's the implementation that concerns workers. "Yes we have ratified these covenants but the implementation is the problem," Anton Marcus, general secretary of the Free Trade Zones and General Services Employees' Union said.

    Union Support

    Last month, the government gained unexpected support from local trade unions, which once said that employers and government violated core labour conventions and therefore should not be benefit from the GSP+.

    "They don't comply by the labour standards but if Sri Lanka loses the GSP+ the impact will be on the workers. So we do not want to see the GSP+ being taken away. But we do want some indication that core labour standards will be adhered to," said Marcus, last month.

    Marcus said the labour groups met a EU delegation visiting Colombo last month and said that they would back the government request for an extension of the special concession if the roadmap is implemented and international trade unions are also appointed as monitors in this process.

    "We have no problem in supporting this as long as the workers get their rights," he said, adding that one of the issues in the roadmap is the right to freedom of association and collective bargaining.

    "This is a key element in the core labour standards agreed by the government in 2003 to the EU which is yet to be implemented," Marcus said.

    US concerns

    Last week, U.S. Ambassador Robert Blake told a meeting of the garment trade, that while Sri Lanka is trying to convince U.S. policy makers to give preferential trade treatment, on the grounds of being a vulnerable economy and on the basis of ethical manufacturing standards, the country's negative human rights image 'eclipsed' everything else.

    The U.S. is the biggest market for Sri Lanka’s garment industry which expects to bring in three billion US dollars this year.

    Escape again

    Whilst Sri Lanka continues to commit gross human rights violation, it may, as in the past, yet again escape from any punitive measures or sanctions by the international community.

    According to local media, Roshan Lyman, EU Economic and Trade Advisor in Sri Lanka, has sent out an optimistic note to the country, informing that Sri Lanka still has plenty of opportunities to improve her human rights situation.

    “We have to first do an evaluation of all the applications and that will start only in October. Certainly, Sri Lanka has time till October”

    “We have a legal department in Brussels and only when they get all the documents for evaluation, the department will release its final results. And this will be on December 15, or so. It is after December 15 that the legal department of the EU will give out the list of countries that qualify for GSP plus benefits,” he has said.


  • Sri Lanka faces sever food shortage

    While Tamil homeland in the Northeast of the island is being subjected to a full-scale war, the Sinhala south is facing a severe food shortage and the highest rate of inflation in the history of Sri Lanka.

    An escalating war, recent heavy flooding and economic policies of President Mahinda Rajapakse’s administration are blamed for the spiraling inflation and severe shortage of food, specifically, rice, the staple food of Sri Lankans.

    With the Sri Lankan government offensives against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelma (LTTE) to capture Vanni yielding no results, the continuing war is putting a heavy burden on the island nation’s fragile economy.

    According to the Colombo Consumer Price Index (CCPI), the current rate of inflation in Sri Lanka is a dizzying 24 per cent. Even the revised index (CCPIN) estimates it at 21.6 per cent. On both counts, it is significantly higher than in other countries in the region, where the rates of inflation vary between 5 per cent and 7 per cent.

    Adding to that the rain came down heavily in March - a usually a dry month during which the rice is harvested. Tens of thousands of paddy land went under water with thousands of farmers becoming destitute overnight, unable to reap the harvest. This has created a severe shortage in supply and led to price hikes.

    Spiraling Prices

    According to The Island newspaper, the average increase in the price of rice varieties in Sri Lanka is 68 per cent. For example, the price of parboiled imported Indian rice has gone up from SLRs.40 to SLRs. 85 per kg in only a few weeks. Prices are expected to further rise because of an increasing local shortage due to bad weather, unwise import policies and increasing world prices.

    One shopper said the kilo of local rice which she bought at Rs 80 last month was being sold at Rs 112. The imported Indian rice, which two months ago fetched, a price of Rs 60 a kilo in Colombo's retail markets is now sold at Rs 100 — and the stocks are fast vanishing.

    The government is confident that it will not allow the situation to get out of hand. However traders are not so confident and predict that the prices will go up further in the coming weeks.

    Government Mismanagement

    Rice merchants blame the government for the current crisis. They say timely imports from neighboring India would have saved the country from the present plight.

    According to them, the government should have placed orders with foreign suppliers (ideally from India) when prices were low and a rise was on the cards.

    In a last minute attempt to take control of the situation, the government this week began forcing traders to sell at prices it had fixed.

    Consumer Affairs Minister Bandula Gunawardena told the BBC that selling above the price limit is prohibited under the Consumer Protection Act.


    However traders are not happy with the move and they shut down Colombo’s wholesale market on Thursday in protest against the new, uneconomical administered prices.

    Interference in private trade by the Mahinda Rajapaksa government in recent times has harmed the economy and social welfare, traders added.

    The controlled price of a 65-kg sack of “samba” rice is now SLRs.4030, but the purchase price is SLRs.5400, traders point out.

    "The government has taken a hasty decision without consulting us," the president of the Old Moor Street Traders' Association, K Palaniandi Sunderam, said.

