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 14, 2012

Mervyn and Prabha abducted by the outrageous Govt. backed White van


Tuesday 14 of February 2012

(Lanka-e-News -14.Feb.2012, 7.00PM) When a suspect was being taken back to the prison after his attending court , a group which came in the white Van had abducted the suspect after assaulting the prison officers in broad daylight yesterday noon right in front of the Colombo courts.

The suspect who was so abducted was Chandrapala Mervyn . He had been charged for cannabis (ganja) and drugs dealings and released on bail yesterday . Eye witnesses said there were six members in the group of abductors.

The relatives of the suspect who was abducted have lodged a complaint with the Keselwatte police.
Meanwhile , a businessman from Canal Road , Wellawatte had been abducted by a group that came in the white Van on the 12th evening , when he was standing in front of his house .

The police stated that the abductors in the white Van have telephoned the wife of the abducted businessman in the night and demanded a ransom of Rs. 100 million for his release.

The victim of the abduction is Businessman Ramasamy Prabhakaran alias Majestic Prabha .

What is most significant to note here is , these abductions and killings by the white Van allegedly done with Regime’s patronage had abducted this businessman for ransom in vile ‘Wild Chicago style’, when the American State Additional Secretary Robert Blake was here to discuss issues relating to human rights violations in SL.

It is being questioned by the general public like in the old story of the shepherd boy where he while tending his sheep screamed ‘wolf’ ,always for his own fun and frolic, finally had no one to save him and his sheep when the wolf actually appeared , whether the Govt . which used the white Van to abduct , kill and intimidate its citizens to achieve its own selfish criminal agendas has lost control over the white Van (like the Shepherd boy losing everything when the very ‘wolf’ used by him for idle amusement appeared truly in its 
viciousness )which is now being used by Govt.’s own criminals for demanding ransom as well from law abiding citizens.

Sri Lanka devided after the war, says cabinet minister

BBCSinhala.com


Post war Sri Lanka is divided in to two countries say, Vasudeva Nanayakkara. Cabinet Minister of National Languages and Social Integration.
Senior cabinet minister Vasudeva Nanayakkara
Senior cabinet minister Vasudeva Nanayakkara

Addressing a seminar to demand implementation of the recommendations of the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) the minister said that democratic institutions in the North and the East of the country have become ineffective.
“The war was waged to stop the division of the country. What we have created are two countries instead of one” says the minister.
No democrasy in the North
LLRC hearing evidence in Jaffna“There is a different administrative system in the North where there is no democratic rule. In the East we have democratically elected bodies but they had failed to implement democratic practices”. The Minister argued at the seminar organised by the Peoples Democratic Forum claiming that there is a different type of government in the rest of Sri Lanka.
LLRC hearing evidence in Jaffna


Meanwhile, the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) welcomed US proposals to put pressure on Sri Lanka to implement the LLRC recommendations.
Maria Otero, the most senior US official to visit Sri Lanka since 2005, said she discussed the recommendations made by the LLRC with President Mahinda Rajapaksa on Monday.
US pressure
“We are glad that US are putting pressure on the government”, M. A. Sumandiran, TNA parliamentarian told the BBC Sinhala Service.
US envoy with President Rajapaksa
Maria Otero met president Rajapaksa

“TNA backs a domestic process to implement the LLRC recommendations. We should ask for an international probe only after a failure of that,” says the MP.
“It is a step by step process. It will take time. They took thirty years in Cambodia.”
The US will support efforts to get Sri Lanka to implement a government commission's conclusions in relation to the civil war, Maria Otero, US Under Secretary General of State told journalists in Colombo on Monday.
UN Human Rights Council
“I confirmed the United States will support a resolution in the UN Human Rights Council in March that provides an opportunity for the Government of Sri Lanka to describe what it intends to do to implement the LLRC's recommendations and advance reconciliation, as well as address accountability, human rights and democracy concerns,” added Ms Otero.
Both Tamil Tiger rebels and the army have been accused of abuses during the final phase of the war in 2009.

