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  • Allow us to speak': French Tamil diaspora demonstrates

    “Allow us to speak. We are not terrorists. What is happening in Sri Lanka is genocide”: These were the voices of the thousands of Eelam Tamil demonstrators who braved defying a government ban and gathered in Paris on October 22.

     

    Reflecting on his experience, Mr Somasundaram Sarveswaran, a participant said what is abominable that goes against all norms of civilization is silencing the civilian voice.

     

    "The Tamil national cause and the struggle against genocide of a people are not terrorist issues. There is a tendency today to look at everything related to Tamil as terrorism. This is why we earnestly look upon the leaders of Tamil Nadu to secure us our righteous global space as a priority, by recognizing the Tamil right to self-determination in the Island of Sri Lanka," he said.

     

    Mr. Sarveswaran made all his way, 400 km from Lyon to Paris, with his wife and two children to take part in the demonstration, without knowing that the French Police had declined permission to the demonstration.

     

    France, which has nearly 100,000 Tamils who respect the country's law, was silent against the killings of Eelam Tamils in their homeland, he charged.

     

    The French government was ignoring the investigation of 17 Tamil speaking humanitarian workers of the French NGO Action Contre La Faim (ACF), who were allegedly massacred by the Sri Lankan forces in Muthur in Trincomalee, he said.

     

    A parade was supposed to go on from Place de la Republic to Place de la Bastille Sunday the 19th of October from 3:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.

     

    This was organized by a member of the French political party Nouveau Centre in which several Tamils are active members.

     

    But in the last minute the French Police refused permission for the parade, without citing reasons for the refusal.

     

    The participants were waiting for this day to speak out to the French government, which holds the current Presidency of the European Union, about the ongoing genocide in Sri Lanka against the Tamil people: aerial bombings, artillery attacks against the civilians and widespread human rights abuses against Tamils all over the island of Sri Lanka.

     

    The refusal turned into deep frustration and anger that demonstrators decided to get to the streets, against being treated as 'terrorists' and demanded for their right to express.

     

    Thousands gathered at Place de la Bastille, a symbolic premises of France, where the French revolution started.

     

    People displayed placards saying 'We are not Terrorists ', 'Give us the right of expression', and 'There is a genocide going on against our Families in Sri Lanka.'

     

    The riot police cordoned off and blocked the demonstrators from moving. Everyone sat down and started shouting slogans.

     

    "There was another demonstration of a French trade union of teachers going on in the same venue at that time. Seeing our plight, they joined us shouting at the French police and even provided space for a representative of us to speak on their stage," a participant said.

  • French Tamils protest against killing by Sri Lanka State

    Hundreds of French Tamils in the east of France assembled in front of the European Parliment in Strasbourg between 3:30 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. on October 24, and demonstrated against the killing of Tamils, and aerial bombardment in the civilian settlements in the North East.

     

    The demonstrators carried pictures of civilians killed by aerial bombings and artillery attacks.

     

    The Mayor of Strasbourg, represented by the Deputy Mayor, Mr Eric Elkouby, showed his support for the demonstration by standing amidst the protesters under heavy rain.

     

    Condemning the silence of the International Community while genocide is being perpetrated against the Tamils, the protesters said the war against terror has turned victims into terrorists.

     

    The protesters urged the European Community to organize transport of food and medical supplies to Vanni residents, and to lead the world community in finding a negotiated political settlement for the Sri Lanka conflict.

     

    People carried placards and shouted slogans condemning the genocidal crimes of the Sri Lanka state against the Tamil people.

     

    Mr Robert Evans, President of the European Parliament's South Asia's group, accompanied by Mrs Jean Lambert, another member of this group, met the protesters and encouraged them in their effort to publicize the atrocities of the State, and added that they knew the grave situation in Vanni.

     

    They said that they were watching closely the developing situation in Sri Lanka.

  • The Spectre of Stalingrad

    The Battle of Stalingrad is considered the bloodiest battle with the largest battlefield casualties in the history of conventional warfare. Under a carefully worked out plan, the Soviet Army inveigled an advancing and over-confident Nazi Army into Stalingrad and then inflicted severe casualties on the Nazi Army. Many of those Nazi soldiers whom the Soviet Army could not kill were killed by "Gen.Winter". The entire Sixth Army of the Nazis was trapped by the Soviet troops with the help of "Gen.Winter" and destroyed.

    As the battle began on July 17, 1942, the Nazi Disinformation machine worked overtime to tell an unsuspecting German people that the fall of Stalingrad and the collapse of the Soviet Army were imminent. The German people waited with bated breath for the news of the fall. "Within two days", they were told. Two days became two weeks. Two weeks became two months. Two months became seven months. The battle ended disastrously for the Nazis on February 2, 1943. This marked the beginning of the end of the Nazi dreams in the Second World War.

    Is one seeing a mini version of Stalingrad in the battle for Kilinochchi, the current headquarters of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE)? It is difficult to say on the basis of the scanty information available from the battle front. From even this scanty information, two things are clear: Firstly, the Sri Lankan Army, which senses victory against the LTTE, has been doing well, but not as well as it claims to be. Secondly, the LTTE has been doing badly, but not as badly as projected to be by the disinformation machine of the Sri Lankan Army . The LTTE has shown that there is still a lot of fight left in it-- and a lot of intelligence and innovative thinking.

    But intelligence and innovative thinking alone cannot win wars without resources and the wherewithal. The LTTE is deficient on both counts. But it has shown itself to be as resilient as the Taliban in Afghanistan and as fiercely-motivated. In 2003, the Americans thought and claimed that they had finished the Taliban once and for all. Their facile assumptions proved to be wrong. The Taliban came back--as if it has risen from its much-proclaimed grave-- and has been moving forward relentlessly. Neither air strikes by the most powerful Air Force in the world nor heavy artillery strikes by the most powerful Army in the world have been able to stop its advance. Reluctantly, senior NATO military commanders in Afghanistasn have started admitting that the war against the Taliban is unwinnable and that one has to search for a political solution with neither victory nor defeat for either side. It has not only become unwinnable unless the Taliban commits some serious tactical mistakes, but is also likely to become increasingly unaffordable thanks to the financial and economic melt-down in the US and the rest of the world.

    The LTTE is calculating that if it can keep fighting against the Sri Lankan Army for some more months, a prolonged war against the LTTE could become as unwinnable and as unaffordable for the rulers of Sri Lanka as a prolonged war against the Taliban for the NATO powers. The rulers of Sri Lanka are living in a fool's paradise if they think that China and Pakistan would come to their rescue if the government of India stops assisting them under pressure from public opinion in Tamil Nadu. The Pakistani economy is on the verge of a collapse. Even the Chinese were reluctant to help out their time-tested friend as they call Pakistan, as President Asif Ali Zardari found to his dismay when he visited China recently. The Pakistan Army is reeling under one set-back after another inflicted on it by the Taliban.To think that the Pakistan Army would rush to Sri Lanka to spite India would be the height of stupidity.

    The Chinese, who are increasingly worried over the impact of the recession in the US on their manufacturing industries, which are heavily dependent on the US market, are hugging tight their foreign exchange holdings. They were reluctant to make any definitive commitment of help to Zardari. They are even showing a decline of interest in further developing the Gwadar port project. In a world beset with the most serious economic crisis it has known since the Great Depression of the 1930s, everybody, including China, is interested in saving every dollar and cent he can. Nobody wants a foreign adventure, which might drain off their depleting resources. If the Sri Lankan Army thinks that China would try to rush in if India stops helping, it is in for a disappointment.

    The LTTE is calculating that if it can keep fighting against the Sri Lankan Army for some more weeks, "Gen.Monsoon" and "Gen.Recession" could put an end to the pipedreams of the Sri Lankan Army of a definitive victory over the LTTE.

    Will its calculations prove right or will they be belied? Whatever happens, one thing seems likely-- there is going to be no definitive victory or no definitive defeat for either side in the on-going war.

     

    B. Raman is Additional Secretary (retired), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi. and, presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai. He is also associated with the Chennai Centre for China Studies

  • Time for some introspection

    The all-party meeting chaired by Tamil Nadu's (TN) Chief Minister M Karunanidhi on October 14 passed a resolution that MPs from the state would resign if the Centre failed to ensure a ceasefire in Sri Lanka (SL) in two weeks. Since current Indian perception of the ethnic conflict has been clouded by Rajiv Gandhi's assassination, it is instructive to review India's past involvement in Sri Lanka and future options.

     

    The goal of India's SL policy since the 1950s was to prevent any hostile power getting a foothold in the neighbourhood. So, over the years, India pursued various policies - some of them at the expense of Sri Lankan Tamil interests - to placate the Sinhalese leadership. Even India's support to Tamil militant groups in the 1980s angered the Sinh-alese leadership. India's current policy towards the ethnic conflict is influenced by the fear that an independent Tamil Eelam will rekindle secessionist tendencies in TN. How-ever, this view is incorrect.

     

    India's policy since 1991 has sought the military defeat of the LTTE for the latter's role in Rajiv Gandhi's assassination and the Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF) debacle. From the beginning, however, India's SL policy failed to appreciate the historical roots of the ethnic conflict, which can be traced back to the wars between the Tamil and Sinhala kingdoms during the past several centuries. The LTTE's conduct also has its share of problems. It has put an entire generation of Tamils through immense hardship. This bitter history makes rapprochement between the Sinhalese and Tamils almost impossible. Given these ground realities in Sri Lanka, what are India's options?