    "We can't sell at the price that the government is imposing because we have bought the rice already at a higher price."

    He also said the country's civil war was having an effect on supplies, with restrictions on movement meaning that the harvest from the north could not reach the south of the island.

    Gunawardena rejected the suggestion that there was a rice shortage in Sri Lanka and said it was a propaganda campaign that was launched before the New Year by "groups with vested interests" to artificially increase rice prices.

    Whilst Gunawardena added that traders were free to import any amount of rice, without tax, from any country, a desperate Sri Lankan government pleaded with India, Pakistan and Myanmar to sell some rice.

    Hunger hotspot

    The World Food Programme in a recent report listed Sri Lanka among eleven countries identified as "hunger's global hotspots". The other countries on the list are Afghanistan, Chad, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Iraq, Syria, Kenya, Somalia, Sudan and Zimbabwe.

    Rise in food prices is worrying because food accounts for 80 per cent of household expenditure in Sri Lanka. An average family has to spend as much as SLRs.4,000 ($37) per month on rice alone, making it unaffordable.
    Many may have to resort to cutting down on food, but this will only worsen the already worrying nutritional status of the population.

    According to the Department of Census and Statistics, only half of Sri Lanka’s total population of 20 million receives the minimum daily intake of 2,030 calories. The actual intake is 1,696 calories per day in the case of the poor, and 2,194 in the case of others.

    But according to the UNICEF, 14 per cent of children under the age of five show signs of wasting or acute undernourishment, and 29 per cent are underweight.


  • Fr. Karunaratnam, head of Human Rights organization killed by Army
    Rev. Father M X Karunaratnam, the chairman of the NorthEast Secretariat on Human Rights (NESoHR), was killed in a Claymore attack carried out by a Deep Penetration Unit (DPU) of the Sri Lanka Army on Sunday, according to initial reports from Tamileelam Police.

    Officials at the NorthEast Secretariat on Human Rights (NESoHR), in a press release issued Sunday, expressed "profound shock and loss," and condemned the assassination of NESoHR's chairman, Fr. M. X. Karunaratnam.

    Press release said, he "worked tirelessly championing the Human Rights of the Tamil people. He travelled to the United States, Canada and Geneva meeting with Foreign Governments and Organizations concerned in Human Rights. Rev. Fr. Karunaratnam pioneered the work of NESoHR in the field of psychological counseling of the war and tsunami affected people in the Tamil Homeland."

    The attack took place on Mallaavi - Vavunikkulam Road in Vanni around 12:30 p.m. Sunday, according to initial reports.

    Fr. Karunaratnam frequently uses the road as his residential prayer and counseling center is located in Vavunikkulam. His vehicle is known to everyone in the area, residents said implying that the Claymore attack has specifically targeted him.

    The attack took place near Kuzhanthai Jesus Church at Vannivilaangkulam while his vehicle, which had broken down on his way back to his residence from Maangkulam Church, was being towed and he was seated in the driver seat steering it. A shrapnel hit his head, causing brain injuries and he died on the spot. His body was brought to Kilinochchi hospital.

    Fr. Karunartnam was the foremost Human Rights activist in Liberation Tigers of Tamileelam controlled Vanni. NESoHR was the only body in Vanni to report and voice for the Human Rights of the Tamil people in the NorthEast.

    Fondly called as 'Kili Father,' he also played a key role in providing psychological support for those in the NorthEast affected by the war and the 2004 Tsunami disaster.

    NESoHR was launched, in July 2004, as part of the Norwegian-facilitated 2002 Peace Process to strengthen the human rights protection mechanisms in the NorthEast of Sri Lanka.

    Karunaratnam led a NESoHR delegation to Geneva in October 2004 and met with several European organizations involved in rights issues. Officials and diplomats visiting Kilinochchi had also made it a practice to meet Fr. Karunaratnam to discuss the humanitarian situation during their missions to Vanni.

    In his latest report, issued on April 5, 2008, he noted:

    "The [Sri Lankan] local mechanism to ensure good governance with respect for human rights has miserably failed and there is widespread call for the establishment of a UN body to monitor human rights violations. Sri Lanka’s claim that establishing such a body is an infringement on the sovereignty and integrity of the state does not hold water as long as series of mass murders and disappearances of Tamil people during communal pogroms and military offensives are not investigated by neutral agencies and perpetrators brought to book in a transparent manner. Diplomatic manipulations and unquestioned rhetoric by Sri Lanka in the world body should not be allowed to white wash the grim ground reality."

    In his latest report, he also said: "NESoHR as the Human Rights body of the Tamil people had high hopes in the UN Human Rights session in view of the buildup of opinion against human rights violations committed by state actors in Sri Lanka."

    "Most disappointingly we find that Sri Lanka was able to hold fort and technically defend its totally unacceptable human rights record in spite of the many adverse reports on human rights violations against the Tamil people."