The litmus test in Sri Lanka

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AHILAN KADIRGAMAR
February 15, 2012
http://www.thehindu.com/multimedia/dynamic/00924/15th_ceylon_map2_jp_924312f.jpgIf President Rajapaksa is serious about a political solution to the Tamil question, he should outline his vision and a timetable for constitutional change.
Soon after meeting with President Mahinda Rajapaksa last month, Indian External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna disclosed to the media, “The President assured me that he stands by his commitment to pursuing the 13th Amendment plus approach.” He also claimed that the “government of Sri Lanka has, on many occasions, conveyed to us its commitment to move towards a political settlement based on the full implementation of the 13th Amendment to the Sri Lankan Constitution, and building on it, so as to achieve meaningful devolution of powers.” In the days that followed, media reports in Sri Lanka and eventually the President himself contradicted this claim. If such contradictions are characteristic of what Sri Lanka claims is its most important bilateral relationship, it should reflect the challenges of any minority party seeking a commitment towards a political solution from the Rajapaksa government.
Divisive colonial policies
The problems requiring this elusive political solution emerged well before the war. It harks back to divisive colonial policies, the rise of Sinhala and Tamil nationalisms and the aggravation of a postcolonial majoritarian democracy. The year after the country gained Independence in 1948, the exploited Up-Country Tamils — indentured labour brought from India to work in the colonial plantations — were disenfranchised, beginning a painful process of repatriation. Sinhala Only language policies, repeated ethnic pogroms culminating in the horrendous July 1983 riots and real and perceived discrimination in employment and education, have constituted the historic grievances of the Tamil community. The ensuing civil war saw mass violence unleashed by both the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam and the state against all communities; the Muslim community suffered ruthless attacks and ethnic cleansing by the LTTE and Sinhala border villages became a buffer for the military and fodder for the LTTE.
It was such devastation during the early years of the war that led to the Indo-Sri Lanka Accord and the attendant 13th Amendment in 1987. However, devolution to the temporarily merged Northern and Eastern Provinces, largely populated by the Tamil and Muslim communities, was soon undermined by the LTTE's refusal to accept the terms of the Accord and the eventual collusion of the Premadasa government. The resulting IPKF debacle prolonged the ferocious war by another two decades. The second Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna uprising opposing the Accord met with the ugly face of the state, pummelling the South in the massacres of tens of thousands. All this to say that despite both the limitations of the 13th Amendment and the process of its conception, if the Accord had been given the chance to work and evolve, we may have avoided decades of destruction.
During the 1990s, solid work by committed intellectuals and politicians contributed to identifying the limitations of the 13th Amendment and approaches to go beyond it, constituting what became a vibrant devolution debate led by visionary Tamil intellectuals such as Neelan Tiruchelvam and Kethesh Loganathan. Tragically, although not surprisingly, given the suicidal and fascist politics of the LTTE, such great Tamil thinkers and leaders were assassinated by the outfit, resulting in decimated Tamil politics facing the post-war era.
1995 and 1997 Proposals
Nevertheless, the debate and the political process produced exceptional work on devolution as evident from the 1995 and 1997 Proposals, the Draft Constitution of 2000, the Majority Report of the Experts Committee of 2006 and the All Party Representative Committee (APRC) Report of 2009. Thus viable solutions towards restructuring the state and power-sharing with all communities have already been conceived by Sri Lankan intellectuals. The issue is not the absence of solutions, rather the short-sightedness of the political leadership. The centre stage given to Sinhala nationalism by the Rajapaksa government led to the de-merger of the North-East through a Supreme Court ruling in 2006, as opposed to resolving the issue through negotiations. Though the APRC process was initiated by the President himself, he has now buried the painfully dialogued and crafted APRC Report and its recommendations.
