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  • ICRC suspends aid operations

    International Committee of Red Cross (ICRC) which was involved in evacuating injured civilians, announced on Wednesday May 27 that it was suspending its aid operations due to difficulties caused by “additional restrictions” placed upon it by the Sri Lanka government.

    "Since last weekend there have been additional restrictions imposed on aid organisations, including the ICRC," Paul Castella, the head of the group's Sri Lanka operations, told Al Jazeera.

    "The authorities have said that because of security they had to restrict access to certain areas,” he said. “What is the take of these civilians and what the conditions are we don't know because we are not granted access to the area."

    “Restrictions have led to a temporary standstill in the distribution of aid” to the main camp holding 130,000 people, Monica Zanarelli, deputy head of operations in South Asia for the International Committee of the Red Cross, said on the ICRC’s Web site.

    Until last weekend, the ICRC had delivered water, food, personal hygiene kits, baby-care parcels, emergency household items and kitchen utensils to the camp, known as Menik Farm, in the country's north, which housed more than 130,000 refugees, Zanarelli said on the Red Cross website.

    “The ICRC is not in a position to provide figures or even to know whether all casualties are receiving the care they require,” Zanarelli said.

    Restrictions on access are “having a severe effect on the thousands of newly arrived displaced people. The ICRC and other humanitarian aid agencies deplore this unacceptable situation,” she said.

  • Sri Lanka rules out outside probe

    Sri Lanka has dismissed calls for an independent inquiry into claims of human rights abuses by the military, saying its own courts will investigate.

     

    Foreign minister Rohita Bogollagama said the claims that heavy weaponry was used in civilian areas during the war with Tamil Tigers were "fictional".

     

    He said the claims were being used to boost accusations of genocide against the country's Tamil minority.

     

    Aid agencies and the United Nations have called for an inquiry.

     

    The exact number of civilians killed in the final weeks of the long-running war has not been established, but one report put it as high as 20,000.

     

    An unverified and unofficial UN estimate said that more than 7,000 civilians were killed and another 13,000 injured in the conflict from January to April this year, according to the BBC's Anbarasan Ethirajan in Colombo.

     

    Mr Bogollagama said the allegations were intended to discredit the armed forces and embarrass the government of Sri Lanka.

     

    Government forces were ordered to stop using heavy weapons on 27 April.

     

    From that time onwards they were supposed to observe a no-fire zone where 100,000 Tamil men, women and children were sheltering.

     

    "Those transmitted, unsubstantiated allegations against the military claimed heavy weapons in civilian areas being used in order to buttress the propaganda of genocide against the Tamil people," Mr Bogollagama said.

     

    "This was both fictional and well-fabricated, with ulterior and sinister motives, in order to discredit the armed forces, as well as to embarrass the government of Sri Lanka."

     

    He said now that the war was over, the country would seek to rebuild.

     

    "Our people are weary of war, yet they are resilient and want to get on with their lives.

     

    "Therefore, the post-conflict period will focus on rehabilitation, resettlement, economic development and holding free and fair elections."

     

    The UN's senior humanitarian affairs co-ordinator, John Holmes, said that while the estimates had no "justification," the claims were serious and needed to be investigated.

     

    Human rights group Amnesty International also called on the UN to investigate.

     

    But Mr Bogollagama, speaking during a summit of Asian defence ministers in Singapore, told Reuters: "Sri Lanka is a sovereign country with its own legal framework.

     

    "We have a very strong separation of powers (and) the judiciary is independent."

     

    The foreign minister also appealed for international help in disabling, what he described, as the Tamil Tigers' powerful political lobbies outside Sri Lanka that were seeking to resurrect the movement.

     

    "It is important for the international community to take all measures to assist the government of Sri Lanka, to track down the global network of the LTTE (Tamil Tigers)," Mr Bogollagama said.

  • Food shortage in ‘safe zone’ critical

    The Sri Lankan government was deliberately carrying out a "horrendous act of genocide" by denying food and humanitarian access to the civilian population, charged Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) Political Head B. Nadesan on Sunday 3 May.

     

    Mr. Nadesan pointed out the imminent danger of starvation escalating exponentially and urged the International Community not to fail in its duty to ensure humanitarian access to the civilian population under siege by the Sri Lankan military.

     

    Meanwhile, health officials in Vanni report that several children faint from hunger within the so-called safety zone every day.

     

    Deliberate denial of food by Colombo, especially milk powder for children, have caused severe malnutrition and starvation as local media reported at least 9 starvation deaths in recent days, TamilNet reported.

     

    The LTTE was always fully prepared to extend its support to ensure humanitarian supplies and international humanitarian access to the civilian population, Mr. Nadesan told TamilNet.

     

    He further said that the LTTE political division was engaged in saving the lives of civilians who were suffering from hunger and starvation.