     

    It is clear that India cannot afford to remain fixated on its past bitterness with the LTTE while crafting its response to the ethnic conflict. The current policy stagnation, besides exacerbating the difficulties of Sri Lankan Tamils, can also be detrimental to India's security. During the Cold War, there was some anxiety in India as Sri Lanka began building a closer relationship with the US. Such concerns are irrelevant now in the light of closer defence cooperation between the US and India. However, there is another potential threat to India's southern frontiers: China is already playing a major role in building ports and potential naval bases in some Indian Ocean littoral states.

     

    India formally extracted concessions from SL through the 1987 peace accord - currently in tatters - that Colombo will not allow any external powers in a way detrimental to Indian interests. However, Lanka has been building parallel defence cooperation tracks with China and Pakistan and the island has been brimming with Chinese and Pakistani intelligence operatives. Yet, India has helped SL to maintain its territorial integrity. This could prove to be costly. India cannot allow this situation to persist while putting pressure on the LTTE and providing military assistance to SL. A credible case could be built that an independent Tamil Eelam will be - for ethnic, linguistic, and religious reasons - friendlier towards India than the Sinhalese dispensation in Colombo.

     

    Although the LTTE is banned in some countries there is also a realisation that any solution ignoring the militant outfit will not be viable. India should review its current policy and exert pressure on SL to seek a political solution for the ethnic conflict. Some argue that India's current free trade agreement with SL will buy more influence among the Sinhalese leadership.

     

    Unless India is able to lock SL in a broad bilateral security relationship, their leadership will have no qualms about allowing China or Pakistan to get a foothold. This is the real danger of India's current policy facilitating the military defeat of the LTTE. If India were to take a hard-nosed view of its interests, a subtle shift in its position on the LTTE will go a long way in safeguarding its strategic interests in the region besides securing the interests of ethnic Tamils in the island. The all-party resolution should provide the UPA an opportunity to do some introspection about its Sri Lanka policy.

     

    TS Gopi Rethinaraj teaches at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore. This is a modified version of an op-ed piece that appeared in the April 2008 issue of Pragati: The Indian National Interest Review

  • Where the different political parties in Tamil Nadu stand on the Tamil national question?

    Marumalarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (MDMK)

     

    MDMK and its leader Vaiko support the creation of independent Tamil Eelam and see this as the only solution to long drawn civil war in Sri Lanka.

     

    In his latest speech Vaiko declared he was willing to take up arms and fight for the Eelam Tamils.

     

    Paataali Makkal Katchi (PMK)

     

    PMK and its founder S. Ramadoss are of the view that formation of an independent Tamil Eelam in the island of Sri Lanka with the support of India is the only solution to the over five decade old conflict.

    Ramadoss in a recent interview said :“This will definitely happen in the near future and Tamil Eelam will come into existence,”

     

    Viduthalai Chiruththaikal Katchi (VCK)

     

    VCK supports the formation of an independent Tamil Eelam.

     

    Following a visit to Jaffna, the leader of VCK, Thol. Thirumaalavan said: "I want a Tamil Government...I want a Tamil country... That country I dream of is coming up in Sri Lanka's Jaffna. I went there to salute that land.."

     

     

    Communist Party of India (CPI)

     

    CPI is of the view that the Indian federal model is insufficient to Sri Lanka. It should be higher than that, perhaps a confederation having constitutional guarantees, preventing one unit militarily interfering with the other.

     

    All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam  (AIADMK)

     

    AIADMK, headed by former Chief Minister Jayalalithaa Jayaram recently released a statement defining the party position on Eelam issue. The statement specified AIDMK's policy on Eelam Tamils in four points:

     

    Not Secondary Citizens: Eelam Tamils have equal rights as all other citizens of Sri Lanka. They are not secondary to anybody.

     

    Equal Rights: We completely support the prolonged struggle of the Sri Lankan Tamils seeking equality before law and equal opportunities in education and employment.

     

    Right to Self-Determination: We totally recognize their righteous struggle seeking the Right of Self-Determination.

     

    Self-Governance within United Sri Lanka: We understand and accept the demand of the Tamils that they shall create a Tamil Homeland where they have the power of self-governance, under the framework of a Sri Lankan Constitution.

  • Tamilnadu in show of solidarity

    As the fighting escalated in Sri Lanka, the news of innocent Tamils civilians being killed and maimed by indiscriminate aerial and artillery bombardment by Sri Lankan forces and the revelation that Indian radar operators were assisting Sri Lankan military brought the plight of Eelam Tamils to the boil in Tamil Nadu in India, leading to mass agitations by political parties, students, lawyers, trade unions and film makers.

     

    Tamil Nadu political parties including Paataali Makkal Katchi (PMK), Marumalarchchi Dravida Munntra Kazhagam (MDMK),  Viduthalai Chiruththaigal Katchi (VCK) and Tamil National Movement (TNM), sympathetic to the suffering of Eelam Tamils, have been protesting against the killing of innocent Tamils in Sri Lanka since Rajapakse administration returned the island to full scale war in 2007.

     

    However the Eelam issue came to the forefront of the political scene in Tamil Nadu when a protest fast organised by the Communist Party of India for October 2 received the backing of major political parties including the opposition All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK).

     

    Even though AIADMK did not participate in the fast, the General Secretary of the party Jayalalitha Jayaram released a statement recognising the Eelam Tamils right to self determination and Traditional Homeland and demanded the Indian government put an immediate stoppage of all military aid to the neighbouring island.

     

    The ruling Dravida Munnetra Kazhgama (DMK) then organised a mass public meeting on Sunday, October 6. This followed by tens of thousands of telegrams being sent to New Delhi after the DMK  leader and Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu urged the people of Tamil Nadu to send telegrams to Indian Premier Manmohan Singh with the message “intervene immediately and stop genocide of Tamils in Sri Lanka”

     

    On Tuesday October 14, the Tamil Nadu government convened an All Party Meeting to discuss the plight of the Eelam Tamils. For the first time an official government communiqué in Tamil Nadu used the word ‘Eelam’.

     

    Although, Bharathiya Janatha Party (BJP), AIADMK and MDMK boycotted the meeting most parties including the Tamil Nadu chapter of the ruling Congress attended.

     

    In a surprise move the All Party Meeting announced a resolution with four key demands and added that in the event of the Union government not meeting the demands within 14 days, the 40 Members of Parliament (MPs) from Tamil Nadu and Pondicherry would quit the Union government.

     

    The support of the 40 Tamil Nadu MPs is crucial for the survival of the Congress government in New Delhi.

     

    The protests gained further momentum after the All Party Meeting, with political parties blockading roads and railways, students boycotting classes, trade unions observing general shut downs and lawyers boycotting courts across the state.

     

    The movie industry also joined in with over 2000 artists including producers, directors and technicians taking part in a mass rally in Raameswaram, on Sunday October 19, and actor and actresses announcing a protest fast on November 1.

     

    All the while New Delhi restricted itself to making statements expressing concern at the humanitarian situation in Sri Lanka and not acting on the key demands.

     

    Finally, in a show of strength, the DMK organised a human chain protest with the backing of many political parties and community organisations, in which tens of thousands of people took part forming a staggering 60 kilometres long queue.

     

    LTTE expresses gratitude

     

    As support poured in from Tamil Nadu, on Wednesday, 08 October, the Liberation Tigers of the head of the political wing of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), B Nadesan released a statement Expressing gratitude on behalf of the Eelam Tamils for the solidarity shown by the leaders and the masses of south Indian state.

     

    Nadesan, in his statement, said the Eelam Tamils, who are facing an onslaught by the indiscriminate shelling and bombardment by the Sri Lankan forces, are inspired by the expression of solidarity from Tamil Nadu.

    He described the plight of thousands of Tamils uprooted from their homes and villages and forced to seek refuge in the open due to the "genocidal war".

    "All the Sinhala forces and parties were giving support to the war being waged by the Rajapakse government with a wrong assumption that even Tamil Nadu would not come forward to voice for Eelam Tamils," Nadesan added.

     

    Countries opposed to India were militarily assisting the Sinhala state and some countries

    of the world are providing financial support, the LTTE statement charged. "Making use of the inter-state diplomatic relations, the Sinhala state has focused its efforts to crush the just freedom struggle of the Eelam Tamils."

    The statement concluded that Eelam Tamils hoped that the solidarity extended by all the leaders of Tamil Nadu would transform into concrete political action.

     

    In addition to the LTTE, Tamil parliamentarians belonging to the Tamil National Alliance, community organisations based in Vanni and numerous Diaspora organizations expressed their gratitude to the Tamil Nadu leaders and people for support.

     

    Reluctant New Delhi

     

    With protests continuing to gain momentum and the political parties in Tamil Nadu deciding to withdraw their MPs from the Union government if their four point demand is not met by October 28, the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) led by Congress was under pressure to show it cared about the wellbeing of Eelam Tamils.

     

    The UPA Government was being forced to choose between a coalition partner and a neighbour. 14 DMK MPs including seven Union Ministers submitted their symbolic resignation to DMK chief Karunanidhi in Chennai on October 17.

     

    Quitting of Tamil Nadu and Pondicherry MPS from the UPA would precipitate a political crisis in New Delhi leading to the collapse of the central government and fresh elections.

     

    So, when DMK joined in the protests the Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh called for steps to protect an estimated 220,000 civilians trapped by the fighting in the northern part of the island.

    On Saturday October 11, according to an official spokesman in New Delhi, Singh called up Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse and ‘expressed his deep concern about the deteriorating humanitarian situation in the north of Sri Lanka, especially on the plight of the civilians caught in the hostilities’.