After the war, the Rajapaksa government's solution has singularly focussed on large-scale infrastructure development assisted by regional powers, including China and India, and by attracting global finance capital. This approach has addressed neither the political problems nor the broader economic concerns seen in the protests and strikes now shaking the South. If anything, such centralised development both undermines devolution and is symptomatic of authoritarianism, and it serves the consolidation of an oligarchy consisting of the President, his family and the elite allied to them.
The increasing international pressure on alleged war crimes during the last phase of the war and the absence of a political settlement led to the appointment of the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) with a limited mandate. The catastrophic end to the war, with devastating consequences for the Tamil community in the North in particular, required a far reaching process of reconciliation. While not addressing accountability for alleged war crimes, the LLRC Report submitted three months ago includes many important recommendations. Specifically, the Commission recommends that the “lessons learnt from the shortcomings in the functioning of the Provincial Councils system be taken into account, in devising an appropriate system of devolution,” and urges the government to have a “structured dialogue with all political parties, and those representing the minorities in particular, based on a proposal containing the Government's own thinking on the form and content of the dialogue process envisaged.” But the government has done little to ensure progress on those recommendations; a timeline of implementation has not been put forward.
Excuses and dithering characterise the President's approach to the issue of devolution with increasing refusal to concede land and police powers already mentioned in the 13th Amendment. Meaningful devolution must include the following: land powers as the historic grievance included alienation of state lands; local police powers to address the security and fears of minorities; and financial powers, necessary to independently develop the local region. Such powers to the war-affected Provinces will give confidence to the Tamil and Muslim minorities that the government intends to empower them and engage them politically.
18th Amendment
For years, the President claimed that the weak parliamentary majority impeded constitutional change, but now he has a two-thirds majority. When it came to consolidating his own power, he quickly pushed through the undemocratic 18th Amendment centralising vast powers and removing the Presidency's two-term limit. The stalling on devolution betrays his Sinhala nationalist leanings, and has set progressive work towards power sharing back by two decades. Despite the limitations of devolution within a unitary Constitution, a solution framed as 13th Amendment Plus — where the shared powers between the Centre and the Provinces are clearly demarcated as devolved powers including land, police and financial powers — will be an important litmus test of the government's stated commitment towards a political solution.
In the months ahead, if the President is serious, he should propose his vision and timeline for constitutional change. Calling on the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) to work with a new Parliamentary Select Committee, while the President is wavering, will only drag the process indefinitely. If inclusivity is the issue, there are already the APRC recommendations agreed to by most of the political parties. The TNA is not bereft of problems. It needs to go through a process of self-criticism for its past relationship with the LTTE, and rethink its Tamil nationalism. It should chart a realistic strategy, given the political weakness of the Tamil community, and neutralise the pro-LTTE sections of the Tamil Diaspora, shifting the political terrain to a viable settlement within a united Sri Lanka. It must work towards a minorities' consensus and engage progressive forces in the Sinhalese community. A welcome recent move is the TNA's dialogue with the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC), with the latter also insisting on land and police powers.
The depressing political trajectory in Colombo signals losing this great post-war opportunity for a political solution. Nevertheless, the devolution debate should be kept alive with the government and the country reminded of the historic problems of the state and minorities' grievances. That is also important for inter-ethnic relations and democracy, given the continued militarisation, worrying ethnic polarisation and increasing authoritarianism. We owe that much to the people who have suffered through Sri Lanka's political tragedy.
(The writer is an activist with the Sri Lanka Democracy Forum and the South Asia Solidarity Initiative.)