     

    Government officials responsible for food distribution, when contacted by TamilNet, said they only received 60 MT food supplies after 02 April. 2,475 MT supplies are needed for a month for 165,000 civilians according to World Food Programme (WFP) specifications, they said.

     

    The ICRC has responded that it was waiting for Colombo's cooperation in bringing in supply ship. Even the ship that was ready with 1500 MT supplies was diverted to Jaffna, they said.

     

    Meanwhile, the Tamils Rehabilitation Organisation (TRO) reported that while the need of food for the estimated 165,000 people, as determined by the District Secretariat, is roughly 2500 MT a month, ships brought only 60 MT for the whole of April, and the 1100 MT announced by the Sri Lanka Government to be loaded in Trincomalee in ships, never materialized.

     

    The World Food Program is limited by the Government of Sri Lanka to send a quantity of food barely sufficient to keep alive 50,000 people, a number GoSL is willing to admit as the numbers holed up in the Safe Zone, said Lawrence Christy, head of the TRO field office in the Safety Zone.

     

    “TRO is continuing the gruel provision activity at Mullivaikal too. 17 centres are functioning for fulfilling this essential task. From morning 10 to evening 4 they provide gruel to hungry people. People – young and old line up with jugs under hot sun and drink that rice gruel. The ingredients of the rice gruel are rice, water, salt and milk,” he said.

     

    "Dead bodies are being taken by TRO volunteers for burial or cremation. Dead bodies have to be collected from shelters and bunkers. When dead bodies are brought to the hospitals or when the wounded people died in the hospital as the treatment failed they also have to be picked up. Almost all the dead bodies amounting about 6,500 were collected by TRO and buried or cremated," TRO said in the report on relief activities.

  • Drop food now if the concern is humanitarian': Vanni civilians

    “If the Colombo government is starving us, the world should know who is keeping us hostages. If the world’s concern is ‘purely humanitarian’ it should act this very minute to give us our means to keep the body and soul together”, is the voice of the civilian victims of Colombo’s starvation weapon, reported TamilNet, quoting hospital sources in Vanni.

     

    Even the meagre food stock of the hospital staff depleted they said.

     

    UN humanitarian chief, John Holmes, acknowledging the situation, said the food supply was barely enough only for a day.

     

    But five days later, no more food shipments to Vanni was the decision in Colombo.

     

    “When Colombo breaches its own international pledge on the use of heavy weapons against its own civilians, the world watches it. Now when it deliberately starves its own civilians to death, then also the world watches,” a political commentator in Colombo told TamilNet, adding that the loss of credibility of UN is going to be irreparable.

     

    The Mahinda Rajapaksa government calculatedly maintains a very low figure of the civilians in the ‘no-fire’ zone in order not to send enough food. Colombo’s figures in the past were supported by India, but both were discredited later.

     

    While Colombo maintains a figure of 15 to 20 thousand civilians, reliable reports from Vanni put it to more than 120,000. Even some international agencies and media are not doing justice in harping on a figure of around 50,000. Colombo prevents international agencies from finding out the truth.

     

    Recently, the UN decided not to penalize Sri Lanka for what it is doing.

     

    'Sri Lanka is a democratically elected government fighting a terrorist organization' is a view maintained by Britain and France.

     

    However humanitarian it could be, it is an internal matter of Sri Lanka, not to be discussed officially in the UN Security Council is the stand of China, sitting on UN action.

     

    The core responsibility now falls on US, said political observers.

     

    Meanwhile, health officials in the Vanni appealed that if there is any meaning for the word humanitarian, the minimum humanitarian act right now is to drop food to the civilians of Vanni without wasting a minute, as an unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe caused by Sri Lankan government enforced starvation engulfs the civilians of Vanni.

     

    “The US government and the world should realise that the situation culminating in the most inhuman act of Colombo calculatedly inflicting starvation death on civilians is ultimately a consequence of the lopsided application of a US policy, and the US has every responsibility to remedy it. Failure amounts to connivance to the crime. US has to immediately airdrop food,” said a relief official in Vanni.

     

    "Colombo, blatantly lying to the world that what takes place is only ‘hostage rescue’ and it is not using heavy weapons, is actually engaged in an all out war to kill or imprison free civilians by the use of all heavy and prohibited weapons. The worst weapon it uses is complete denial of food," complained the relief official who was engaged in arrangements with moving the hospital to a new location as Sri Lanka Army fired artillery shells have hit the makeshift hospital several times. Patients were struggling without medicines and shelter.

     

    "The Indian Establishment is not only extending its war partnership with Colombo indefinitely, but also is believed to be pressurizing Colombo to use ‘all methods’ to win the war before the Establishment’s fate is decided in the elections in mid May. The starvation agenda is believed to be one such either to kill or to crush the will of the freedom loving people and to incarcerate them."