    This is the advantage rogue states have over unrepresented people in the UN. NESoHR has the responsibility to voice the concerns of an unrepresented people in the UN who have been deceptively made a minority in their land of birth to depend on a majority with a supremacist psychosis by the colonial powers when they left the island," he had noted.

    Two of the eleven founder members of NESoHR and parliamentarians of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) have been killed in Sri Lanka Army backed paramilitary attacks earlier.

    A. Chandra Nehru, a founder member of NESoHR and former TNA Parliamentarian for the Ampaarai District was killed by paramilitary in February 2005.

    Joseph Pararajasingam, a senior TNA MP from Batticaloa and a founder member of the NESoHR was shot dead on the Christmas Eve of 2005.

    The other founding members of the NESoHR are: K. Sivapalan, an attorney-at-law from Trincomalee, now exiled in Norway, TNA parliamentarian Gajendrakumar Ponnambalam, whose father Kumar Ponnamapalam was allegedly assassinated by the Sri Lankan establishment in January 2000, the general secretary of the Ceylon Tamil Teachers Union (CTTU) T. Mahasivam, Dr. K Sivapalan, Ms. Sri Arulananthan, Mr.S. Achsuthan, Dr. N. Malathy and Dr. S Sriskandaraja.
  • Food insecurity a growing problem
    UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs has warned that a combination of poor rice harvest, rising global food prices and the escalating civil war are increasing food insecurity for hundreds of thousands of Sri Lankans.

    In a statement released on 9 April 2008 the UN agency said, only half the country’s 20 million people are receiving the minimum daily calorie intake of 2,030, according to the latest poverty assessments compiled by the government.

    “An average poor person in Sri Lanka receives only 1,696 kcal per day while a non-poor person receives 2,194 kcal,” according to the Department of Census and Statistics, in a report entitled Poverty Indicators - Household Income and Expenditure Survey - 2006/07, released in March 2008.

    Officials at the UN World Food Programme (WFP) told IRIN that high levels of under-nourishment prevail, especially in rural areas and those regions in the north and east affected by more than 25 years of conflict.

    “The highest rates of under-nourishment are in the north and east as well as parts of the dry zone towards the centre of the island,” Jean-Yves Lequime, the deputy head of WFP in Sri Lanka, said.

    “Our information shows that these areas are some of the poorest on the island, with very high under-nutrition rates, poor education levels and poor sanitation, all of which contribute to under-nutrition,” Lequime said.

    Poverty and high energy requirements were also common in the rural agrarian areas, Gordon Weiss, chief of communications at the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) in Colombo, the capital, told IRIN. “Especially in the agricultural areas, they engage with heavy work, so they need more calories. Most of the agricultural-based areas are considered poor areas.”

    Child nutrition

    “Sri Lanka has a significantly higher child underweight rate than would be expected on the basis of its [annual] per capita GDP [of US$1,599],” Lequime said. “Indeed, Sri Lanka has a child underweight rate that may be three times as high as what would be expected from a country with Sri Lanka's level of infant mortality.”

    UNICEF said 14 percent of children under five in Sri Lanka showed signs of wasting (acute underweight) and stunting (chronic underweight) while 29 percent of children younger than five were underweight for their age.
    However, districts that have been affected by conflict record even higher rates, according to UNICEF’s Weiss.

    WFP said the continuing conflict between government forces and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) had also raised concerns regarding overall food security and nutrition levels in the conflict zone.

    “Food insecurity levels are high in areas affected by the conflict, according to the Integrated Food Security and Humanitarian Phase Classification conducted by WFP in April 2007,” Lequime said. “Kilinochchi, Mullaitivu, Trincomalee, Mannar and parts of Vavuniya [districts] are classified as acute food and livelihood crises. Jaffna and Batticaloa are classified as a humanitarian emergency.”

    There are also fears that national nutritional levels will deteriorate further due to rising food prices caused by inflation running at a record high of 17.5 percent, the WFP official said.

    “Heavy unseasonal rainfall over much of Sri Lanka, including the conflict-affected areas, has destroyed much of the main ‘Maha’ rice harvest, which when combined with global price rises and food shortages may indicate major problems for the future,” according to Lequime.
  • Election related violence escalates in East
    As the polling day for the Provincial Council election nears, election related violence is on the increase according to media reports.

    Complaints regarding at least 49 incidents of violence related to the forthcoming provincial elections have been lodged at various police stations in Eastern province until Saturday, May 3, according to the Police.

    The highest number of incidents was recorded in Ampaarai district where police have been notified of 26 violent incidents. In Batticaloa 18 complaints have been received while 7 incidents were reported in Trincomalee.

    However Sri Lanka's President Mahinda Rajapaksa dismissed complaints of election related violence and said that there is no election violence in east as claimed by opposition parties.

    Earlier, Peoples Action for Free and Fair Election (PAFFREL), an election monitoring group reported that 32 complaints of election related violence including two killings have been reported till Friday, May 2 from the three districts of the east since the nominations closed for the provincial council election which is scheduled to be held on May 10.