    Foreign Secretary Shiv Shanker Menon also had a tough message for Colombo.

     

    "We see it has a humanitarian crises which effects civilian population and it really needs to be addressed but there is a larger issue of settling the conflicts which requires a political settlement and it cannot be settled militarily," Memon said on October 14.

     

    Whilst the Congress led government in New Delhi released statements and made some noise, it did not act on any of the demands put forward by the Tamil Nadu parties.

     

    Infact the External Affairs Minister, Pranb Mukherjee, defended India’s policy of training Sri Lankan troops and arming the island nation and made it clear that India’s geopolitical interests are of more importance in comparison to the well being of Tamils.

     

    Responding to clarifications sought by the members in the Rajya Sabha on India's stand on the current crisis in Sri Lanka, External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee said security cooperation with Colombo, including training of Lankan forces by India, was "necessary".

     

    “We have a very comprehensive relationship with Sri Lanka. In our anxiety to protect the civilians, we should not forget the strategic importance of this island to India's interests,” he said in response to questions raised by a few members over the rationale of India continuing its military cooperation with Colombo in view of the plight of ethnic Tamils in that country and also incidents of firing on Indian fishermen entering Sri Lankan waters by mistake.

     

    Sri Lankan tactics

     

    Sri Lanka tried to subdue the pressure resulting the political upheaval in Tamil Nadu by taking number of steps.

     

    Firstly it brushed off the Tamil Nadu protests as non events and warned Tamil Nadu to mind its own business.

     

    Indirectly targeting Tamil Nadu and interestingly referring to the war effort s as ‘development activities’, Basil Rajapakse, younger brother and  senior advisor to President Mahinda Rajapaksa charged that `some foreign elements` were trying to disrupt the ongoing development activities in Sri Lanka and added that the island nation has `got maximum support from India to crush` the Tamil Tigers.

     

    Meanwhile, a leading Sri Lankan daily has advised Indian leaders to keep off the Tamil refugees in Sri Lanka and look after the poor in their own country.

    A front page editorial in The Island daily on Monday pointed out that the Global Hunger Index (GHI) had found that 200 million of India’s 1.2 billion people went hungry and the food shortage in Madhya Pradesh was comparable with Ethiopia and Chad.

    The survey had further said that three-quarters of Indians were living on 30 cents a day. “Charity, Chief Minister Karunanidhi should be told, begins at home!”

    “Terrorism thrives on well orchestrated false propaganda if not diabolical lies. The lunatic fringe in Tamil Nadu is accusing Sri Lanka of committing genocide.


    Then whilst boasting that it had the maximum support of New Delhi, to put pressure on India it sent a defence delegation to Pakistan.

     

    “The government, which has destroyed the LTTE, is getting adequate support from our foreign friends. Here, the support from our neighbour is very vital. India has been always with us. We got maximum support from India to crush the LTTE,” said Basil Rajapakse.

     

    A Sri Lankan defence delegation led by Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa is scheduled to embark on a five-day official visit to Pakistan today.

     

    According to media reports in Pakistan, during its stay in Pakistan the delegation will hold meetings with Defence Secretary Kamran Rasool, Defence Secretary Production Lt. General Shahid Siddiq Tirmizey and other senior Pakistani military and defence officials.

     

    The delegation will also visit Pakistan’s Defence Industry with the hope of expanding bilateral cooperation between the two countries, the Pakistan media reported.

     

    Finally, it continued with its genocidal offensive.

  • Wrong Premise

    Despite the Sri Lankan government’s insistence it will soon destroy the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), its military onslaught has become mired in a war of attrition in the muddy fields of Vanni. Amid the tub-thumping, the Sri Lanka Army (SLA) has launched another recruitment drive, is arresting and press-ganging military deserters back into service and has stopped issuing even the sanitised casualty figures it has been issuing. Tabled spending on the war next year is set to outstrip 2008 by a significant margin. Despite its assurances of imminent victory, Colombo is girding for protracted war.

     

    Little wonder then that even the staunchest backers of Colombo’s brutal war in the Tamil homeland are wavering. This week the United States’ Ambassador, Robert O’ Blake, insisted that a military solution was not possible. This does not mean, contrary to Mr. Blake’s suggestions, that the US and other allies of the Sinhala supremacist regime would not prefer a military solution. This week the Ambassador, speaking in the now simmering Indian state of Tamil Nadu, urged President Mahinda Rajapakse – yet again - to put forward a ‘political solution’.

     

    That “there is no military solution, only a political solution” is a mantra long chanted by the West, even as it armed, financed and trained the Sinhala state to militarily crush Tamil aspirations for self-rule. The duplicity was apparent in Mr. Blake’s elaboration of this position last week. Colombo should put forward a political solution, he said, because this would help defeat the LTTE. Thus a ‘solution’ need not be offered because this is the right and proper thing to do by the long-suffering and persecuted Tamils, but because it would contribute to military victory over the Tigers.

     

    Of course this logic comes straight out of the ‘hearts and minds’ section of Western counter-insurgency theory. What is incredible is that despite the evidence all around him of stark ethnic polarisation, of Sinhala hubris and racism, of the impossibility now of a single ‘people’ on the island, the US thinks this is a viable approach, that somehow the latest bunch of Sinhala supremacists running the Sri Lankan state are going to win the support of the Tamil people.

     

    The point, as we argued recently, is that the US et al think that as an under-developed and unsophisticated community, what the Tamils actually want, despite using language like ‘national liberation’ and ‘self-rule’, is just economic opportunity and the possibility of using their own language. Which is why we often hear Colombo governments being urged to implement ‘language rights’ and undertake ‘development’ in the Northeast as if these have any bearing on the fundamental contradictions in the island’s politics.

     

    The theories of ‘internal conflict’ in the ‘developing’ world – including ‘poverty causes conflict’, ‘greed over grievance’, and so on – are incapable of taking seriously the Tamils’ long-asserted argument that we are an oppressed people seeking self-rule. But these bankrupt theories have underpinned Western policy towards places like Sri Lanka. Colombo has – without much difficulty – exploited this contempt for ‘Third World’ peoples to secure Western involvement in its onslaught against the Tamils. In the post Cold War era, Sinhala governments have exploited the logics of ‘fighting terrorism’, ‘defending democracy’, ‘promoting pluralism’, and so on whilst at the same time continuing a slow genocide, starving, bombing, abducting and murdering the island’s Tamils.

     

    In the past two years, amid growing confidence that the LTTE was being defeated, both the Sinhalese and the international community have dropped their pretence. For example, the All Party Representative Committee (APRC) served as a figleaf for both the Sinhalese and the international community to pretend a political solution was valuable while the murderous military campaign against the Tamils was pressed home, but when the offensive on Vanni began this time last year, even this was dropped.

     

    Ironically, it is precisely the West’s undisguised contempt for Tamils, their political aspirations and their suffering under the Sinhala jackboot that has done most to consolidate Tamil support for the LTTE and fuelled the demands for Eelam. On what basis, by the way, do the US et al expect the Tamils to live in Sri Lanka? On the terms set out by the Army chief and Sinhala ideologues – i.e. as interlopers who may remain provided they know their subordinate place? In the past three years the Tamils have been both internationally isolated and targeted by the full might of the Sinhala state as never before. It is as a consequence of these dynamics that Tamils are uniting behind their liberation struggle as never before. The present conflict is thus turning into an orthodox race war. On the one side is the Sinhala state, deploying a Sinhala Army and supported by the Sinhala people. On the other are the Tamils and the LTTE.

     

    It is this grim reality that has resulted in such vigorous agitation in Tamil Nadu. Various analyses have sought to explain the events in South India in terms of pre-election strategies and a lack of serious local issues for political contestation, for example, or even as ‘resurgence’ in India of buried Tamil ethno-nationalism (as those fluent in the conceptual terminology of Western liberalism have rushed to term it). What is clear is that a huge number of people in Tamil Nadu are genuinely moved by the suffering the Eelam Tamils are enduring at the hands of the Sinhala state and its international allies. The more colourful of Tamil Nadu’s politicos are even suggesting that the Eelam issue is revealing a contradiction between ‘Tamil’ and ‘Indian’ identities, given Delhi’s support for the Sinhalese.

     

    The point here is that even as our enemies step up their efforts to annihilate us, the Eelam Tamils’ liberation struggle is drawing new support, both moral and tangible, from Tamils around the world (India is not the only country where the Eelam cause is vigorously being taken up). The ‘with us or against us’ gauntlet of the Global War on Terror has fed neatly into the Sinhala hegemonic project, but now has produced a specific irrevocable dynamic of racial polarisation in Sri Lanka. Tamils and Sinhalese can no more be expected to live peaceably together than the various peoples of the Balkans. This is not about ancient hatreds – despite the rhetoric of the supremacists running Sri Lanka (and the present lot are no different to those in 1956, 1972, 1978, 1983 and 1995) – but the clear and present danger to the wellbeing and safety of the Tamil people posed by the Sinhalese.

     

    Mr. Blake’s call last week for the Rajapakse regime to come up with a solution is so disconnected from the island’s lived reality that it says less about Colombo’s intransigence than the international community’s apathy in the face of the humanitarian crisis that has impelled the Diaspora and Tamil Nadu to such outrage. As such, Mr. Blake’s comments couldn’t have come at a better time for the LTTE.

  • Return of Sri Lanka's death squads

    A group calling itself the Mahason Battalion has sent threats to the registrars of Colombo courts and a number of human rights lawyers, saying anyone who represents ‘terrorists’ or ‘suspected terrorists’ in court will face death.