  • Hospitals overwhelmed by injured

    The flood of wounded civilians from the conflict in Sri Lanka is overwhelming doctors and nurses in hospitals near the war zone who said Saturday people risk dying from lack of proper attention.

     

    A British surgeon working for Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF), Paul McMasters, said his team in the state-run hospital in Vavuniya had performed 71 operations in one recent 24-hour period.

     

    In an MSF statement, McMasters said the hospital was struggling to provide adequate post-operative care.

     

    "One of the patients I have seen is a little girl of about seven or eight who has a severe leg injury. Her elder sister is in the same bed with wounds on her arms and legs," McMasters said.

     

    "Their sister has burns to her face. Their mother has been killed and their father is in intensive care. With the level of aftercare that we can provide at the moment, he has a fifty-fifty chance of making it, at best."

     

    "It’s so crowded that the nurses cannot physically walk around the ward," he said, estimating the number of patients in a 45-bed ward at around 320.

     

    "There are simply too many people to treat them all. We are not able to save some people because we need to provide more aftercare," he said, adding: "There are simply not enough nurses."

     

    Most staff were already putting in 20-hour days, he said.

     

    McMasters said MSF had heard reports of chicken pox outbreaks in the makeshift camps housing tens of thousands of displaced civilians.

     

  • Karunanidhi happy with Rajapakse’s response six hour fast

    Tamil Nadu chief minister and DMK president Muthuvel  Karunanidhi said he believed Sri Lankan president Rajapakse would keep his word and not resume combat operations against Tamil Tigers, despite the Sri Lankan military declaring there is no ceasefire in place.

     

    Karunanidhi had gone on a six-hour fast on Monday, April 27 to demand a truce. He ended the fast after Colombo announced a halt in strikes against the LTTE.

     

    "I'm totally satisfied with the Sri Lankan government's response to the fast I undertook on Monday. After a heavy shower there will be a drizzle that cannot be avoided and the present Lankan move of continuing the war is akin to it. I believe that Rajapaksa will keep his word. But I insist and urge that he must do as promised on Monday. In fact, I had offered to go on a fast nearly two months ago. VCK's Thol Thirumavalavan, DK's Veeramani and PMK's Ramadoss were present when I made that offer. But they prevented me from doing so," Karunanidhi told reporters at a news conference at the party headquarters at Anna Arivalayam here.

     

    Asked whether the peace talks could be held in Lanka without the involvement of the Tigers, as they were on the verge of a collapse, Karunanidhi indicated that a solution to the ethnic crisis was not possible without the LTTE. “Even if you remove the vegetation from a land, it will blossom again by virtue of the fertility of the soil. This is evident from many freedom struggles.”

     

    All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhgam (AIADMK) general secretary J Jayalalithaa pooh­poohed the fast observed by Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) chief and Chief Minister M Karunanidhi on Sri Lankan Tamils issue as a mere drama which was enacted to divert the attention of the people.

     

    “It is obvious India is providing the support to Lankan army in the ongoing war. Then whose attention Karunanidhi wants to grab by observing the fast?,” she questioned.

     

    She charged that the Lankan army had exposed the help rendered by India to them in the war. “The geographical sketch of the Tamil people living there has been provided by the Indian army to their Sri Lankan counterpart. That is why their army has succeeded this far in the war,” she said.

     

    “Therefore, in such a scenario, it is evident that the fast observed by the DMK is just a diversionary tactic to fool the electorate,” she said and added that “it was staged by Karunanidhi to escape the people’s wrath.”

  • We will fight to attain that independent Eelam: Jayalalitha

    A separate Tamil Eelam is the only solution that will permanently put an end to the problems of the Tamil people in the island of Sri Lanka, said Tamil Nadu former Chief Minister and principal Leader of the Opposition, Jayalalitha Jayaram at an election rally in Salem city.

    In a powerful, moving speech, on Saturday April 25, she resolved to fight to attain independent Eelam.

    "I met Art of Living founder Sri Sri Ravishankar who has just returned from the war-zone in the Vanni. He gave me CDs and photographs of the atrocities. My heart boils when I looked at it," the AIADMK leader said. If this pathetic situation of the Tamil people has to be removed, if the problems of the Lankan Tamils has to come to an end, an independent Eelam is the only solution, she added.

    "We will fight to attain that independent, separate Eelam. Till today, I have never said that separate Eelam is the only solution. I have spoken about political solution, this and that. But, now I emphatically say, a separate Eelam is the only permanent solution to the Lankan conflict, “she said.

    Earlier, Jayalalitha had announced at an election rally in Thirunelveali (Tirunelveli) on April 18 that if elected in all the 40 seats, the AIADMK-led alliance would have a say in the next Union Government and would strive to get Eelam if a fair political solution was not found for the Tamil people in Sri Lanka.