    The police has announced it would deploy about 10,000 police personnel in the east for election duty to curb violence and maintain law and order during the election period and on the polling day.

    In the meantime, according to reports from Batticaloa, paramilitary members of Pillayan group have warned the residents in Kaluvaagnchikkudi located in Manmunai South and Eruvilpattu division of the Batticaloa district of adverse consequences if they fail to attend and vote for ruling UPFA alliance in the forthcoming elections for the Eastern Provincial Council.

    The group has referred to the low percentage of votes polled in the local elections and said such low attendance would 'not be tolerated' by the top hierarchy of the outfit.

    Only 48% of the voters had participated in the local elections held in March. Of these, 13% of the voters had cast invalid votes.
  • IIGEP: Sri Lanka lacks political will to investigate abuses
    A panel of top international legal luminaries told Sri Lanka's government on Tuesday to clean up its human rights record, saying an escalating war against Tamil Tigers had brought with it grave abuses.

    The International Independent Group of Eminent Persons (IIGEP), headed by the former Indian chief justice J N Bhagwati and comprising 10 experts from Australia, Britain, Canada, Japan, France, Netherlands and the United States blamed the Government of Sri Lanka for "absence of will" in the present Inquiry to "investigate cases with vigour, where the conduct of its own forces has been called into question."

    "The IIGEP has... found an absence of will on the part of the Government of Sri Lanka in the present inquiry to investigate cases with vigour, where the conduct of its own forces has been called into question," the panel said.

    "Summary executions, massacres, disappearances, wanton destruction of property, and forcible transfers of populations can never be justified. No efforts should be spared to uncover responsibility, including recognition of command responsibility, for such actions."

    Following international pressure, in September, 2006, President Mahinda Rajapaksa announced that his government would "invite an international independent commission to probe abductions, disappearances and extra-judicial killings."

    However, within days of his announcement, he deviated from the claim and said, that he would invite a group of international experts to act as observers of the activities of the Presidential Commission [consisting of Sri Lanka nationals] which will investigate alleged abductions, disappearances and extra judicial killings.

    The IIGEP was setup in February 2007, to observe the work of the Commission of Inquiry to Investigate and Inquire into Alleged Serious Violations of Human Rights (“the Commission”), which was established in November 2006. The Serious Violations referred to in the Warrant establishing the Commission were 16 cases dating from 1 August 2005 until 16 October 2006.

    However, in early March, the IIGEP announced its decision to quit, saying there was no cooperation from the authorities and the effort was virtually a sham to deflect international criticism.

    Announcing the decision to quit IIGEP said: “The IIGEP is of the opinion that there has not been the minimum level of trust necessary for the success of the work of the commission and the IIGEP.”

    The latest IIGEP report gave the following reasons for its decision to terminate the mission "with profound regret that more could not have been achieved."

    - A conflict of interest in the proceedings before the Commission
    - Lack of effective victim and witness protection
    - Lack of transparency and timeliness in the proceedings
    - Lack of full co-operation by State bodies
    - Lack of financial independence of the Commission

    "Sections of popular opinion suggest that human rights and respect for the rule of law should take second place to measures necessary to repel these hostilities," the panel said.

    "The IIGEP rejects this opinion."

    Sri Lanka's Attorney General C. R. de Silva, however, hit back at the panel as "flawed" and a source of "unnecessary inconvenience to the government."
    The panel's report said military operations and respect for civil liberties were not incompatible.

    "It should be emphasised that respect for human rights and the conduct of military operations in strict accordance with international humanitarian law are powerful weapons in the struggle against dissident forces and terrorism," the IIGEP report said.

    The group also asked the Sri Lankan government to ensure that senior military officers were held responsible for the actions of lower ranks, set up a witness protection mechanism and end a culture of impunity for perpetrators.

    In its report, the IIGEP made following particular recommendations:
    - That the President should ensure that all State bodies comply with international norms and standards and his directive to provide full disclosure of information and cooperation to the Commission.

    - The Government should respect and implement the internationally agreed doctrine of command responsibility as part of the law of Sri Lanka, whereby superiors of those who have committed criminal acts may also be held responsible.

    - The Government of Sri Lanka should establish, as a priority, a workable, effective and permanent system of victim and witness protection. The Commission should endeavour to train the staff of its victim and witness protection unit in order to provide the optimum level of security and assistance to potential witnesses. The IIGEP also calls for the establishment of a facility whereby essential witnesses, who have left Sri Lanka, and who can continue to give first hand evidence as to some of the events under examination by the Commission, can give their oral evidence to the Commission by video-links under conditions of complete safety. In this respect, international support to the Commission has proven critical.

    - The Commission of Inquiry should include in the course of its inquiries an examination of the reasons for systemic failures and past impunity in relation to the cases under review, and consider the making of recommendations for the eventual appointment of independent special prosecutors in cases in which the security forces have been involved in serious human rights violations.

    - The Government of Sri Lanka should provide the immediate and necessary financial resources to the Commission of Inquiry,and place adequate funds at its disposal, to enable it to fulfil its mandate.

