Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Tuesday, February 26, 2013


Did Chagi Gallage leak the photographs?

Tuesday, 26 February 2013
There are doubts whether the photographs of the killing of LTTE leader Velupillai Prabhakaran’s 12 year old son, Balachandran had reached the Tamil Diaspora through Major General Chagi Gallage’s lover who is an Indian journalist, sources from the army said.

Sources say that Gallage, who during the period of the war was a brigadier playing a key role in the battle front had had in his possession a Sony digital camera during the period of May 15th to the 20th.
Technical information has revealed that most of the photographs that have been revealed so far by the Tamil Diaspora had been taken from a Sony digital camera.
Army personnel say that Gallage has in his possessions photographs of the killings of LTTE leaders carried out by other senior army personnel at the time and that Brigadier Gallage had met his Indian journalist lover when she was reporting from the frontlines.
Gallage had been a frequent visitor to this Indian journalist’s residence in Bambalapitiya, Colombo 4. The army officer who gave us the information said it is believed that the Tamil Diaspora had used this Indian journalist as a “Mata Hari.”

Sri Lanka Opposes UN Screening of Critical Film


By FRANK JORDANS Associated Press
BERLIN February 25, 2013 (AP)
ABCNews.comSri Lankan diplomats are working to block a British-made documentary about the Asian country's civil war from being shown on the sidelines of a United Nations human rights meeting this week, arguing that it is part of a concerted campaign by the defeated Tamil Tiger rebels to destabilize the peace.
In a letter obtained Monday by The Associated Press the island nation's ambassador to the U.N. in Geneva said the film contained a narrative that was "discredited, uncorroborated and unsubstantiated."
The letter sent Sunday by Sri Lankan ambassador Ravinatha Aryasinha to the head of the U.N. Human Rights Council, warns that the global body could be violating its own rules if the film is screened March 1 in Geneva at a meeting hosted by rights groups.
The 90-minute documentary, titled "No Fire Zone: The Killing Fields of Sri Lanka," alleges government troops and Tamil Tiber rebels engaged in war crimes during the final stages of the conflict in 2009.
The film shows interviews with eyewitnesses and original footage of alleged atrocities against civilians including summary execution, sexual violence and torture. Its backers include the non-profit Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting and Britain's Channel 4 television, which aired two previous documentaries on the Sri Lanka's civil war.

"The timing and the venue of this screening clearly demonstrates that it is aimed at influencing the debate in the council on Sri Lanka," Aryasinha said in the letter, citing the two previous films that were also shown during meetings of the Geneva-based rights body.
He said the film contained "morphed and diabolical" material aimed at undermining the process of reconciliation between Tamils and the nation's ethnic Sinhalese majority.
The film's director Callum Macrae acknowledged that the documentary's release had been timed to coincide with one of the council's three regular annual meetings, but denied that it distorted the facts.
"We believe that our film contains very important evidence about the terrible events in the last few months of this war and we believe we have a duty to make that evidence available to the diplomats and country missions at the U.N. Human Rights Council who must make important decisions about how to ensure accountability and justice in Sri Lanka," Macrae said.
Earlier this month the U.N.'s top human rights official faulted Sri Lanka for failing to properly investigate reports of atrocities during the war and said government opponents continue to be killed and abducted.
The United States has said it will introduce a resolution at the meeting urging a full accounting of what happened at the end of the war. A U.N. report says tens of thousands of civilians were killed in the final five months of the fighting.
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Sri Lanka ambassador's letter: http://db.tt/PdRoYQlN