Lawyers and relatives protest against court abduction

BBCSinhala.com14 February, 2012 

A group of lawyers protested outside the court complex on Tuesday demanding an end to unresolved abductions.
A silent vigil was held after a suspect was abducted on Monday from the gates of the court complex in Colombo.
"Someone should take responsibility for these abductions. This is a threat to the independence of the judiciary," leading human rights lawyer, Chrishantha Waliamuna told the BBC.
Stop white van abductions
Lawyers holding placards demanded an investigation about Monday's abduction of a suspect by an armed gang that came in a white van.
"If this continues, there will be no guarantee of safety in courts. We may face a scenario where people get abducted during court hearings. There should be firm action to prevent these acts. We can't allow the law of the jungle to prevail in the court complex," said lawyer Gunaratne Wanninayake.
 We can't allow the law of the jungle to prevail in the court complex
 
- protesting lawyers
The suspect Methias Chandrapala was released on bail from remand custody by the court prior to the abduction.
'Find my husband'
"If he is guilty of a crime, he should face court proceedings. I demand the authorities to find my husband," S. Ramani, the wife of the victim told the BBC.
Relatives and supporters of the victim held a separate protest outside the court complex on Tuesday.

UN rights chief raises concern about Sri Lankan to Ban

ReutersUNITED NATIONS | Tue Feb 14, 2012

By Louis Charbonneau

(Reuters) - U.N. human rights chief Navi Pillay said on Monday that she has raised concerns in a letter to Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon about the appointment of a Sri Lankan army general to Ban's senior advisory panel on peacekeeping.
Pillay's worries relate to General Shavendra Silva, currently Sri Lanka's deputy U.N. ambassador, who commanded the Sri Lankan army's 58th Division during the final assault against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in 2009.
The Indian Ocean island nation has come under pressure from Western governments and human right groups to account for war crimes they suspect it committed in the final phase of a 25-year war against LTTE rebels, often called the Tamil Tigers.
After a U.N. General Assembly meeting on Syria, Pillay was asked what she thought about General Silva's appointment to Ban's Senior Advisory Group on Peackeeping.
"It's a matter of concern," she told reporters. "The United Nations has very clear policies on vetting and this is part of the work that my office does.
"We keep a list of individuals who are suspected of committing human rights violations and I have addressed a letter of concern to the secretary-general about this individual," Pillay said.
U.N. officials say that General Silva was appointed to the advisory panel on peacekeeping by the Asia Group, which consists of U.N. delegations from Asia and the Middle East, not by Ban himself. Ban's spokesman did not have an immediate response to a request for a reaction to Pillay's remarks.
A U.N.-sponsored panel said in a report that it found "credible evidence" that the military killed tens of thousands of civilians in the last months of Sri Lanka's war in 2009 and that both sides committed atrocities.
General Silva is named in that report as the commander of one of "six major battalions (that) were active in the final stages of the war."
Sri Lanka says that report simply repeats fabricated charges made by the Tamil Tigers' overseas networks and that its soldiers acted in accordance with international law. The Sri Lankan government has vowed to investigate itself.
The Sri Lankan U.N. mission did not have an immediate response to Pillay's remarks.
Earlier this month a U.S. court dismissed a lawsuit against General Silva filed by people who say they are relatives of victims of Sri Lankan violence against Tamils, citing his diplomatic immunity as Colombo's deputy U.N. envoy.
(Reporting By Louis Charbonneau; Editing by Sandra Maler)

Meeting challenge of anticipated human right resolution in Geneva


article_image
by Jehan Perera

There are indications that the US Government will support a resolution at the forthcoming March session of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva that, among other things, will call on the Sri Lankan government to implement the recommendations of its Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is reported to have sent a letter to the government that acknowledged that the final report of the LLRC had made a number of important and positive recommendations for promoting national reconciliation, such as the withdrawal of armed forces from civilian life in the North and East, the reining in of paramilitaries, strengthening of democratic and civil society institutions, investigation of disappearances and attacks against journalists.Read More...

US commends Lanka for tackling child labour

By Ravi LadduwahettyVisiting United States under Secretary for Civilian Security for Democracy, Human Rights Maria Otera yesterday commended the government on its efforts to curb child labour. It has made great progress, she said.

Making the opening remarks at a joint news conference with US Under Secretary for South and Central Asia Robert Blake at the Hilton Colombo yesterday evening , she said: " Child labor is another area where the Sri Lankan government and NGOs are making a great deal of progress. Today less than two percent of children are engaged in the worst forms of child labor in Sri Lanka. This is a significant achievement, particularly in this region, and we are even more encouraged by the government’s plan to entirely eliminate the worst forms of child labour from the country by 2016.

"During my trip, I had the chance to meet with officials and groups who focus on trafficking in persons, child labor, and human rights. The Government of Sri Lanka has demonstrated improved performance, most notably in the successful prosecution and conviction of traffickers under anti-trafficking legislation, and rejuvenated its interagency task force on this issue. We welcome the opportunity to continue to work with the government to strengthen investigation and prosecution efforts and eradicate the scourge of trafficking in persons."

Ms Otera, senior most U.S. government official to visit Sri Lanka since US Secretary of State Colin Powell in 2005 said that she was pleased to be in Colombo for the first time," she said.  

I’ve had a series of productive meetings with the government of Sri Lanka, as well as civil society, political leaders, and journalists.  President Rajapaksa was kind enough to meet with me and explain his government’s vision to advance reconciliation among Sri Lanka’s ethnic communities since the end of the conflict.  I also had fruitful meetings with Minister of External Affairs Prof. G.L. Peiris and Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa.