    - The Government of Sri Lanka should not entrench the role of the Attorney General as counsel assisting the Commission of Inquiry through legislation.

    Among the cases being probed by the Commission of Inquiries and monitored by IIGEP was the August 2006 massacre of 17 local aid staff working with a French charity in the island's northeast. The evidence in this case has pointed to the involvement of security forces and a state cover-up.

    Colombo pulled out of a tattered 2002 truce with the LTTE in January this year in the belief that it could crush the LTTE and regain areas under its control.

  • Sri Lanka creating a ‘health disaster’ in Vanni
    The Sri Lankan Defence Ministry has come under attack for engineering a health disaster in LTTE administered Vanni by blocking medical supplies to the region.

    In its latest situation report released on April 17, the International Committee of Red Cross (ICRC) said the lack of regular deliveries of supplies from the country’s health ministry has resulted in clinics and hospitals in the Vanni (the four northern districts of Sri Lanka) running out of basic medicines such as paracetamol, antibiotics and vaccines.

    In addition, the limited number of staff available to care for routine cases alongside war casualties has become a critical issue for several hospitals in northern Sri Lanka, ICRC added.

    The Deputy Provincial Directors of Health Services (DPDHS) for Kilinochchi and Mullaithivu, have both recently raised their concerns about the severe lack of material resources to run the health services in the two districts. These two districts in Vanni suffer material shortages to run the health services because these materials are blocked at the checkpoints in Omanthai and Vavuniya by the Sri Lanka Defense Ministry.

    Commenting on the situation, LTTE Spokesperson for Human Rights and Humanitarian Affairs, Ms. Selvi, said: “the concerns raised by the DPDHS highlight the stark conditions in which the health services in Vanni are struggling by the man made disaster created by the Sri Lanka Defense Ministry.”

    “It is worth reminding ourselves what the United Nations human rights instruments have to say about the responsibility to provide adequate health services, especially to the children. The Convention on the Rights of the Child in Article 24 it says:

    "State Parties recognize the right of the child to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of health and to facilities for the treatment of illness and rehabilitation of health. States Parties shall strive to ensure that no child is deprived of his or her right of access to such health care services."

    Selvi questioned the Sri Lankan government logic for denying basic medical supplies to Tamils and urged the international community to react to this gross human rights violation committed by the state.

    “Under the pretext of ensuring security in the south of the island is the Sri Lankan state denying the very basic medicines to the Tamil children? Has the international community failed to notice this gross human rights violation?” Selvi asked.

    Deputy Provincial Director of Health Service (DPDHS) division office recently said that medicine quota for the district hospital for the first quarter of 2008 is yet to arrive.

    This quota should have arrived prior to the start of the quarter in January but they have not arrived even after the quarter ended by end of March. The medicines have been stagnating in Vavuniya without permission from the Ministry of Defense. The DPDHS expressed hope that they will arrive some time soon. There are no stocks for the Amoxil syrup, a common pediatric antibiotic, and Diabetes medication. Patients are in serious danger due to lack of these medicines.

    Meanwhile, Mullaiththeevu DPDHS has told media that only 20% of the fuel supplies needed to operate the district hospital, two sub-hospitals and six pharmacies in the district, has been allowed across the entry point at Oamanthai by the Sri Lankan forces.

    The Mullaithivu DPDHS also raised his concern about the huge reduction of the fuel allocation to his health services. Although unlimited amount of fuel was permitted during the ceasefire period the amount permitted has been gradually reduced further and further.

    Mullaithivu DPDHS said that the health services in his district that is made up of a vast area and sparse population need 14,000 liters per month at the very minimum. With this fuel the Mullaithivu district hospital, two sub-hospitals in the district, and six pharmacies must be operated. This fuel is needed to run the electricity generation in these hospitals and also to run the ambulances that must take serious cases to the Vavuniya hospital. Despite these urgent needs only 2750 liters of fuel has been allocated for the health services in the Mullaithivu district.
  • ACF labels aid workers massacre as war crime
    A French aid agency that operated in conflict areas in Sri Lanka and lost 17 of their local workers in a single incident two years ago has labeled the massacre as a ‘war crime’ and decided to withdraw from Sri Lanka.

    Action Contre la Faim (ACF or Action against Hunger) in a press release issued on Friday, April 18 said the execution style killing of the aid workers, mostly Tamils, could not be considered as collateral damage and the massacre is a war crime in violation of the Geneva Conventions.

    “The Muttur slaughter can't be considered only as a "collateral damage" during the Muttur battle: our team has been specifically and deliberately targeted, their death has been organised execution style with bullets shot in their head. Everything was consciously and brutally planned: the victims were kneeling, unarmed and defenceless. The culprits of this massacre are the ones who were carrying the arms. We can assert that this massacre is a war crime in violation of the Geneva Conventions”, the ACF statement read.