     

    If someone in Sri Lanka says, “I will kill you," it should not be taken lightly. Many who have received such threats lie in their graves – and there are thousands. It is easy to make such threats, and it is also easy to carry them out.

     

    Addressed “to those who represent the terrorists today,” the document delivered to the courts said, in part: “The innocent people of our motherland have been subject to the killing sprees of terrorists for over three decades … But there is no one today to speak for the human rights of these innocent people.

     

    “However, we know that there are many traitors who voice their concerns for the human rights of the evil terrorists and those who assist them in carrying out these indiscriminate killings.”

     

    It warned, “In the future, all those who represent the interests of the terrorists will be subject to the same fate that these terrorists mete out to our innocent people.”

     

    “Mahasona” is a Sinhala word meaning “the ghost that brings death.” The majority of those charged under terrorism laws are Tamils suspected of belonging to or supporting the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.

     

    This type of threat was widely delivered, and carried out, in the 1980s, which became known as the “period of terror.”

     

    Around 30,000 people disappeared during this time according to official estimates, most of them from the south.

     

    At that time groups associated with the state acted under a variety of names to issue and execute death threats.

     

    One well-known group at the time was the “Black Cats.”

     

    Sri Lanka has experienced extremely sophisticated death-squad operations.

     

    During the period of terror, a list of persons to be killed would be circulated to several groups operating in secrecy.

     

    This meant that even if one group found a reason not to assassinate a person on the death list, another group operating independently would carry it out.

     

    Once on the list, a person had little chance of escape.

     

    The mushrooming of death squads meant there was little chance of identifying the assassins.

     

    This virtually prevented investigations. “Unidentified persons” were always blamed for the killings.

     

    Another sinister aspect of the situation was that, once a state agency got involved with death squads, criminal gangs imitated their methods, giving the appearance that their deeds were state-sponsored.

     

     Some carried out the instructions of those seeking personal revenge, some were used to abduct people for ransom, some simply injured or killed business competitors.

     

    Another unique aspect of Sri Lanka’s experience with death squads and extrajudicial killings has been that large numbers of innocent persons have been killed in order to ensure that wanted persons did not escape.

     

    For example, the usual estimate of members and associates belonging to the group called the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna, or People's Liberation Front, in 1971 was around 2,000.

     

    However, the number killed in a purge of this group is estimated at around 15,000 – 750 percent more than the estimated number of unwanted persons.

     

    In the late 1980s this was exceeded when 30,000 people were forcibly “disappeared.” The deputy minister of defense who masterminded the operation later claimed that police officers acted excessively due to over enthusiasm.

     

    A Dutch video journalist who reported on the killings in the late 1980s titled his presentation “Sri LankaMurder Land.”

     

    There have been no estimates of the number of people killed in this manner in the north and the east in the last 30 years. But the south is now witnessing a return to the period of terror.

     

    As for the north and east, it has always been a period of terror in which the forces of the state, the LTTE and others have made no secret of eliminating their opponents.

     

    The following is an extract from the Final Report of the Commission of Inquiry into Involuntary Removal or Disappearance of Persons in the Western, Southern and Sabaragamuwa Provinces, made in September 2007.

     

    It reminds us that Sri Lanka has done nothing to change its behavior regarding death squads.

     

    “We are mindful that our recommendations should have relevance and be meaningful to citizens living in all parts of Sri Lanka. Priority must be given at all times to the avoidance of situations of disappearances arising.

     

    “The security forces and the police are necessary adjuncts of a state. They are required for the protection of the state and the protection of the citizens of the state. The average citizen looks to them for protection.

     

    “The tragedy of Sri Lanka lies in the distortion of relationships between the citizens and the security forces, including the police, which has resulted from the acts of both politicians and subversives.”

     

     

    Basil Fernando is director of the Asian Human Rights Commission based in Hong Kong. He is a Sri Lankan lawyer who has also been a senior U.N. human rights officer in Cambodia. He has published several books and written extensively on human rights issues in Asia.

  • Time for Colombo to defeat LTTE with political solution: U.S. Ambassador to Sri Lanka

    "The U.S. view is that the [Sri Lankan] government could further isolate and weaken the LTTE if it articulates now its vision for a political solution," said U.S. Ambassador to Sri Lanka Robert Blake while addressing an interactive session at the University of Madras on Friday, The Hindu reported.

     

    While ruling out the military option, Mr. Blake has alluded that the U.S. position was to militarily weaken the LTTE to defeat it politically.

     

    The United States has been a key player of the Co-Chairs for the Sri Lankan process, which has been managed by the facilitation of Norway till Sri Lanka unilaterally withdrew from the ceasefire.

     

    Commenting on the U.S. Ambassador's views, Tamil National Alliance MP and the leader of the Tamil Eelam Liberation Organisation (TELO) Selvam Adaikkalanathan told TamilNet Saturday that the U.S. policy was "fundementally flawed" on three aspects.

     

    First, the United States has approached one of the major national questions of the contemporary world as an 'LTTE-centric problem' to be defeated. Secondly, it has failed to grasp the reality of half a century old post-colonial lessons in Sri Lanka that Colombo would never be prepared to offer a viable solution to a weakened Tamil side, and thirdly, it contributed to weakening the diplomatic balance of power by isolating the LTTE and by hinting Sri Lanka and other countries to adopt a military solution.

     

    "Approaching national questions solely on the basis of geo-poltical interests and overlooking crucial ideological and humanitarian quests of peoples is not a healthy approach to powers that seek to guide the world," Mr. Adaikkalanathan said.

     

    "The United States is reaping the economic results of its global policies."

     

    The U.S. Ambassador has observed in Chennai that the U.S. ban on the LTTE, which was followed by several other countries, has cut the flow of money and weapons to the Tigers adding that the "result of which could be seen in their recent military defeats."

     

    Refusing to comment on the rising voice in Tamil Nadu for Indian pressure on Sri Lanka, the U.S. Ambassador has said India and the United States could use their "strategic partnership to good effect in Sri Lanka," The Hindu reported.

     

    "The greatest failure of the last 25 years has been the failure of the main Sinhalese parties to reach agreement," the paper quoted Mr. Blake as saying.

     

    The Hindu report summarised the U.S. view expressed by Mr. Blake in following words: "Moving forward on a political solution would have three-fold benefits - to reassure 200,000 refugees in the Vanni region that they can move south and aspire to a better future; to disprove the LTTE's claim of being the sole representative of Sri Lanka's Tamils; and to persuade Tamils overseas to stop funding the LTTE."

     

    However, the U.S. Ambassador, who admitted that his government earlier helped the Sri Lankan military, said the United States has recently effected a complete freeze on all military assistance to Sri Lanka.

  • It’s the Tamil Economy, Stupid

    Following World War II, economic competition is increasingly viewed as the preferred alternative to war.  For example, Japan and Germany sought military dominance in the mid-forties, but a demilitarised post-war Japan and Germany achieved global dominance through trade.

     

    Today, India and China are aggressive, current contenders for global dominance. They expect to achieve this through trade, not war.  

     

    The debate on economic competition between nations focuses centres on fair and unfair competition. It is unfair competition to protect local markets from foreign manufactured goods. But it is “fair competition” for governments to subsidise local industries that have “strategic significance”: defence or nuclear energy for example.

     

    Genocide is the ultimate form of unfair competition: as Black July 1983 illustrates. In fact, each stage of the slow genocide of the Tamil people in Sri Lanka has also been an economic project.

     

    Eliminating the Tamil industrial base

     

    The Economist of August 6th 2003 summarised the genocide of Black July 1983 thus: “Two weeks ago Tamils owned 80% of the retail trade and 60% of the wholesale trade in the capital Colombo. Today that trade is gone. Food shortages and inflated prices are one result. The Tamil industrial base, built up over generations, is no more.”

     

    To start with, the 6th, 20th August 1983 editions of the Economist are worth reading in full for the paper’s comprehensive grasp of the economic motivation of the Black July Pogrom of 1983.

     

    In an article entitled “The wages of envy”, the Economist said: “[Cambridge-educated finance minister] Mr Ronnie de Mel is too sophisticated to use the term on the tip of many Sinhalese tongues these days – the need for a ‘final solution’ to the Tamil problem. But, even for him, the ‘only solution’ is to ‘restore the rights of the Singalese majority’. Restoring Singalese rights is a code phrase for dislodging the Tamils from their disproportionate influence over large sectors of the Sri Lankan economy. This is what the Singalese mobs set out to do when they put their torches to thousands of carefully targeted Tamil factories and shops.

     

    “Now the government is about to advance this process by expropriating all damaged properties. Many Tamils will assist them by leaving the country. The result will be decisive shift in the balance of economic power in Sri Lanka from Tamils to Singalese.

     

    “The stated aim of the government’s takeover of riot-ravaged homes and businesses is to prevent distress sales and to promote an orderly reconstruction programme. ..In theory, former owners will be free to buy back government shares in time. But ministers do not disguise their redistributive intentions. Many are talking about following Malaysia’s example of writing preferences for the majority community into commercial law.

    “The trade minister has already reorganized rice wholesaling to break the Tamil grip. ‘It is no longer in my interest to allow one community to dominate the wholesale trade in any commodity’, insists Mr Lalith Athulathmudali, who doubles as a government spokesman on Tamil questions...

     

    “The state stake in Sri Lanka’s injured industries is meant to be temporary. But, if the alternative is returning economic control to the Tamils, the government may decide to hold on. ..