    Jayalalitha, had in the past espoused that a solution to the Tamil problem had to be found within the constitution of Sri Lanka.

    Few days earlier, in an interview to a popular Tamil weekly, LTTE political wing head, B Nadesan described the AIADMK led alliance in Tamil Nadu as ‘an alliance of friends of Tamil Eelam’ which was widely interpreted as LTTE’s endorsement of AIADMK alliance in the upcoming Lok Sanha elections in  the southern state.

  • SLA abducts 76 people from IDP detention camps
    Sri Lanka Army (SLA) soldiers forcibly took away 76 Tamils from two detention camps in Jaffna district where civilians fleeing war in Vanni were held, according to local sources.
     
    On Saturday April 4 and Sunday April 5, the SLA soldiers took away the 65 detainees to the SLA Special Rehabilitation Camp (SRC) in Thellippalai claiming they were involved in terrorist activities.
     
    SLA soldiers had forced the family members of the 65 detainees to sign documents that said that the detainees were being taken to the SLA Thellippalai SRC on their own wish, local NGO sources said.

    27 detainees from SLA detention centre in Mirusuvil Roaman Catholic Church premises, 9 from Kodikaamam Government Tamil Mixed School (GTMS) detention centre and 29 from Koappaay Teachers’ Training College hostel detention centre were taken away by the soldiers. Most of the detainees taken away are students, they added.

    Also, on Sunday April 5, SLA soldiers forcibly took away eleven students held along with their parents in the SLA detention camp in Koappaay Teacher Training College hostel, according to Education officials who visited the detention centre Monday, April 6.
     
    Some of the students forcibly taken away by SLA soldiers are to sit for the forthcoming GCE A/L examinations.

    The other students in Koaapaay detention centre rejected the educational materials given to them by the Education officials.

    The parents of the students are angry and frustrated that the government authorities had not shown any concern for their children being forcibly taken away by SLA soldiers.
  • Co-chairs urge humanitarian pause in ‘futile fighting’
    In a statement released by the US embassy in Sri Lanka, the co-chairs of the now defunct Norwegion initiated peace process ‘expressed urgent concern for the safety of more than 100,000 people trapped by the conflict’ and ‘stressed the importance of a humanitarian pause and of ensuring that adequate supplies of food, water and medicine reach the civilians in the zone,’
     
    The four-nation group, dubbed the Tokyo Co-Chairs, on a conference call held on Friday April 10, discussed "how to best end the futile fighting without further bloodshed," a U.S. State Department statement said.
     
    The statement from the United States, Britain, Japan and Norway came as Sri Lanka's military said it had begun military operations targeting the no fire zone, calling it "the largest hostage rescue operation in the world".

    Full text of the US embassy release follows:

    Representatives of the Tokyo Co-Chairs convened a conference call this morning to discuss the humanitarian situation in northern Sri Lanka. Assistant Secretary for South and Central Asian Affairs Richard Boucher participated for the United States.

    Co-Chair members expressed urgent concern for the safety of more than a hundred thousand people trapped by the conflict between government forces and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in a narrow strip of land in northern Sri Lanka. They call on the Tamil Tigers to permit freedom of movement for the civilians in the area. They discussed the need for the Sri Lankan government and the LTTE to respect the ‘no fire zone’ and protect the civilians trapped there. They reaffirmed the need to stop shelling into the ‘no fire zone’ to prevent further civilian casualties. They stressed the importance of a humanitarian pause and of ensuring that adequate supplies of food, water and medicine reach the civilians in the zone. Assistant Secretary Boucher and the other Co-Chair representatives discussed how to best end the futile fighting without further bloodshed.
  • PMK leaves Congress Alliance, Reiterates support for Eelam
    Paataali makkal Katchi (PMK), an ally of ruling Congress government has announced that it is forging a new regional alliance in a blow to the ruling Congress party's attempts to secure a national coalition weeks before the general election.
     
    PMK said it would join Congress opponent the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) in the Lok Sabha election, party officials said.
     
    PMK's move is the latest in a series of blows for Congress. While it is still the election front-runner, Congress has struggled to cement alliances in Bihar and Uttar Pradesh, which together account for 120 seats in parliament.
     
    The main national vote battle is between a coalition led by Congress -- the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) -- and the National Democratic Alliance (NDA), an alliance led by the Bharatiya Janata Party.
     
    Many national polls show that the Congress-led alliance could beat the main opposition grouping led by the BJP, but it could still fall short of a majority in parliament.
     
    A "Third Front" of communist and regional parties is challenging the two main alliances. PM|k’s move in Tamil Nadu could give impetus to the Third Front if the PMK and AIADMK join it in an alliance.
     
    Tamil Nadu, which accounts for 39 of the parliament's 543 seats, was a swing state in the last general election in 2004 and helped the Congress-led coalition gain a majority in parliament.
     