    The 17 local aid workers were killed when the military was taking over the LTTE controlled area of Muttur, 260 kilometres north east of the capital on August 4, 2006.

    Explaining its decision to quit Sri Lanka the aid agency said, the decision by International Independent Group of Eminent Persons (IIGEP), a group of international experts observing the proceedings of a presidential commission probing 15 violent incidents including the killing of the aid workers has made them lose confidence in the dragging inquiry process.

    The Paris based ACF added, it considered the presence of the IIGEP as an essential condition for the credibility in the investigations into the killing of its staff in Muttur and now doubted whether the Commission of Inquiries would respect international standards.

    Last month, the IIGEP, headed by P N Bhagwati, former Indian Chief Justice, told the Sri Lankan government they were withdrawing from the inquiry because of official interference and lack of internationally acceptable standards.
    In a statement released at the time, the IIGEP said: "The IIGEP is of the opinion that there has not been the minimum level of trust necessary for the success of the work of the commission and the IIGEP,"

    Declaring that a massacre of so many NGO workers has never happened in the history of humanitarian organizations, the ACF said its overall aim was to help the affected population particularly during crises like natural disasters, wars or internal conflicts and to avoid humanitarian crises and massive displacements.

    “ACF carries out its role in regions like Darfur and Chechnya, but no accident such as the one that happened in Mutur has ever been reported,”

    Founded in 1979, the non-profit-making organisation has programmes in 43 countries worldwide and its vocation is to save lives by fighting hunger, especially those of malnourished children, and to work with vulnerable populations to preserve and restore their livelihoods with dignity, ACF added.

    Nordic truce monitors, from the Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission at the time blamed Sri Lankan security forces for the massacre - at the time the worst attack on aid workers since a 2003 bomb attack on the United Nations office in Baghdad.

  • The story of one Black Tiger
    I had a rare opportunity to come to know closely of the details of a Black Tiger Thurairathinam Kalairaj (Ilam Puli), who became a Martyr, when the Anuradhapura Air Base was attacked by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

    Ilama Puli was born on 13.10.1981 in a fishing village called Myliddy. His father was a prosperous fisherman, who owned a big motor boat. Ten people were employed by him and led a very comfortable life having his own stone built house, a motor cycle and all the other paraphernalia that go with prosperity. He had three children with Ilam Puli sandwiched between two sisters.

    Ilam Puli was very much attached to both the sisters and particularly to the younger one Kaviarasi. He had his education at the Nadeswara College in Myliddy until the tragedy struck their family through the invasion of the Sri Lankan Army (SLA) in 1995. This family was among the several lacks of people, who left the Jaffna peninsula in an exodus. They left behind all their belongings except what they could carry in their bare hands. Since the motorbike was in a garage, they had to leave that also behind. Unfortunately they had no bank accounts and all their savings were only the jewels the ladies were wearing. They lost everything – the boat, the engine, the motorbike and all what were left behind in the house. Even the house was subsequently washed away by the tsunami. A one time rich family was made as refugees within a matter of hours.

    They reached Nagarkovil by foot and lived in a temporary shed; what a contrast from a big stone built multi-roomed house. Ilam Puli and his sisters continued their education at the Nagarkovil Govt. Tamil Mixed School. Incidentally this is the school that was bombed by the SL Air force in 1995. Ilam Puli and his siblings escaped miraculously from that bomb attack.

    His father being a good fisherman got hold of a few logs of wood and made a Catamaran to continue fishing in the coasts of Thalayadi. But their problems propped up again, when the SLA commenced shelling the Vadamaradchchi East, which constituted Nagarkovil as well. All those from the nearby villages had to be moved out further into Vanni. They finally reached Mallavi.

    Again another shed housed all the five inmates of the family and with no fishing possibilities in the heartland of Mallavi they were left at the mercy of the handouts given to them by the International Non-Governmental Organisations (INGOs). But that was hardly sufficient to feed five mouths. The father was earlier shot and injured severely by the IPKF and one of his lungs and a kidney were affected. Hence he could not do any hard manual labour. Hence it was Ilam Puli’s mother who had to find work as a coolie in the neighbourhood.

    Mallavi is not a very prosperous area either. There were days when none of the members of the family had anything to eat. Yet they managed somehow and Ilam Puli with his siblings joined the Mallavi Maha Vidhyalayam. He and his younger sisters did exceptionally well at school. He attained such good results at the Advanced Level that admission to the university was open for him. But his love for his family was eating into him. He just could not leave them behind. Besides he could not even dream of a University Education due to the high costs involved.

    I was told that he kept telling his friends that the cause for their present plight was the Sri Lankan Government (GoSL). He felt sorry for the rest of the refugees. Their misery was hurting him. This antagonism made him decide to do what he thought was best and that was to join the LTTE and fight the enemy who was ruining the lives of several thousands of people. Without the knowledge of the parents he joined the LTTE in 1999.