     

    “The losses are still being added up in the statistical department of the central bank, which has sent out teams of accountants and surveyors to do an on-site census of destruction. The preliminary estimate of $150m worth of damage to commercial and residential property – equivalent to about 4% of Sri Lanka’s GNP – is almost certainly too low, because it is based on book value; replacement costs might be five to 10 times higher. It also excludes the value of lost stocks, lost output and lost export orders…”

    There is considerable evidence that the genocide of 1983 was committed with the specific intent of acquiring Tamil businesses and private property: often by murdering the owners and their families.

     

    It is now widely accepted that the 1983 pogrom was state orchestrated and government ministers were complicit.

     

    The parallels to the Jewish Holocost are unmistakeable: it was firstly Jewish economic success that provoked Nazi envy in pre-war Germany.

     

    Nazi documents and memos following Kristallnacht - the Nazi pogrom where almost 7,500 Jewish businesses were destroyed - evidence the economic nature of the issue.

     

    Robert Conot, Justice at Nuremberg, provides a transcript of Goering addressing a high-level Nazi meeting the days immediately following Kristallnacht.

     

    Goering concludes “I implore competent agencies to take all measures for the elimination of the Jew from the German economy.”

     

    As to the elimination of the Tamils from Sri Lankan economy, the 1983 pogrom, spectacularly achieved its objective. The observations of the Economist in 1983 remain true today: “The Tamil industrial base, built over generations, is no more”, having never recovered from 1983.

     

    Impact of ‘The Open Economy’

     

    In a previous article we cited Michael Mann’s hypothesis that “murderous ethnic cleansing, which in extreme forms can become genocidal, is the “dark side of democracy”.  

     

    Similarly, an open, egalitarian competitive economy leads to genocide when a minority ethnic group is disproportionately economically successful and when the state is fundamentally racist.

     

    In a seminal article in 1984, Newton Gunesinghe argued that the open economy was a key factor in the July 1983 genocide.

     

    Gunesinghe argued that in the period before 1977, the socialist Sri Lankan government had favoured heavy state regulation and intervention: licenses were needed for most activities, including exports and imports. Government-owned cooperative stores displaced small retailers. The economy was fuelled by Government infrastructure spending.

     

    Tamil entrepreneurs found it impossible to compete since licenses and supply contracts to large government monopolies were awarded via political patronage to affiliates of the major Sinhala Parties. Small Tamil business owners lost out to their Sinhala counterparts.

     

    But with the introduction of Jeyawardene’s open economic policies in 1977 and globalisation, an (unintended) consequence was a levelling out of the ethnic playing field. Sinhala businesses built on political patronage could no longer compete effectively. Middle level businesses were adversely impacted by economies of scale and markets open to international competition.

     

    In contrast to many Sinhalese businesses, Tamil entrepreneurs were better equipped for open economic conditions having faced an adverse state for many years. The larger industrial groups – where Tamil ownership was disproportionately well-represented – were quick to form foreign joint ventures and to compete internationally on price and quality.

     

    Both Gunesinghe and Richardson attempt to explain why anti-Tamil violence spiked many-fold in the golden period of Sri Lanka’s market economy, during the markedly pro-globalisation, capitalist, market-driven government of President Jeyawardene.

     

    The short reason was the ethnic backlash against Tamil prosperity: the Economist’s “wages of envy”. The 1983 Genocide was the ultimate form of unfair competition.

     

    Reparation to Tamils unaffordable

     

    It follows that the prosperity of the present Sri Lankan economy is built on the proceeds of genocide.

     

    Successive Sinhala governments have entrenched the reversal of relative Sinhala-Tamil economic power on the island. And they have used military force to achieve this.

     

    For while Sri Lanka was in recent years South Asia’s wealthiest country on a per capita basis, there are enormous regional differences. The Sinhala Western province near the capital Colombo has almost four times the per capita annual income ($2118) of the Tamil North ($610) according to the World.

     

    Over 50% of people live below the poverty level in the Northern region.

     

    Over a third of all Tamils in Sri Lanka have no sustainable livelihood, living in camps as internal refugees, many having held this status for decades.

     

    Sinhala human rights activists in the capital Colombo claim that Sri Lanka has moved beyond the racism of 1983. They cite that 21 years later the government of Sri Lanka had apologised to the Tamil victims of 1983 – and offered 937 victims 600 pounds (sterling) in compensation.

     

    It follows that not even one Sinhala human rights activist in Sri Lanka has acknowledged the requirement for just reparation in line with commercial law. Instead they paper over the cracks to claim their country has “moved on”. It hasn’t.

     

    For the Sinhala nation simply cannot afford to make the commercial reparation that is owed.

     

    Let us think about what this means for the Black July 1983 anti-Tamil pogrom alone. Commercial reparation would be, for example, include reparation for the 80% of Colombo’s retail trade and 60% of its commercial trade destroyed in 1983. One would use well understood business valuation principles – net present value (NPV) in 1983 of all future  earnings, which NPV is then  projected forward to today using realised growth rates (since we know with hindsight the growth rate between 1983 and today). This would still not account for the fact that had the original owners retained control and developed their already considerable entrepreneurial and management skills, greater growth may have been achieved.

     

    Having engineered the appropriation of enormous quantities of Tamil assets, the difficulty for the Sinhala Nation is how to deal with the consequences.

     

    Even if the Sinhala nation could afford reparation, the truth is they do not wish it. For the Sinhalese do not accept that commercial reparation is required for the genocide in 1983 and since.

     

    Even the most liberal Colombo-based peace activists remain content to deal in the realm of rhetoric on 1983: art exhibitions, letters in state-owned media, inadequately couched phrases of regret by professional human rights spokes people.

     

    No one gets down to the bottom line and talks about money.

     

    Breach of contract with Tamil taxpayers

     

    The modern state is financed by enterprise, by the private sector. In return it provides services for the common good – including policing and security – using the money generated by business, a portion of which is given to the state as taxes.

     

    The state is hence the modern equivalent of the medieval mercenary knight one could hire to guard ones farm or one’s home: the Japanese roving Samurai, or the Tamil soldier caste who carried out “Kaval” (guard) duties.

     

    The Tamil businesses that represented 80% of Colombo’s retail trade and 60% of its commercial trade in 1983, had, for decades been financing a good proportion of the Sri Lankan state through taxes. They paid a good proportion of the salaries of all those Colombo soldiers and policemen who stood by – or as in many cases participated – while the mobs torched Tamil homes, shops and cars.

     

    Not only did the Tamil business owners of 1983 lose the value of the businesses destroyed in the pogrom, they also discovered that they had been paying taxes for decades on a false assumption: that the police, army, judiciary and government bureaucracy that they financed through taxes would protect them in times of crisis. 

     

    Even if reparation were made for the loss of the businesses and lives in 1983, can there be reparation for the breach of contract by the state to the people whose taxes had paid for it all those years?

     

    But the breach of contract continues. Every Tamil taxpayer in Sri Lanka today – including all the abducted business persons in Colombo - understands that they are being defrauded of the benefits of their taxes: the State has no intention of providing them with the security they have paid for. The police, army, judiciary do not work for them.

     

    As the pogrom demonstrated, economic assets require defence – both from physical destruction by mobs and from expropriation by hostile governments (and their international allies).

     

    The Tamil people instinctively understand that it is not possible to rebuild that “Tamil industrial base, built over generations” without first hiring a reliable Kavalar to protect it.

     

    In modern terms, this translates to a State with a defence and judiciary that is accountable to the Tamil people that finance it. A State that will not turn against its people. In short, the free state of Eelam.

     

    The Federal solution amounts to ignoring all previous breaches of contract and re-hiring the Sinhala State – including its present army – for the Kavalar role. This would require a huge leap of faith by the Tamils, but to date there have been no grounds on which such a leap can be based. On the contrary, all the actions of the Sinhala state to date suggest that such a leap of faith would be naive in the extreme and stupid at best.

     

     In the Sinhala State the Tamils will always be hostage to the “wages of envy”, (to use the terminology of the Economist): as the Jewish people were in Europe in the 1940s, as the Tutsis were in Rwanda, both minorities that had been disproportionately successful in their countries. Envy does not have a sell-by date.

     

    It follows that the separatist project is also an economic project. If the Tamil industrial base took generations to build before it was destroyed by a 1-week pogrom, then the 25 years or more to be spent building the pre-requisite state, that will lay the foundation for the next generation of industrial base is not unacceptable.

  • West urged not to ignore Sri Lanka

    A senior western diplomat has warned that living conditions are deteriorating for tens of thousands of civilians displaced inside Tamil Tiger-held areas in northern Sri Lanka.

     

    It is a humanitarian disaster waiting to happen, he says.

     

    "We have one of the biggest humanitarian problems emerging in the north at the moment. Unfortunately it's not attracting enough international attention," the diplomat, who's familiar with the Sri Lankan situation, told the BBC.

     

    Sri Lankan security forces are carrying out a multi-pronged offensive against Tamil Tigers in the north and some army units are reported to be very close to the town of Kilinochchi, where the Tamil Tigers have their administrative headquarters.

     

    The United Nations says more than 200,000 people have been displaced in the latest round of fighting and they have been moving from place to place inside Tamil Tiger-controlled areas.

     

    With the army capturing more and more territory from the LTTE, the civilians have now been confined to a smaller region.

     

    Sooner or later hostilities are expected to break out in areas not very far from them. Some fear that they might get caught in the crossfire.

     

    The diplomat, who didn't want to be identified, said Western governments had lost interest in Sri Lanka because "they think that there is little value of going back to the peace process because they are not sure whether the rebels will negotiate in good faith".