    Eelam only solution
     
    Speaking to reporters after announcing its split with Congress, PMK founder and leader Dr. Ramadoss said Congress has been ignoring the sentiments of seven crore Tamils on the Eelam Tamils issue and his party would press the next Central government to take concrete steps on Sri Lanka which includes stopping all aid, economic and military.

    He also said that the party stands by the belief that a separate nation for Eelam Tamils was the only solution to their problem.
     
    The PMK leader further added that the AIADMK has already made its stand on supporting Lankan Tamils cause clear. The presence of MDMK and the Communist party strengthens the front on working for the Lankan Tamils cause, he added. 
  • LTTE continues attacks on STF in the east
    In the space of one week, Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) launched attacks on Special Task Force (STF) commandos in the eastern district at four separate locations killing 9 STF commandos injuring 13.
     
    According to LTTE officials in Ampaarai, LTTE fighters carried out three separate attacks on Friday March 29 and Saturday March 30.
     
    Liberation Tigers launched the first attack around 10:45 pm on Friday on the STF commandos posted at the road check point located between Urukaamam and Kiththul on Batticaloa-Badulla road in which an STF commando was killed and three seriously injured.

    The second attack took place Saturday around 12:30 pm on the STF mini camp at 78th mile post on Chengkaladi-Badulla road where a time bomb planted by the Tigers exploded killing two STF commandos and seriously wounding one.
     
    The third attack was on the STF sentry post in Karadiyanaaru police division in which three STF commandos were killed and four seriously wounded, Batticaloa district LTTE said.
     
    Meanwhile, two Sri Lanka Army (SLA) home guards lost their legs caught in a booby trap set by the Tigers Saturday around 6:30 am in the 16th village in Ampaarai district, LTTE in Ampaarai said.

    Few days earlier, on Sunday March 22, three STF commandos were killed and five sustained injuries when LTTE commandos launched a surprise attack on an STF mini-camp on Chengkaladi - Badulla Road, according to a news release issued by the LTTE Political division in Batticaloa.

    The mini-camp was located between Koappaaveli and Pullumalai, the Tigers said.
  • Cluster bombs, concentration camps, attacks on civilians and media … Sri Lanka’s lies
    Sri Lanka’s war on the Tamil people has reached an extremely brutal level. Many neutral observers and human rights activists have called it ‘genocide’. While brutal attacks against Tamils have reached a new height, lies spread by the government have also reached a new height. For example, Sri Lanka has been lying on the use of cluster bombs, concentration camps, and attack on food supplies, civilians, and media. The catalogue of lies and disinformation churned out by plethora of ministers and spokespersons of Sri Lanka reminds us the propaganda unleashed by the Dr Joseph Goebbels under the Hitler’s Third Reich.  Sri Lanka has been emboldened to churn out lies after lies because it has thrown out all international media and aid organisations from the war zone and imposed censorship on domestic media through draconian laws and brutal violence. Even ICRC does not have full access to this area. Despite this news blackout, one after the other Sri Lanka’s lies are being exposed everyday.
     
    Since October 2008 there have been reports about the indiscriminate use of cluster bombs and artillery shells by Sri Lankan forces on Tamil population. These are banned weapons under the Convention on Cluster Munitions (CCM) which was signed by 92 countries in Oslo in December 2008.   Sri Lankan ministers and officials have repeatedly denied using cluster munitions despite graphic evidence from the war zone. They claimed that Sri Lanka does not even have cluster munitions and technology. This lie was exposed by Pakistan which supplied these munitions to Sri Lanka. In an interview to the Dawn newspaper in July 2008, Major General Mohammad Farooq, Director General of the Defence Export Promotion Organization, while boasting about Pakistan's defence exports spilled the beans that Sri Lanka has purchased cluster bombs, deep penetration bombs and rockets and Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) from Pakistan. As early as May 2006 the Indian Express reported that Sri Lanka has placed orders with Pakistan for cluster bombs, deep penetration bombs and rockets and UAVs. At the time no one took the report seriously, maybe except the LTTE.
     