"We also appreciate the work of Sri Lanka’s Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) While it has shortcoming on accountability, the Commission addressed a number of crucial areas of concern to Sri Lankans, and makes substantive recommendations on reconciliation, devolution of authority, de-militarization, rule of law, media freedom, disappearances, and human rights violations and abuses that, if implemented, could contribute to genuine reconciliation and strengthening democratic institutions and practices."

 "I discussed the recommendations with the President and he assured me that they were looking to implement the LLRC report in a comprehensive manner.  I urged the Sri Lankan Government to share the details of their plans and begin fulfilling the recommendations called for in the report, and to credibly address outstanding issues of accountability. I confirmed the United States will support a resolution in the UN Human Rights Council in March that provides an opportunity for the Government of Sri Lanka to describe what it intends to do to implement the LLRC’s recommendations and advance reconciliation, as well as address accountability, human rights and democracy concerns.   

 Ultimately, the government should address the needs of all communities in Sri Lanka by creating independent mechanisms that support reconciliation, democracy, and accountability for serious human rights abuses.  It is critical to ensure the rule of law foster lasting reconciliation. We strongly encourage the Government of Sri Lanka to work with international bodies, including the United Nations, to address these matters. An agreement between the Sri Lankan government and the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) on a lasting political settlement is also critical, and we urge both sides to approach negotiations in the spirit of trust, empathy, and good faith to reach a political solution that is in the best interest of all of Sri Lanka’s citizens."

Otera said that it was the sincere hope of the US that the Government and people of Sri Lanka would seize that opportunity to build a democratic, tolerant society that would lead to lasting peace and prosperity, she said.

"We hope that all Sri Lankans see diversity as strength, not a weakness. Sri Lanka has immense potential.  The United States looks forward to continuing to work with you to build on your momentum toward a peaceful, prosperous, and democratic Sri Lanka.

Monday, February 13, 2012

Campus students protest over fuel issue

 times online                   TUESDAY, 14 FEBRUARY 2012 
Students of the Ruhunu University today staged a protest against the fuel price increase.
The students said that they were protesting as the fuel price increase and the consequences of it was a national issue now.
The students demanded that the fuel prices be reduced and that relief be provided as promised by the government.

Fuel ‘hartal’ Island wide: Fishermen abandon fishing to demonstrate on the highway; bus and railway transport crippled -46 arrested








(Lanka-e-News-13.Feb.2012,11.45PM) Following the steep record breaking fuel price hikes, massive protests Island wide are raging in SL. Based on a decision taken by the Private bus owners Association , the private buses were withdrawn from the roads . The transport was completely crippled Island wide today. 46 persons were taken into custody allegedly for attacking buses which plied defying the strike. The police said as follows regarding the arrests.

1. ) 04 persons who attacked the driver and conductor of a private bus in the Narahenpita police division , and 25 others who were unruly were arrested.

2.) Jaela police division – 30 persons who obstructed a private bus at Ekala Madama junction traveling form Kurunegala to Colombo , and were violent were taken into custody by the police.

3.) Matara police division – 06 persons who attacked a CTB bus with stones and caused damage had been arrested. Another 08 persons were arrested for obstructing a bus when it tried to proceed after stopping , and for unruly conduct
The total number of persons arrested therefore was 46.Meanwhile , a strong protest was staged by the Negombo – Chilaw fishermen. These fishermen abandoning their fishing took to the road 
along with their families and children irrespective of age . They claimed that if concessions on fuel are to be given to the bus operators , they should also be similarly granted. They also hooted 
at the eputy Minister who arrived at the scene for discussions. Because they brought the boats to the roads and also burnt tires , the entire highway was blocked , whereby transport on those roads 
were rendered impossible. Owing to the massive demonstrations of the fishermen , who also obstructed the railway lines , the Colombo –Chilaw train was suspended.
The Negombo - Chilaw fishing stalls were also closed. 
The regime chief MaRa who returned to the Island yesterday after his Pakistan tour is scheduled to visit Singapore. 
Herein are pictures which depict the protests that were staged

While Island wide protests are staged against Govt. over fuel price hikes, US announces officially in Colombo it will support Geneva proposals


(Lanka-e-News-13.Feb.2012,11.45PM) Since the Sri Lanka (SL) Govt. had failed to implement the recommendations of the Lessons learnt and reconciliation Commission (LLRC) report of the Presidential Commission , Robert O Blake , the US Additional State Secretary for Central and Asian regional affairs said, they will be supporting the proposals pertaining to SL to be presented at the next session of the UN human rights Council . (UNHRC). Blake stated this at a media discussion held in Colombo this afternoon.