     

    With the international community showing little interest in the Sri Lankan conflict, the Tamil Tigers now appear to have turned towards their supporters and political parties in neighbouring India to bring about a ceasefire in the island nation.

     

    Pro-LTTE political parties and some fringe groups in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu have been holding protest rallies against the Sri Lankan army offensive claiming many Tamil civilians are being killed in the conflict.

     

    Sri Lankan officials deny the charges, saying they are only targeting the Tiger fighters.

     

    Tamil Nadu is home to more than 60 million Tamils, who share close linguistic and cultural ties with the Tamils in Sri Lanka.

     

    Most of the major political parties from Tamil Nadu have warned that their lawmakers will quit the Indian parliament if Delhi fails to broker a ceasefire in Sri Lanka.

     

    If the threats were carried out they could trigger a political crisis in Delhi.

     

    But these protests are viewed by some as an attempt by the pro-LTTE groups to try to protect the Tamil Tigers, who appear to have been cornered by the Sri Lankan security forces in recent months.

     

    India has been pursuing a hands-off policy in Sri Lanka since the assassination of the former Indian prime minister, Rajiv Gandhi, allegedly by a female Tamil Tiger suicide bomber in 1991.

     

    However, it actively backed the Norwegian-led peace process, which was officially called off early this year.

     

    Officially, India wants a negotiated settlement within a united Sri Lanka, knowing that any fragmentation of Sri Lanka could have serious ramifications for its own security.

     

    If Delhi attempts to exert any pressure on Colombo it is bound to trigger an angry reaction from hard line political parties in Sri Lanka.

     

    So the protests in Tamil Nadu may not result in a major shift in India's Sri Lanka policy as Delhi's options appear to be limited.

     

    "The Tigers seemed to have made a miscalculation on when and how India will intervene. I don't see any chance of the conflict ending in the next few weeks," the western diplomat said.

     

    The Sri Lankan military would also stoutly oppose any move to stop the offensive which seems to be going in their favour.

     

    Analysts say the military's numerical superiority, stronger firepower and better military strategy have helped them to push rapidly deep inside LTTE-held territory in recent months.

     

    But their progress has been slow in recent weeks due to stiff resistance from the Tigers.

     

    Many military observers agree that if the present trend continues then the army will capture Kilinochchi sooner or later.

     

    If the army achieves its objectives, then the Tigers would be confined mostly to the Mullaitivu region.

     

    Now the fear among the Tamils is if the LTTE are weakened then the government may not show interest in devolving powers to Tamil areas.

     

    "There is a danger that there will be little pressure on the Sri Lankan government to devolve powers to Tamil regions if the Tigers lose the war," says Sri Lankan analyst DBS Jeyaraj.

     

    However, he argues that the fall of Kilinochchi may not be the end of the LTTE as most of their weapons and cadres are still intact and they may be gearing up for a long, drawn-out guerrilla war.

  • DMK, AIADMK harden stand on Sri Lanka

    As a protest organized by the Communist Party of India attracted the support of many political parties and drew thousands of people across the state both the ruling Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) and the opposition All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) hardened their stand on the Sri Lanka. 

    Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M. Karunanidhi addressing a public meeting support of Eelam Tamils on Monday, October 6, declared that the DMK will be forced to consider withdrawing from the central government if it does not take decisive steps to stop attacks against Tamils in Sri Lanka and Indian fishermen by the island’s naval force.

     “The final decision in the matter will be taken by the DMK’s highest policy making body - the general body,” Karunanidhi added.

    During a telephonic conversation with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, he demanded India lodge a strong protest with the island’s diplomatic mission in New Delhi.

    “The chief minister stressed that the Sri Lankan high commissioner be summoned and told that India condemns the genocide of the Tamil minority and (that) its navy is killing innocent Indian fishermen,” an official statement released by the Tamil Nadu government stated.

    “The prime minister has promised to carry out the chief minister’s wishes,”

    “The prime minister was also requested to do the needful to ensure the immediate end of attacks on Indian fishermen at the hands of Sri Lanka’s defence establishment,” the statement added.

    Jayalalitha, the Leader of, main opposition, AIADMK, on Saturday October 4, issued a statement castigating the central government for collaborating with Sri Lanka in the alleged genocide of minority Tamils in the island nation and called for immediate stoppage of all military aid to it - especially in the view of its navy allegedly carrying out attacks against Indian fishermen.

     

    She alleged that the Indian government had remained not just a passive witness but was an active collaborator by supplying arms, providing radars and training to the Sri Lankan armed forces and urged Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to call up his Sri Lankan counterpart and convey his displeasure over the killing of Tamils in the island nation and attacks on Indian fishermen.

    “After the disastrous IPKF misadventure and the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi, the Indian government had taken a decision that it would not get involved in the internal affairs of Sri Lanka. But now, we have the same government going all out to help the Sri Lankan armed forces,” she said.

    Jayalalitha said though it was not uncommon for one nation to offer training or supply arms to another country, in the case of Sri Lanka, the question arose as to who its target was.

    “The Sri Lankan government may well claim that its Army is shooting only at the LTTE’s fighters. But, claims made about the death toll indicate that it is not just the LTTE fighters who are being mowed down, but a substantial part of the hapless Tamil population as well. So, in essence, Indian arms and ammunition sent from India are being used against the innocent Tamils of Sri Lanka,” she said.

    “The Sri Lankan armed forces have also killed Indian fishermen in the sea. All the time, the Indian government has been saying that this matter has been taken up with the Sri Lankan government. But, no tangible action has been taken so far by the Indian government,” she alleged. “We are not asking for an armed invasion of Sri Lanka. What we look for is that the Indian Prime Minister should call up his Sri Lankan counterpart and make his displeasure known in clear terms,” she stressed.

    Earlier Karunanidhi also opposed a proposal for joint patrolling of the Palk Straits by the Indian and Sri Lankan navies to prevent attacks on Indian fishermen.

    Karunanidhi expressed his opinion in an official letter addressed to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, copies of which were released to the media.

    The chief minister Karunanidhi was reacting to reported discussions between External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee and his Sri Lankan counterpart Rohitha Bogollogama in New York during which the proposal for joint patrolling was mooted to resolve the issue.

     

    "While I have repeatedly stressed on the need to strengthen our security on the international maritime border line by giving adequate facilities to the Indian Coast Guard and the navy, we have also made it clear that joint patrolling was not feasible," Karunanidhi said.

    The state government had also pointed this out to National Security Advisor M.K. Narayanan, he added.

    An estimated 800 Indian fisherman have died at the hands of Sri Lankan Navy since India ceded Kachchatheevu to Sri Lanka.

  • Witness to Thileepan’s fast

    Thileepan, the young Tiger leader of Jaffna, took the podium on the 14th September 1987 at the Nallur Kandasamy temple to commence his fast- unto-death as a protest against India’s failure to fulfill her pledges, and to mobilise the frustrated sentiments of the Tamils into a national mass upsurgence.

     

    Thileepan’s non-violent struggle was unique and extraordinary for its commitment. Although an armed guerrilla fighter, he chose the spiritual mode of ‘ahimsa’ as enunciated by the great Indian leader Mahatma Gandhi to impress upon India the plight and predicament of the people of Tamil Eelam.

     

    The levels to which the Tamil people or more specifically, the LTTE cadres, are prepared to go for their freedom mirrors not only a deep passion for their liberation, but indicates the phenomenal degree of oppression they have been subjected to. It is only those who experience intolerable oppression of such a magnitude, of being threatened with extinction, that are capable of supreme forms of self sacrifice as we have seen from Thileepan’s episode.

     

    Thileepan, who had travelled to Delhi as part of LTTE leader Vellupillai Pirabakaran’s delegation before the signing of the Accord, was informed of the content of the dialogue that had taken place between the Indian Prime Minister and the LTTE leader.

     

    With the knowledge that there was an unwritten agreement between Indian Premier Rajiv Gandhi and Mr. Pirabakaran and that it had not been implemented, he felt that his people and the struggle had been betrayed and decided on a fast-unto-death demanding the fulfillment of the pledges.

     

    When news of Thileepan’s fast-unto-death and the deteriorating political situation between the LTTE and the Indian Peace Keeping Force reached us, we decided to leave India for Jaffna.

     

    My joy at reaching the shores of Tamil Eelam after so many years was contained by the gloom that hung in the air. Thileepan was a few days into his fast till death and the population of the Peninsula was seriously concerned and wholeheartedly behind the non-violent campaign of a single individual seeking justice from the world’s largest democracy. Subsequently, our first priority after our arrival in the Peninsula was to visit Thileepan encamped at the historic Nallur Kandasamy temple, the cultural and spiritual centre of the Jaffna Tamils.

     

    Thileepan’s decision to single-handedly take on the credibility of the Indian state was not incongruous with his history of resistance to state oppression as a cadre in the LTTE. He had faced battle on several occasions in defence of Jaffna during Kittu’s time and suffered serious abdominal wounds in the process. He was well known for his astute understanding of the politics and mindset of his people and emerged as a radical political leader.

     

    The senior LTTE women cadres often speak of his staunch advocacy of inducting women into the national struggle and is remembered as one of the founding fathers in the promotion of women’s issues. With such a history it comes as no surprise that he endeared himself not only to the cadres but the people of Jaffna also.

     

    My husband, LTTE theoretician Anton Balasingham, met Thileepan during the pre-Accord talks when he shared a hotel room with him in Delhi and quickly grew very fond of this affable fellow. It was an extremely painful and emotional experience for Bala to meet him again in Jaffna, in totally adverse conditions, with Thileepan’s life slowly ebbing away.