    Sri Lanka claims that Tamil civilians who crossed over to government areas from the LTTE controlled areas are sent to ‘welfare villages’. In reality these are nothing but concentration camps. They are surrounded by thick rolls of barbed/razor wire and manned by the army. The inmates are denied free movement outside camps and are not allowed to meet relatives. The fact that these are really concentration camps are not lost on international agencies and media.   For example, after seeing the plight of the so called ‘liberated’ Tamils in the East, this is what Sreeram Chaulia from the Maxwell School of Citizenship in Syracuse, New York, commented (Online Asia Times, 11 September 2008): “With the objective of luring Tamil civilians into "cleared areas" (territory retaken from LTTE control by the state), the government is setting up reception centres in Vavuniya district. These camps are strictly policed and offer very limited freedom of mobility for inmates. Since civilian escapees from Wanni are all suspected of loyalties to the LTTE, the camps are subject to screening and "weeding out" operations by security forces. One informed international aid official likened them to Nazi concentration camps.” Again, in her testimony to the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee (February 2009), Dr Anna Neistat from Human Rights Watch described these camps as ‘defacto internment camps’. She observed: “The perimeters of the sites are secured with coils of barbed wire, sand bags, and machine-gun nests. There is a large military presence inside and around the camps...Upon arrival in Vavuniya, all displaced persons, without exception, are subjected to indefinite confinement in defacto internment camps, which the government calls transit sites, “welfare centres”, or “welfare villages”.”
     
    Recently, some media and embassy officials were taken on a conducted tour to one or two selected camps which are considered the best ones to demonstrate how nicely the helpless Tamils are looked after by the government.  In one just tour, Amos Roberts, reporter for ‘Dateline’, a programme of Australia's Special Broadcasting Service (SBS), could see how terribly frightened these people are to open their mouth to the visiting reporters and he also observed how the camp was filled with soldiers everywhere. A representative of Medicine san Frontiers advised him not to talk to the inmates as that could spell disaster to these helpless people.  When Amos Roberts sought permission to visit and interview the wounded Tamil civilians who have been evacuated by ICRC from the war zone to Trincomalee, Major General Palita Fernando, the military commander in Trincomalee refused permission and when asked why not, he replied: "that's the way we want it, simple answer." It is obvious, if allowed to interview wounded civilians, they would tell the truth that the government has been attacking civilians with cluster bombs and munitions and thousands were killed.
     
    Sri Lanka has presented a plan seeking international funds to create a number of these ‘welfare villages’ (concentration camps) to detain displaced people for at least three years. When objected by international agencies including the UN, the government started saying that Tamils will be sent to their homes within a short period. This is another lie that is proved by the experience of the people in the East and Jaffna. Thousands of people in the East are still languishing in internment camps more than one year after their so called ‘liberation’.  There are over 93,000 permanently displaced persons (for over 19 years) from Jaffna district where their homes were taken over by the army to form High Security Zones (HSZ).  This shows that the government has no intention of sending people back to their own villages.
     
    Often Sri Lanka used embargo on food and medicine to bring Tamils to their knees. During the ceasefire period it closed A9 Highway to Jaffna and stopped food supplies. It followed same strategy and also used artillery shelling and aerial bombings to drive Tamils out of their villages in the East. In September 2008 the government ordered all aid organisations to leave LTTE controlled areas and stopped supplies of food and medicine to over 350, 000 Tamils.  Recently, the government allowed ICRC to carry just a tiny fraction of the supplies needed by a ship to the conflict area. The army fired artillery shells on the ship while it was unloading and blamed it on LTTE. This is a devious ploy to cancel even this tiny volume of food supply. This cheap lie is again exposed by the ICRC. In a statement to BBC (9 March 2009), Carla Haddad, Deputy Head of communications of ICRC, Geneva said: "We have no reason to believe the ship flying the ICRC flag was targeted by shells which were falling around it while trying to unload supplies."
     
    A number of journalists, particularly Tamils, have been killed by Sri Lankan government forces and its paramilitaries. Lasantha Wickrematunge, the editor of Sunday Leader, was killed in broad daylight. His obituary (published as editorial) written by himself anticipating such event clearly accused the government for his death. Recently, Nadesapillai Vithyatharan, the editor of two Tamil news papers - Uthayan and Sudar Oli - was at first abducted by the notorious White Van in broad day light (very few returned alive after being abducted). But the government was forced to declare that he was arrested due to international pressure.  Yet, Jaliya Wickramasuriya, Sri Lanka's Ambassador to the US, had the audacity to argue that the "attacks on journalists may have been perpetrated by "terrorists" seeking to embarrass the government."
     