    His exemplary service and meritorious qualities were straight away spotted by the higher-ups in the LTTE. He was swiftly absorbed into the medical division and taught medicine. Within four years he qualified as a medical practitioner and everyone addressed him as Doctor. He exemplified himself in his duties and exhibited his devotion and dedication to that noble profession. I was told that he did several surgical operations under very primitive circumstances and saved so many lives and limbs. Very senior doctors and surgeons admired his skill in surgery. He was a committed doctor and cared for the patients with love and devotion. He saved so many people that he made several friends. One Cholan (fictitious name), whose life was saved by Ilam Puli, became his thickest chum. It is Cholan who now takes good care of the family after the demise of Ilam Puli.

    Heart of hearts Ilam Puli’s intention was always to become a Black Tiger. So he made his application to the Leader Mr.V.Pirapakaran but got no response. He made another attempt after one year. He was called in by the Leader after a long wait of another six months and the Leader told him that he could not take him in simply because Ilam Puli was the only son in the family. It touched my heart when I heard of this from Kaviarasi. Mr.V.Pirapakaran who is characterised as a “Ruthless leader” in several quarters has such a soft and tender heart embedded in him.

    But Ilam Puli returned with a broken heart. He got a day’s leave from work and visited his parents. I heard that he was unusually very moody on that day. They did not know why. Normally when he comes home he used to sit beside his mother holding her hand and putting it intermittently on to his eyes. He also does not fail to put Kavi (as Kaviarasi is called by him) on the other side. And before he leaves he always touched the feet of his parents (Patha Namaskaram).He was so attached and devoted to the family.

    His mother told me that Ilam Puli once wrote to them to get him a small radio, which they did when they visited him next. But when they met him after three months he did not have the radio with him. His explanation was that he had given it away to another LTTE cadre from Batticaloa as he had no parents or any relations. This is a symbol for Richness in Poverty.

    Ilam Puli never gives up until he attains his goal. He kept applying until one day when he was finally taken as a Black Tiger. He told no body about this, which is typical of the Black Tigers. Neither his best friend nor any of the members of his family including his mother, whom he loved so much, knew of this development.

    Now looking back the motherly instinct tells her that it was several months before the attack that her son must have become so. This is because his usual visits that were once quite frequent gradually became rare and rare. Even when he visited them he kept a distance from his mother and his dear little sis Kavi. Apparently he was cutting himself off from the family in the interest of both the parties. Only he knew what was in store.

    Kavi told me last week that Ilam Puli once came with her photo where her picture was decorated with Red Roses. When she asked him for the reason he seems to have said “It is because you are a Rose to me.” She couldn’t control her emotions and was sobbing when she narrated this. I wouldn’t disagree with his statement as she is as pretty as a rose.

    It was more than six months since he visited his family last. It was only when the “News” was brought to them by Karikalan that they came to know the whole story. During his visits Ilam Puli seems to have asked his parents for a few things. One was that in case of his death they should treat those who bring the message of his death, lovingly and give them tea. The other was to decorate his coffin with Red Roses, which I trust, symbolized his sister Kavi. Another day Kavi told me that Ilam Puli use to call her as Kavi and not Kaviarasi. When she asked him as why he calls her so, he seems to have said “because you are a poem to me” and of course she broke down after that too.

    But I give credit to his mother. I did not see her cry even on the day of the funeral or on the 41st day ceremony. When I met her ten days back to prepare this article I asked her the reason for it. She said that she did cry a lot when the “News” was broken to her but within a matter of hours she pulled herself together, because she remembered what Ilam Puli had told her once. It was that none of them should cry over his demise.

    Kaviarasi despite the very trying circumstances she was in, yet she got a B and two Cs in the Advance Level exam. But poverty, the atrocities by the army and the fact that she is a sister to a Black Tiger prevented her from joining the University in Jaffna. What a pity.

    Both at the funeral and on the 41st day there were present several from the LTTE cadre who had been treated by Ilam Puli. They were full of praise for the care and dedication he devoted in treating the injured. Their words filled with emotions spoke of the great respect they have for him.

    Even though Ilam Puli was a qualified doctor yet the photo of the hut where his parents live, will portray the poverty of the parents. Their faces are intentionally not shown for obvious reasons. It is in this small hut that his parents live with their daughters. The elder daughter is married and has a child as well. In spite of his being a doctor he was not paid any remuneration, which is the practice with the LTTE, whose cadres are unpaid volunteers sacrificing their lives for the betterment of our community.

    When our brothers, sisters, sons and daughters are sacrificing their lives for us, the question that props in my mind is “what am I doing for them?”

  • The temporal and spiritual conquest of Tamils
    More than security concerns, the sentiments of Tamil Christians and their mistrust of Sri Lankan State seem to be the impelling force behind the decision of taking away Our Lady of Madu from her abode. Those who could look at how Kathirkaamam was confiscated from the predominance of Tamils and how the ancient temples behind the Tamil Saiva myth are inside ‘High Security Zones’, could understand the fear of Tamil Christians. The question is whether the International Community and India, which contribute to the military option, don’t understand or don’t want to understand the fact that if there is anything to be defeated militarily in Sri Lanka, it is the chauvinism of the Sri Lankan State.