     

    As we entered the premises of the Nallur Kandasamy temple we were confronted by a sea of people seated on the white sands under the blazing sun. The air was thick with collective emotion and solemnity. This fading young man on the platform obviously embodied the political sentiments and aspirations of his people.

     

    But it was more than that also. Thileepan’s fast had touched the spirit of the Tamil nation and mobilised the popular masses in unprecedented solidarity. One could sense how this extraordinary sacrifice of a fragile young man had suddenly assumed a formidable force as the collective strength of his people. Thileepan’s fast was a supreme act of transcendence of individuality for a collective cause. Literally, it was an act of self-crucifixion, a noble act by which this brave young man condemned himself to death so that others could live in freedom and dignity.

     

    With deep humility, Bala and I mounted the platform to speak to the reposed Thileepan. Already several days without food or water and with a dry cracked mouth, Thileepan could only whisper. Bala leaned closer to the weakened Thileepan and exchanged words with him. Naturally enough, Thileepan enquired about the political developments. We left soon afterwards, never to see him alive again.

     

    As Thileepan’s fast moved on in days, he was no longer able to address the public from the podium and spent much of his time lying quietly as his condition steadily deteriorated. As Thileepan grew visibly weaker in front of his people’s eyes, their anger and resentment towards India and the IPKF grew stronger. The sight of this popular young man being allowed to die in such an agonising manner generated disbelief at the depth of callousness of the Indian government and the Indian Peace Keeping Force.

     

    All that was required to save Thileepan’s waning life was for the Indian High Commissioner, Mr. Dixit, to humble himself and meet and reassure Thileepan that the Indian government would fulfil its pledges to the Tamils. In fact Delhi ignored Thileepan’s fast in the early stages as an isolated idiosyncrasy of an individual, but later became seriously concerned when the episode gathered momentum and turned into a national uprising with anti-Indian sentiments. Delhi’s concerns compelled Mr. Dixit to pay a visit to Jaffna to ‘study the situation’.

     

    On the 22nd September, the eighth day of Thileepan’s fast, Mr. Dixit arrived at the Pallaly airport where Mr. Pirapaharan and Bala met him. Bala told me later that Mr. Dixit was rude and resentful and condemned Thileepan’s fasting campaign as a provocative act by the LTTE aimed at instigating the Tamil masses against the Indian government.

     

    Mr. Pirapaharan showed remarkable patience and pleaded with the Indian diplomat to pay a visit to Nallur and talk to the dying young man to give up his fast by assuring him that India would fulfil its pledges. Displaying his typical arrogance and intransigence, Mr. Dixit rejected the LTTE leader’s plea, arguing that it was not within the mandate of his visit.

     

    Had Mr. Dixit correctly read the situation and genuinely cared for the sentiments of the Tamil people at this very crucial time, it is highly probable that the entire episode of India’s direct intervention in the ethnic conflict would have taken a different turn.

     

    But Thileepan’s willingness to sacrifice his life in such a way touched the spirit of the people and his unnecessary tragic death on 26th September planted deeply the seeds of disenchantment with the Indian Peace Keeping Force.

     

    Adele Balasingham is a sociologist, political activist and writer who has lived and worked in India and Sri Lanka with the LTTE for more than twenty years. This article is compiled, with kind permission, from extracts of ‘The Will to Freedom’, her internal study of the armed struggle of the Tamil Tiger movement, 2nd edition, Fairmax Publishing Ltd (UK), 2003.

  • Factual distortions can destroy the fundamentals of a community

    It is with deep concern and understanding that I made a comparative study of Dr. A.R.M. Imtiyaz’s “Tamil-Muslim Relations and Unity for Peace” a paper presented during the conference “Ending the war and bringing justice and peace to Sri Lanka” held at the Steelworkers’ Hall in Toronto, September 13, 2008 and the article “Why Tamil-Muslim unity crucial for peace –“excerpts” which was published in the last issue of this paper.

     

    In fact, I attended a panel presentation on Sunday, September 14, 2008 where Dr. Imtiyaz highlighted some of his views on his presentation.

     

    While respecting Dr. Imtiyaz as an academic, I am much concerned about the credibility of references and citations presented by selected academics and their vocal presentations with regards to the ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka.

     

    I am particularly concerned with the references made to the Sri Lankan Muslim community of the North and North Eastern Province of Sri Lanka, to which I belong though currently domiciled in Canada.

     

    Cause of conflict

    In page 1 of his circulated hard copy and e-mailed paper presented at the conference Dr. Imtiyaz states:

    “However, Sri Lankan Muslims claim majority in Amparai district of Eastern province, and regularly develop social and political tensions with the Tamils of the East. Muslims of the North and East became regular victims of ethnic instability that generated ethnic civil war between the Tamils and the Sinhalese”.

     

    But Dr. Imtiyaz gives another contradictory view in para 4 of the Excerpts published in the Sunday times article by stating:

     

    “However, they claim they are the majority in the Amparai district of the Eastern province, where exist social and political tension between the Tamils and the Muslims. The Northern and Eastern Muslims became victims of a vicious cycle of ethnic instability that led to the ethnic civil war between the Tamils and the Sinhalese”.

     

     These two statements are highly contradictory of each other in the comparative study of academic understanding.

     

    Later in his original presentation, under the sub-heading “Tamil-Muslim Divide”, Dr. Imtiyaz states:

     

    “Sinhalese politicization of ethnic emotions by the Southern parties of Sri Lanka failed the country and it eventually drove the Tamils and the Sinhalese into grisly ethnic civil war.

     

    This statement again contradicts and nullifies his claim that it was the vicious cycle of ethnic instability that led to the ethnic civil war between the Tamils and the Sinhalese

     

    There had always been harmony between the Tamils and Muslims, specially in the North and North Eastern Provinces. This was true even before the island gained independence from the British. As even Dr. Imtiyaz notes:

    “Sinhalese politicization of ethnic emotions by the Southern parties of Sri Lanka failed the country and it eventually drove the Tamils and the Sinhalese into grisly ethnic civil war.

     

    So the alleged ethnic instability between the Muslims and Tamils – which did not exist – in no way contributed or led to the Sinhalese-Tamil conflicts.

     

    Further analysis of Dr Imtiyaz’s statements reveals that one (that Muslims became ‘regular victims of ethnic instability that generated ethnic civil war’ between the Tamils and the Sinhalese) is a accusation against the Tamils, while another – that there was social tension between the Tamil and Muslims – is an assumption.

     

    The Tamils and the Muslims were in the best of cultural, political, socio-economics and territorial rights relationships at all times and were not in conflict as argued by Dr. Imtiyaz. Various researchers have proven this.

     

    The Muslim identity

    Further in the presentation, Dr. Imtiyaz states that:

    Muslims have their own concerns and issues pertaining to their identity and security. A notable feature of the Tamil-Muslim relations in contemporary Sri Lanka, according to McGilvray, is Muslim desire to develop a non-Tamil identity based on Islam, a religion which strictly calls obedient only to Allah, a profound emotional message that relentlessly resists any forms of obedience to all other human and spiritual powers. Muslims’ decision to seek own identity based on the Islamic religion triggered Tamil anger.

     

    But in the excerpts published last week, Dr. Imtiyaz states:

     

    “A notable feature of the Tamil-Muslim relations in contemporary Sri Lanka is the Muslim desire to develop a non-Tamil identity based on Islam, a religion which strictly calls obedience only to Allah, a profound message that relentlessly resists any forms of obeisance to all other powers. The Muslims' decision to seek their own identity based on Islam triggered Tamil anger.”

     

    These statements are contradicted by other researchers. For example, Dr. Imtiyaz has not referenced Dr. Dennis B. McGilvray, Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of Colorado, in his original presentation. Dr. McGilvray in the publication titled “Muslim perspectives on the Sri Lankan Conflict”, written with Mirak Raheem, contradicts Dr. Imtiyaz’s statements.

     

    In Policy study 41, 2007 of the East-West Centre in Washington, Dr. McGilvray states that: “The essential point is that Sri Lankan Muslim politics is not infused with religious ideology or sectarian jihadism. Humanitarian solidarity with fellow-Muslims who are endangered or opposed is strongly felt, as when the 2004 tsunami tragedy struck the east coast, inflicting roughly a third of Sri Lanka’s tsunami deaths on a community that is 8% of local population.”

     

    Therefore, Dr. Imtiyaz’s statement that the Muslims sought a non-Tamil identity based on their religion, and that it was this that “triggered Tamil anger” is, in my opinion, defamatory of the Sri Lankan Tamil-Muslim political relationship.

     

    Muslim political alliances

    In his original presentation Dr. Imtiyaz states:

    “The political establishment of the Muslims supports the Sinhala political leaders for political and commercial purposes: they vigorously oppose the Tamil demand for self-autonomy in the merged North and East and support successive Sinhala-dominated governments' military actions against the Tamils.”

     

    The facts arguably contradict this statement. Indeed, in the North and North-East, Muslims were supportive of Tamils and federalism – then.

     

    Again quoting Dr. McGilvray and Mr. Raheem:

    “The Federal party retained a degree of popular support over its Muslim population in the North East until the goals of the party became confrontational. Yet even in 1960’s and 1970’s not all Muslims distanced themselves from the Federal party. For instance at the Vaddukoddai Resolution meeting in 1976, M.H.M.Ashraff, who was to later establish the SLMC as the first successful Muslim political party, reportedly said “If elder brother Amirthalimgham [then Tamil leader of the TULF coalition in Parliament] failed to get Tamil Eelam [a tamil-speaking homeland in North east], the younger brother Ashraff will get it”

     

    It is further stated by these two academics that:

    “The Federal Party even adopted a resolution at the Trincomalee Convention in 1956 in favour of both a Tamil State and a Muslim State with a Federal set-up.”