He added that even the LLRC report has not investigated the war crime charges .

Blake is to leave SL tomorrow. The US State Dept. Deputy Secretary for protection of people’s human rights and Democracy, Mario Otero also participated in the media discussions

It is noteworthy that ,while massive protests and demonstrations were being staged Island wide against the govt. for unreasonable increases in fuel prices , the Dep. State Secretary of the US made these comments.

The international community requested the Rajapakse Govt. to investigate the crimes which were committed during the war waged to usher in long term peace in SL. The SL Govt. did not pay heed to this. Subsequently the UN Secretary general’s advisory committee , the Dharusman committee called for evidence and investigated it. The SL Govt. however did not allow that Committee to visit SL in that regard. Later after the Dharusman report was published , the SL Govt. was told to inquire into the evidence therein which are acceptable. The SL Govt. in reply told , as the LLRC has been appointed , it will take action , based on the report furnished by the LLRC .

The international community pointed an accusing finger at the LLRC on the ground that the former Attorney General C R DE Silva who is LLRC chairman is not impartial , and therefore, it is not in keeping with the accepted norms . To substantiate this accusation, the two Commissions appointed by the President where he was the Chairman were cited. One commission dealt with the killing of 5 students in Trincomalee and the other dealt with the killing of 17 relief workers in Mutur . Both these Commissions where he was the member did not reveal the reports of the findings.
In any event , the LLRC report is now revealed. The International community in good faith now instructed the Govt. to implement the recommendations in that report. What Rajapakse Govt. did on the contrary was ,it threw it into the Temple Trees ‘Rajakakuses’ (latrines) and conveniently forgot them .

In the circumstances , proposals in respect of SL are scheduled to be brought before the next UNHRC assembly .

The Rajapakse Govt. is of the view that it can override any international issue with the help of the veto powers

Human skeletons recovered from well in Valikaamam North


தெல்லிப்பளையில் மனித எச்சங்கள் மீட்பு
 
 