    Again Sri Lanka has been deliberately and repeatedly lying about the number of Tamil civilians in the war zone. It insists that there are only 70,000 people in the war zone while the ICRC and UN aid agencies have been saying that there are between 200,000 and 250, 000 people in the war zone. It seems that by repeating same lies hundreds of times, Sri Lanka wants to make the international community to believe them as facts and truths. To some extent, it appears to have succeeded in marketing its lies and deceptions.  But now increasingly the international media has started asking probing questions. For example, the international community has willingly accepted Sri Lanka’s absolute lie that it is always ready to find a political solution but the LTTE has been intransigent. They never asked Sri Lanka: ‘what is your peace proposal or political solution?’ In his recent article in The Guardian (17th December 2008), Jonathan Steele nailed this lie and observed: “Ironically, the only constructive proposals made since the crisis started came from the LTTE in 2003. Their suggested Internal Self-Governing Authority is over-ambitious but it has never been matched by a detailed blueprint from the government side. Until the government comes up with a realistic offer, which will have to involve elements of a federation, there will be no cause for celebration and no chance of compromise and peace.” Is this the beginning of the end for the Goebbels of Sri Lanka? Let us hope so.
    Dr Angathevar Baskaran is Senior Lecturer and Researcher at the Middlesex University Business School, London
  • India’s help significant in defeating Tigers - Sri Lanka minister
    Nimal Sripala de Silva, a cabinet minister in Sri Lanka parliament, said that India’s great assistance helped Sri Lanka Army (SLA) to defeat the Liberation Tigers and that the people of Sri Lanka should be grateful to India, while responding to the strong accusation against allowing Indian Medical team into Sri Lanka by Anurakumara Tissanayake, the parliamentary group leader of Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) party, during the proceedings of the House of Representatives when it met Tuesday, March 17, sources in Colombo said.

    Anurakumara Tissanayake pointed out that the Indian medical team in question is really a wing of the Indian Army and that its members will engage in espionage from Pullmoaddai hospital helping the Liberation Tigers.

    Tissanayake had submitted a lengthy report on this issue expressing his strong condemnation and protest against the coming of Indian medical team to Sri Lanka.

    The report was presented in the House with the permission of the Speaker at the end of question time.

    Minister Nimal Sripala de Silva also told the members of the House that the Government of India is providing its co-operation and support for the war against the Liberation Tigers to the Rajapakse government.

    The minister told the House that as no Sri Lankan doctor was willing to treat the SLA soldiers, fifty of them have been forcibly enlisted to serve.

    Therefore no one can protest against the presence of Indian medical team in Sri Lanka, he further added.

    Meanwhile, National Independent Front (NIP) led by Wimal Weerawansa and Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU), the Buddhist Monks party, had expressed their strong opposition to the coming of the Indian Medical team in a press meet held in Colombo last week.
     
    BJP to expose Congress
     
    During the campaign for the Lok Sabha elections, India’s main opposition party, the Bharathya Janatha Party (BJP), will expose the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government’s support for the escalating war in Sri Lanka in which thousands of Tamils have been killed and maimed, according to a senior leader of the party.
     
    Referring to Minister Nimal Sripala de Silva that India’s help significant in defeating LTTE, Tamil Nadu State BJP president L Ganesan said on Wednesday, March 18, said it is proof of the tacit support extended by the UPA government to the Sri Lankan army.
  • Inclusion the way to real peace
    ON May Day in 1993, Sri Lankan president Ranasinghe Premadasa was in the back streets of Colombo, greeting supporters as they streamed into the capital for the day's festivities, when he was killed by a suicide bomb. Had the conventions of diplomacy permitted it, I would probably have been at his side. He had been insistent that I should join him on this occasion.
     
    In the previous year, Premadasa had allowed me to see some of the handiwork of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.
     
    Before the bodies were cleared away, I spoke with some of the shattered survivors of LTTE massacres of simple farming folk in the pitifully poor eastern villages of Palyagodella and Alinchipotana, in one instance crouching with a wild-eyed labourer over the pools of drying blood where his family had had their throats cut.
     
    But neither Premadasa nor his successors were as accommodating when it came to investigating the handiwork of government forces, which has so often been of equal savagery.
     
    By the time of his assassination, however, Premadasa was coming around.
     
    Among other things, he allowed a limited review by a small group of ambassadors (myself included) of the widespread extrajudicial killings and disappearances of Tamils at the hands of government forces.
     
    It is often overlooked that Tamil militarism was, in the first place, spawned by the deliberate demonisation of Tamils (both Hindu and Muslim) in the early years of Sri Lanka's independence from Britain.
     
    The situation took a significant turn for the worse following the failure of Junius Jayawardene's government to promptly intervene in the deliberate slaughter of thousands of innocent Tamils over just a few days in 1983.
     
    In his retirement, an unrepentant Jayawardene explained to me at his residence in Colombo in 1992 that, following a tit-for-tat killing of policemen by Tamil militants, 1983 had been about giving the Tamils a "bloody nose" to "put them in their place".
     
    He scoffed at the notion that the country's Tamils were as Sri Lankan as the Sinhalese. Jayawardene was not alone in this view then, nor is he now.
     
    It is therefore hardly surprising that many Tamils feel it is only the spectre of the Tigers and their ability to strike back that prevents further pogroms against their people.
     
    The answer for many Tamils to the Government's failure to broker a peace has been to flee the country to either the refugee camps of southern India or, for the more fortunate, a new start in other countries.
     
    This is happening in such numbers that they are referred to as the Tamil diaspora.
     
    For those trapped in the north during the current Government offensive, the risk of accepting a "haven" on the Government side must be weighed against the risk of putting themselves in the hands of Government forces.
     