    Our Lady of Madu has become a refugee in her own land, the Bishop of Mannaar said on Thursday.

    To a Tamil mind it reminds of the plight of the two chief deities of Tamil Saivism and Vaishnavism, who had to be carried away to escape vandalism at the hands of the Muslim rulers of medieval times.

    Arangkan (Sri Rangkanaathar of Sri Rangkam) had to flee to Thiruppathi, Saligramam and Chegnchi and Ampalavan (Nadaraja of Chithamparam) had to find sanctuary in Thiruvaaroor.

    It took a pan south Indian resistance movement to reinstate Arangkan and there rooted the birth of Vijayanagara Empire.

    The Tamil identity is secular. It doesn’t have any particular religion. Tamil served the medium for all the major religions of the world since very old times, which is a unique attribute to a language and the identity associated with it.

    To a Tamil mind, the self-respect of one’s freedom to follow any faith in his or her language and cultural context is what that matters.

    Tamil Christianity in Sri Lanka today is an integral part of Eezham Tamil identity.

    Contrary to the impression of many, Christianity hasn’t come into Tamil heritage with the advent of the Portuguese. It had come long before, almost at the time of the birth of Christianity in West Asia. It made an impact and survived in the old Tamil society, the descendents of which are the Syrian Christians of Malabar.

    When the Roman Catholic faith came along with the Portuguese to Asia, Mannaar, associated with the activities of St. Francis Xavier, was one of the first centres – a Tamil Christian centre, established through martyrdom.

    For centuries, the Tamil Christian heritage of Mannaar has evolved its own culture, literature, art forms etc.

    The origin of the icon of Our Lady of Madu, go back to the times of the advent of Catholic Christianity in Mannaar.

    In the 16th century, the image, which was then known as Our Lady of Good Health, was in a church at Maanthai.

    The persecution of Catholics by the Dutch in the 17th century made her worshippers to carry her deep into Vanni in the year 1670.

    She was kept at a place Marutha-madu (meaning, the deep tank in the locality of Maruthu / Terminalia arjuna trees), which at that time was in the border of the territories of the king of Kandy. The settlement soon received further Catholic refugees from Jaffna, fleeing Dutch persecutions.

    A lady among the latter group called Santa Lena (St Helena) built a humble church for the statue, which then became Our Lady of Madu.

    Over the centuries Madu became the most important pilgrim centre for Catholics, both Tamils and Sinhalese, throughout Sri Lanka.

    Many, who have not grasped the undercurrents, may wonder at the necessity to carry the image when the church is a pan Sri Lankan pilgrim centre. They may ask whether the Sri Lankan state is incapable of protecting it.

    Of course there is insecurity in wartime, especially when having a State with credentials of committing destruction to Christian and Hindu places of worship.

    But, more than the fear of destruction, the pricking question now it seems, is the attempt of Sinhala nation to confiscate pilgrim sites, and Sinhalicise them, to deal with myths counter to it.

    Most of the Sinhala Catholics, who make pilgrimage to Madu, were Tamils three or four generations ago. They come from the coastal areas of Northwestern and Western Provinces. All along the western coast, up to Colombo, there were traditional villages of Tamil Christians.

    Their Sinhalicisation was systematic, abetted by an ingenious scheme of disruption of communication. The closing down of the traditional coastal highway between Colombo and Mannaar / Jaffna, in the guise of the Wilpattu sanctuary, cut down the contiguity.

    What happened in the western coast is actually the forerunner to what happened and what is happening to the geographical contiguity of Tamils in the East.

    Through a state orchestrated process, involving competition for fishing grounds, the third generation not only became Sinhalese but also anti Tamil. The churches, which until recent times conducted masses in Tamil, switched over entirely to Sinhala, signifying a wedge between Tamil and Sinhala Christianity.

    The matter didn’t stop there. The Sinhala Buddhists have not accepted them fully, just because they speak Sinhala. Frictions are not uncommon in this part of the Island.

    More than security concerns, the sentiments of Tamil Christians and their mistrust of Sri Lankan State seem to be the impelling force behind the decision of taking away Our Lady of Madu from her abode. They trust the secularism of the LTTE better.

    Those who could look at how Kathirkaamam (Kataragama), once the most favoured pilgrim place for Tamil Saivites, has been confiscated from their predominance and how all the ancient temples behind the Tamil Saiva myth, such as Thiruketheesvaram (Maanthai), Thirukkoa’nesvaram (Trincomalee), Nakuleasvaram (Keerimalai) and Maaviddapuram are denied to devotees, being inside of ‘High Security Zones’, could understand the fear of Tamil Christians about Madu.

    The question is whether the International Community and India, which contribute to the military option of Sri Lanka, don’t understand or don’t want to understand the fact that if there is anything to be defeated militarily in Sri Lanka, it is the chauvinism of the Sri Lankan State.
Subscribe to Diaspora