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தெல்லிப்பளை கொல்லங்கலட்டி பிள்ளையார் கோவிலுக்கு அருகிலிருந்து மனித எச்சங்கள் இன்று பொலிஸாரினால் மீட்கப்பட்டுள்ளன.
தெல்லிப்பளை கொல்லங்கலட்டி சிந்துவாம்பிட்டி என்ற இடத்தில் உள்ள வீடொன்றிலிருந்தே இவ் எச்சங்கள் இன்று மீட்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.
நேற்று மாலை குறித்த வீட்டின் கிணற்றினைத் துப்புரவு செய்து கொண்டிருந்த பொழுது கிணற்றுக்குள் இருந்து இவ் எச்சங்கள் கண்டுபிடிக்கப்பட்டன.அதனைத் தொடர்ந்து துப்புரவு செய்தவர்களால் தெல்லிப்பளை காவற்துறைக்கு தகவல் வழங்கப்பட்டது.
அதனையடுத்து நேற்றைய தினம் மாலை தெல்லிப்பளைக் காவற்துறையினர் இருவர் சம்பவ இடத்திற்கு வருகை தந்து முதற் கட்ட விசாரணைகளை மேற்கொண்டுள்ளனர். தொடர்ந்து இன்று காலை முறைப்பாடு செய்யப்பட்டது.
இன்று காலை குறித்த இடத்திற்கு வந்த காவற்துறையினர் மற்றும் சட்ட வைத்திய அதிகாரி முன்னிலையில் கிணற்றிலிருந்து இவ் எச்சங்கள் மீட்டெடுக்கப்பட்டன.
இச் சம்பவம் குறித்து தெரிய வருவதாவது, 1992ம் ஆண்டு யுத்தத்தினால் குறித்த கிராம மக்கள் இடம்பெயர்ந்து சென்றுள்ளனர். அவ்வேளையில் குறித்த வீட்டு உரிமையாளர் உட்பட அவரது சகோதரிகள் இருவரும் அங்கேயே தொடர்ந்தும் இருந்துள்ளனர்.  செல்லப்பா இராசரத்தினம்(வயது 75), செல்லப்பா பாலாம்பிகை (வயது80), செல்லத்துரை அன்னலட்சுமி (வயது 70), ஆகிய 3 சகோதரர்களுமே தங்கியிருந்ததாக அயலவர்கள் தெரிவித்தனர்.
பின்னர் அவர்கள் பற்றிய விபரங்கள் எதுவும் உறவினர்களால் அறியப்படவில்லை. 6 மாதங்களுக்கு முன்னரே இப் பகுதி மக்கள் மீளக்குடியேற அனுமதிக்கப்பட்டு தங்கள் வளவுகளை துப்புரவு செய்து வருகின்றனர். அதன்படி குறித்த வீட்டின் உரிமையாளரின் பெறாமகன் லண்டனில் இருந்து யாழ்ப்பாணத்திற்கு வந்துள்ளார்.
அவரினால் குறித்த வீட்டுப்பகுதியும் துப்புரவு பணிகள் மேற்கொள்ளப்பட்டது. அதன் போது மனித எச்சங்கள் கிணற்றிலிருந்து மீட்கப்பட்டுள்ளன. இதனையடுத்து 3பேருடைய மனித எச்சங்களும் இருக்கும் என எதிர்பார்க்கப்பட்ட போதும் ஒருவரது பூரணமான எச்சங்களே மீட்கப்பட்டுள்ளன.
ஏனையவர்களது எலும்புக் கூடுகளும் அப்பகுதியிலேயே இருக்கலாம் என சந்தேகிக்கப்படுவதாக தெரிவிக்கப்படுகின்றது. இவை தற்போது யாழ்.போதனா வைத்தியசாலைக்கு எடுத்துச் செல்லப்பட்டுள்ளன. நீதிமன்ற உத்தரவின் பின்னர் பரிசோதனைகள் மேற்கொள்ளப்படவுள்ளன. மக்கள் மீளக்குடியமர அனுமதிக்கப்பட்டதனைத் தொடர்ந்து குடாநாட்டின் பல பகுதிகளிலும் தொடர்ச்சியாக மனித எச்சங்கள் மீட்கப்பட்டு வருகின்றமை குறிப்பிடத்தக்கது.
குறித்த மனிச்சங்கள் ஆணுடையதா அல்லது பெண்ணுடையதா என்றும் எந்த காலப்பகுத்தியில் குறித்த நபர் மரணமடைந்துள்ளார் என்பதும் மருத்துவபரிசோதனையின் பின்னரே உறுதிப்படித்த முடியுமென வைத்தியசாலை வட்டாரங்கள் தெரிவிக்கின்றன.

Human skeletons recovered from well in Valikaamam North

[TamilNet, Sunday, 12 February 2012, 16:40 GMT]
TamilNetRecently resettled civilians in Kollangk-kaladdi of Valikaamam North in Jaffna have located human skeletons inside a well while clearing it for their use, sources in Valikaamam told TamilNet Sunday. A skull was located. But, the number of the recovered skeletons indicates that some of the victims had been decapitated, before they were dumped into the well, the sources said. It is believed that the victims were civilians abducted by the Sri Lanka Army operated squads and those who went to check their properties inside the SLA occupied territory after year 1992, when the SLA seized the village of Kollang-kaladdi. 

Residents of Kollangkaladdi also said there were three persons from a nearby house reported missing earlier when the area was seized by the SLA. 

After discovering human skeletons in wells and toilet pits in the area, the civil organisations representing the resettling civilians have begun a systematic search for similar graves, civil sources in the area said. 

Allegations have surfaced that the abducted youth from Jaffna peninsula were taken into the so-called High Security Zones and detained by the Sri Lanka Army there till they were tortured and killed. 

The pattern of recovery of skeletons in areas allowed for resettlement, especially inside the buildings used by the SLA as mini-camps and in abandoned wells near the bunds of the SLA in areas recently allowed for resettlement has indicated that such killings have been widespread inside the Hight Security Zone adjacent to the Palaali military base situated in Valikaamam North in Jaffna.