    The essential interest of Sri Lanka's Sinhalese political parties and personalities is still how to exploit the struggle with the Tigers to maintain power in Colombo.
     
    Successive governments have more or less dressed up their intention to negotiate to assuage the feelings of the United Nations and donor countries, including Australia, but not nearly enough to fool any informed observer into believing that the underlying issue of rapprochement between Sinhalese and Tamils is any more on the government's agenda than it was 50 years ago.
     
    There is little hope of an enduring end to Sinhalese victimisation of Sri Lanka's Tamils until Sri Lanka produces the kind of courageous and visionary leadership that can admit the errors of the past and reach out in a sustained way to all Sri Lankans, thus providing a sound basis for drawing all Tamils, including the Tigers, into the political process.
     
    The Sri Lankan government did this with the murderous Communist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) back in the late '80s after its violent uprising had almost brought the country to its knees.
     
    But that, it seems, was different: the JVP was Sinhalese.
     
    Unhappily, the vision required today, free of the deeply embedded political and financial corruption that has plagued Sri Lanka for so long, is nowhere in sight.
     
    Ordinary Sri Lankans, disempowered and cowed through decades of dominance by the business and political elite and effective exclusion from the rule of law, are still easily duped into believing that they will be better off once the Tamils have been crushed.
     
    It is at least doubtful that the LTTE can be completely wiped out by Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa's salaried soldiers, who are largely in it for the money they cannot earn at home.
     
    Government forces should certainly be able to outgun the LTTE in military set pieces, but it is most unlikely that they will ever be able to match them in guerilla warfare.
     
    Having so loudly abandoned the peace process, the Rajapaksa Government is throwing everything into the military fray.
     
    Though this approach is being backed with claims of higher body counts and significant incursions into Tiger territory, the consequence of pushing the military arm of the LTTE to the wall could well be a dramatic upsurge in urban terrorism, of which the recent mosque bombing in Akuressa would only be the beginning.
     
    It is an option for which, after all the years of its existence, the LTTE is no doubt well prepared.
     
    Should infrastructure, transport and even tourism become systematic targets in such a campaign, Sri Lanka could be brought to its knees.
     
    Rajapaksa, or whoever is in power, would then have to think again about a peace process, but this time from a weaker position than the one that applied through much of 2006, when a small group of uniquely qualified Americans and a former Australian high commissioner quietly tried, working with the highest levels of the Sri Lankan Government, to build capacity for statesmanship and progress before peace talks with the LTTE scheduled for Geneva in October of that year.
     
    As it turned out, Sri Lanka's leaders only pretended to listen, and so doomed a country and a people once so full of promise to more mindless death and destruction, the worst of which may yet be to come.
     
    Howard Debenham was Australian high commissioner to Sri Lanka from 1992 to 1994.
  • Global Powers’ experiment with Vanni civilians
    To what extent human beings can survive under extreme conditions was a Nazi research on the ‘dispensable Jews’ of the concentration camps, to find out the levels of extremity the human body and mind can withstand.
     
    Academic and professional circles raise an alarm that the Colombo government and the abetting powers, in experimenting political cum military effectiveness of their local and global order through a no-witness genocidal war, are probably at such a research with the Eezham Tamils.
     
    "Whether a humanitarian catastrophe faced by them is deliberately ignored by the international community and whether the instruments of humanitarian intervention have given up Vanni people for good," ask Dr. J. Sivamanoharan and S. Edmond Reginold, professionals of mental health working in Vanni.

    The professionals of the Psycho Social Co-ordinating Committee of the Vanni Region have come out with a first hand report, Friday, on the alarming mental health conditions of the civilians in the so-called safe zone in Vanni.

    Recently a British parliamentarian said that she had never heard of the need of bunkers in a ‘safe zone’.

    The report of the professionals is a true story of the trauma of a people, who are forced to live day and night in the bunkers, amidst torrents of SLA shelling and hundreds becoming casualty everyday. All forms of religious rituals to the deceased are abandoned, the report said.

    “Many are losing their zest for life and suicidal ideations are widely found”, the report said on the situation, where patients lack medical care and people see their beloved ones pathetically killed in front of their eyes.

    “Children seem to have outgrown their youth state. The games they play have military connotations and this is a very unhealthy symptom”, the report said touching a significant point on the mental condition of children.

    Scores of children are killed everyday in government shelling, witnessed by these children.

    The most dangerous phase of the experiment is the use of terror at a 'safe zone' by a government abetted by powers, in order to imprison the civilians and send them to internment camps for further experiments, said an academic specialized in refugee studies.

    The academic also hinted at the connotations behind India starting a military hospital instead of a civilian one at Pulmoaddai. It shows the angle from which they want to experiment with the civilian issue of Vanni, he said.
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