     

    Another of Dr. Imtiyaz’s defective view is his statement in both the presentation and the article is when he states that the Muslims had “deep distrust in S.J.V. Chelvanayakam's federal demand”. Again this is countered by Dr. McGilvray and Mr. Raheem, who report of a “Muslim-Tamil Alliance … [that] emerged in the North East”.

     

    Further, Dr. Imtiyaz makes no reference to the fact that it was a Muslim parliamentarian who won the parliamentary seat of Mutur (Trincomalee district) in the 1950's. He made his maiden parliamentary speech in the Tamil language, which is arguably an expression of Muslim-Tamil solidarity, understanding and respect which still remains to date.

     

    It can be argued that some academics are trying to forget this longstanding accord, with the possibility of fanning discord between the two Tamil Speaking communities in Sri Lanka.

     

    Other challenges

    The following statements, made in the presentation and the excerpts, can also be challenged as deceptions that could become disastrous and potentially destroy the fundamentals of a minority community.

    1.      “The political establishment of the Muslims supports the Sinhala political leaders for political and commercial purposes: they vigorously oppose the Tamil demand for self-autonomy in the merged North and East and support successive Sinhala-dominated governments' military actions against the Tamils”.

     

    1. “All of which goes to show that the irrational approach of the Tamil resistance movement towards the Muslims of the North and East was the key component of the Muslim frustration, and thus some (affected) Muslim youth eventually resorted to violence against the Tamils and joined the state security forces, either as low-level cadres or as informants”.

     

    1. “The bottom line is that the minorities in Sri Lanka have some special problems. These problems are associated with the issues of identity and existence, and thus they need special solutions”.

     

    1. “During the 1983 riots, a Muslim Minister is said to have disgraced Islam by unleashing his thugs in central Colombo against the Tamils. The Muslims of the Eastern Province were alleged to have got together with the STF in terrorist exploits against the Tamils there”.

     

    1. “As a result, Muslims have changed their preferences and strategies to contain the ethnic Tamils' cultural and political domination.  This suggests one key rational for the formation of the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC) in the mid of 1980’s, when the Muslims also established some informal contacts with the Sri Lanka state forces”. 

     

    Further reading

    The following short list of publications will allow any concerned reader to begin revealing the flaws in Dr. Imtiyaz’s arguments.

     

    ·       "The Muslims of Sri Lanka, 1000 years of ethnic harmony 900-1915 AD" by Lorna Dewaraja, (Lanka Islamic Foundation, 1994),

    ·       The Muslims and Sri Lanka by Ms. Kamalika Pieris, available at  http://www.missionislam.com/knowledge/srilanka.htm

    ·       Sri Lankan Muslims: Ethnic Identity within Cultural Diversity by Prof M A Nuhuman.

    ·       The article - Sri Lanka 's Muslims, Homeless and homesick, Oct 11th 2007,
    From The Economist print edition, An unhappy and forgotten minority,

    ·       Ameer Ali, "The Genesis of the Muslim Community in Ceylon (Sri Lanka): A Historical Summary", Asian Studies, Vol. 29, April-December, 1981, pp. 65-82,  

    ·       M M M. Mahroof, "Sri Lanka: the Arab connection", Journal of Islamic History, New Delhi, 1/2 Oct-Dec., 1995, pp. 305-316,

    ·       M M M. Mahroof, "Sri Lanka: the Arab connection", Journal of Islamic History, New Delhi, 1/2 Oct-Dec., 1995, pp. 305-316,

    ·       Ameer Ali, "Politics of Survival",

    ·       The Article by Farah Mihlar in Britain’s The Guardian newspaper titled “Britain is failing Sri Lanka's Muslims”, available at http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2006/sep/01/post331  

    ·       Dr. Ameer Ali - Politics of survival: past strategies and present predicament of the Muslim community in Sri Lanka, Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs, Volume 7, Issue 1 January 1986 , pages 147–170

    ·       Article on “Muslims in Sri Lanka’s Ethnic Conflict”, by Ms. Farzana Haniffa (Senior Lecturer, Dept. of Sociology, University of Colombo), published in Review 19, Spring 2007 - ISIM, University of Amsterdam.

     

    The author is a Tamil Speaking Canadian citizen, hailing from Trincomalee. He is a scholar of Communication Science who was a NORAD-Fellow in 1971. He is currently teaching Communication Studies in Canada, where he is also a freelance writer very much involved in the Peace Activities, especially concerning the ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka.

  • Worsening humanitarian situation as support disappears

    International aid agencies pulling out of the Vanni in early September has exacerbated the already difficult life of those who had displaced to the region, local reports said.

     

    With the impending monsoon, assuring access to fresh food and reliable shelter has become a priority for both the remaining local agencies and the displaced alike.

     

    "The most pressing needs of these people are security, health, water, shelter, sanitation and food," Anthony Dalziel, ICRC deputy chief in Sri Lanka, said.

     

    The United Nations and other aid agencies withdrew from the Vanni last month after the Sri Lankan government ordered them out of the war zones.

     

    Though many protested at leaving the civilians as their situation was worsening, all eventually left as their own security became precarious.

     

    The government said it could not guarantee their safety.

     

    Analysts suggest the government wants to avoid more incidents like the killing of 17 aid workers as the fighting was moving into Muttur in August 2006, a massacre that has been blamed on Sri Lankan government troops.

     

    Whilst there had not yet been any reports of food shortages in the Vanni, ICRC officials said there were areas of concern.

     

    The withdrawal of aid agencies has already resulted in a mass reduction in food supply to the Vanni region.

     

    This week a United Nations convoy of fifty-one trucks was finally allowed through the Omanthai checkpoint, accompanied by UN staff, but locals said this was nowhere near enough.

     

    "We hope this will be the first of many such convoys," a World Food Programme (WFP) spokesman told BBC.

     

    "We are not talking about starvation in the north, but we are talking about people whose ability to cope after heavy fighting over the last month has been seriously eroded."

     

    According to the Sri Lankan Minister for Disaster Management and Human Rights, Mahinda Samarasinghe, this is "just the beginning of a consistent strategy" to ensure there is sufficient food supplies for the displaced people in the Vanni.

     

    But aid workers say the government is reluctant to allow the convoys through.

     

    The attempt to fix explosives onto one of the trucks, an act that has been condemned by the UN, was cited as a clear attempt to obstruct the convoy.

     

    Though no group has claimed responsibility for the attempted attack, reporters note that the explosives were placed on the truck while it was being monitored by the Sri Lankan military.

     

     “The convoy will transport and distribute food to four locations to the east of Kilinochchi, where the majority of displaced civilians are thought to have concentrated,” according to a press release issued in Colombo by the Office of the UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in Sri Lanka.

     

    Civilians – both those already displaced and those who used to reside in Kilinochchi – are fleeing further east towards Mullaitivu as the Sri Lanka Army approaches the town that used to be the operational headquarters of the LTTE, the BBC reported.

     

    They had already started moving to avoid aerial attacks by the Sri Lankan Air Force, which press reports said had been targeting civilian areas for the last few weeks.

     

    Although the government has urged civilians to move into Vavuniya, which is under government control, the vast majority are deciding to head deeper into LTTE controlled areas, local reports said.

     

    "They are setting up camp in the Darmapuram area, about 15 km from Kilinochchi, where there is water because of irrigation canals," IPS quoted civilian sources in Kilinochchi as saying.

     

    "But toilet facilities will be a big problem because everyone is using the open grounds," the sources had cautioned.

     

    There were more attacks on Kilinochchi town on Friday, the government's top civil servant in Kilinochchi district, Nagalingam Vedanayagan, confirmed.

     

    "Shelling and other attacks are taking place in Kilinochchi," he told the BBC Tamil service.

     

    "To escape the fighting people are moving towards the east. Most of them have been moving out."

     

    Additionally with the continual aerial bombardment, the movement of civilians has left many without any appropriate shelter.

     

    "People are living under trees. They don't even have a mat to sleep on. There is no electricity," one resident told BBC.

     

    With many more likely to become displaced, the sight of whole families living in these conditions is likely to become even more prevalent, analysts predict.

     

    The health services available in the region have also become a casualty of the ongoing conflict.

     

    "Local health facilities have moved along with the civilian population and are continuing to provide health services under extremely difficult conditions," the ICRC deputy told reporters.

     

    "Kilinochchi District General Hospital has been receiving even more patients than usual," Mr. Dalziel added.

     

    Though there have been no health problems yet, “the approaching monsoon rains are cause for concern”, noted the ICRC deputy.

     

    Kilinochchi hospital has already moved from its original position, with relocating 18km north of the town on September 27.

     

    Patients, staff and records were moved to two schools as a temporary measure.

     

    The hospital had a severe logistical problem in shifting the seriously ill patients, and most importantly the giant generator which supplies power to the refrigerators in which vaccines, medicines and blood were stored, Provincial Health Services Regional Director Dr. T. Sathyamoorthi told The Sunday Times.

     

    The hospital buildings had already been slightly damaged in aerial bombardment and shelling in the vicinity, he said.   

     

    The UN reports that 45 percent of university applicants in the Vanni were unable to sit their entrance exams due to the fighting.

     

    The educational prospects of at least 30,000 school children are also affected according to NGOs operating in the area.

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