Colombo threatens Tamils in contact with visiting US delegation

TamilNet[TamilNet, Sunday, 12 February 2012, 23:56 GMT]
Some of the eyewitnesses in Vanni, who met the visiting US delegation headed by Stephen J Rapp, the ambassador-at-Large for war crimes at the US State Department, on Thursday and Friday, have been harassed by the occupying Sri Lanka Army in Mullaith-theevu after the US delegation had left the region, sources in Mullaith-theevu told TamilNet Sunday. The SL Army has questioned a parish priest, inviting him to their camp consecutively for three days, and at least five parents who had allegedly complained about their missing sons and daughters have also been questioned by the SLA. While diplomatic circles in Colombo wonder at what the USA is up to in the island, Tamil circles are worried at pre-emption hatching in the establishments of the USA and India. 

In the meantime, sources in Ki'linochchi also reported similar harassments there. 

The visiting US delegation attempted to circumvent the prying eyes of the SL military in their search for witnesses who could testify the use of chemical weapons and cluster bombs. They also gathered details of the youth who were handed over by the parents to the Sri Lanka Army at Vadduvaakal in Mullaiththeevu after the war ended in Vanni on 18 May 2009. 

Following the harassment by the SL military, an embassy official at the US embassy, who is in touch with local media, has blamed the local media as exposing the details of those who met Mr. Stephen Rapp in Vanni. The official had said questions had been raised from the hierarchy in the US department regarding the harassments caused by the SL military.

However, the journalists said there was no direct or indirect information about the people who met the visiting US delegation in their coverage. 

The visiting US delegation had gone to remote places in Mullaiththeevu and Ki'linochchi districts. Since there are military camps all over the Vanni, it is nearly impossible for a foreign visitor to undertake confidential investigations, the sources further said. 

Civil sources in Vanni commented that Stephen Rapp, who visited Vanni was fully aware of where Sinhala colonisation, land grab and demographic changes were being carried out. 

Meanwhile, informed sources in Colombo said that the US government was already in possession of critical evidences that could directly implicate SL Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa in war crime charges. However, the sources also opined that Mr. Gotabhaya was having powerful friends in the US defence establishment and that it remains to be seen whether the evidences collected by the USA would lead to any international investigations on Mr. Gotabhaya and his commanders, who had committed war crimes and crimes against humanity in the final phases of the war.

Sunila Abeyasekera: No clarity on what is on offer for the Tamil minority

Sunila Abeyasekera, the well-known human rights activist discusses with Newsclick the situation in Sri Lanka after the defeat of the Tamil Tigers. She discusses that for a lasting peace in Sri Lanka, the rights of the minorities -- human rights, linguistic rights, cultural rights -- need to be guaranteed and protected. This is far from the case right now with atrocities, disappearances and other violations still continuing.

US to support UN body’s resolution asking Sri Lanka to implement recommendations on abuses


By Associated Press, Updated: Monday, February 13,

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka — The United States will support a U.N. human rights council resolution asking Sri Lanka to implement recommendations its commission made on the island nation’s civil war, an American diplomat said Monday.
The resolution would let Sri Lanka explain how it intends to advance ethnic reconciliation and accountability, said Maria Otero, under secretary of state for civilian security, democracy, and human rights, on a visit to the country.
Sri Lanka appointed a commission to investigate possible human rights violations after a 2010 report written for the United Nations found allegations were credible and warranted a full investigation.
The Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission cleared Sri Lanka’s military of allegations it deliberately targeted civilians and deprived them of food and medicine as a tactic of war. It did find that some violations by individual soldiers needed further investigation.
Sri Lanka’s report also said the Tamil Tiger rebels routinely violated international humanitarian law. The U.N. report found abuse allegations credible on both sides, particularly in the final deadly months of the quarter-century war that ended in May 2009.
Otero commended the commission report but said “it has shortcomings on accountability.”
“I urged the Sri Lankan government to share the details of their plans and begin fulfilling the recommendations called in the report and to credibly address outstanding issues of accountability,” she said.
President Mahinda Rajapaksa assured American diplomats the commission report would be implemented “in a comprehensive manner,” Otero said.
If Sri Lanka’s own efforts have shortcomings, pressure will grow for an international investigation, said Robert O. Blake, the U.S. assistant secretary of state for South and Central Asian affairs.
Efforts are being made to bring a U.N. resolution before the Human Rights Council at its meeting starting Feb. 27 in Geneva. The discussions about it are ongoing.
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