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

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Sri Lanka 'hit by rise in abductions'

BBC

Sri Lanka 'hit by rise in abductions'

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Sri Lanka's civil war may have ended three years ago, but the repercussions of that conflict are still being felt.
There are regular accounts of Human Rights violations and, more recently, there has been a rise in abductions and disappearances.
The UN Human Rights Council is due to discuss a US resolution asking Sri Lanka to explain how it will ensure justice and reconciliation for its people.
From Colombo, the BBC's Charles Haviland reports.

Channel 4 claims Sri Lanka footage “authentic”


 Tuesday, 13 March 2012


Footage is part of documentary Sri Lanka's Killing Fields: War Crimes Unpunished

Britain's Channel 4 on Tuesday insisted in comments to The Hindu that its footage purporting to show that the slain LTTE chief Velupillai Prabakaran's 12-year-old unarmed son Balachandran Prabakaran was “brutally executed” by Sri Lankan forces in May 2009 even as he was preparing to surrender was “authentic”.
The footage is part of a documentary, Sri Lanka's Killing Fields: War Crimes Unpunished, to be screened on Wednesday.

The Sri Lankan government has questioned its authenticity, calling it “concocted”, and protested to Channel 4.

However, Callum McCrae, director of the documentary, told The Hindu that the footage of Balachandran's bullet-ridden body lying besides his “slaughtered bodyguards” had been examined by a “respected forensic pathologist”, Professor Derrick Pounder. Channel 4, he said, had also obtained “a series of high-resolution stills of the scene” which had also been examined by Professor Pounder.

“Professor Pounder believes he has identified first of the shots to be fired at the boy. It is possible, he suggests, that the boy may have been made to watch the execution of his bound and blindfolded guards before the gun was turned on him,” he said, claiming that forensic analysis “suggested” that he was shot at point-blank range.

Mr. McCrae said the Channel 4 had “seen” a leaked legal sworn testimony by a senior Sri Lankan official claiming that Balachandran was executed by government soldiers as he was being escorted to surrender.

“He had been seen with five escorts [going] to surrender. I got to know at a later stage that they [security forces] found out that he was Prabhakaran's son,” the leaked document reportedly says.

Mr. McCrae said: “We've examined the document and found it to be genuine. It is a chilling new evidence of Sri Lankan security forces' systematic policy of executing many surrendering or captured LTTE fighters, even if they were children.”

He said the footage dating from May 18, 2009 appeared to have been shot as a “grotesque trophy video by Sri Lankan forces”. It shows a 12-year-old boy lying on the ground — stripped to the waist and with “five neat bullet holes in his chest”. Beside him lie the bodies of five men, believed to be his bodyguards. There are strips of cloth on the ground which, the film claims, indicated that they were tied and blindfolded before they were shot.

“The blindfold of Balachandran appeared to have been removed before he was shot,” Mr. McCrae said.

The 50-minute film purports to show “new video evidence of war crimes” including contemporaneous documents, eye-witness accounts, and stills.

“It investigates who was responsible — the results point to the highest levels of the Sri Lankan government and complicity at the top of the army. It forensically examines four specific cases. The cases are: the deliberate heavy shelling of civilians and a hospital in the ‘No Fire Zone'; the strategic denial of food and medicine to hundreds and thousands of trapped civilians … and the systematic execution of naked and bound LTTE prisoners,” Mr. McCrae said.

In a statement, the Global Tamil Forum sought India's intervention.

“We want Delhi to be sensitive to feelings of the Tamils and support the U.S.-led resolution at the United Nations Human Rights Commission in Geneva India must stand for justice now,” said its spokesman Suren Surendiran.

Sri Lankan ghosts haunt India

Asia Time Online - Daily News
By M K Bhadrakumar 
Deep-rooted contradictions are surging to the surface in India's Sri Lanka policy. 
Sri Lankan ghosts haunt India

New Delhi faces a dilemma as a resolution condemning crimes allegedly committed by the Sri Lankan military during its destruction of the Tamil Tigers comes up for a vote in the UN Human Rights Commission. Good relations with Colombo are essential as China plays a greater role, but other issues are at stake - not least India's international prestige and relations with its own Tamil population. - M K Bhadrakumar (Mar 14, '12)
Full Story>>>

SM Krishna's statement on Lanka situation

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Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Sri Lanka film sparks Indian parliament debate

Tuesday 13 March 2012
India's parliament erupted in uproar today when opposition MPs challenged the government's reluctance to confront Sri Lanka over allegations of war crimes, brought to light by a Channel 4 film.
New evidence of war crimes will be aired on a Channel 4 documentary tomorrow night, which includes chilling video evidence of five men and a child who have been executed.
A UN resolution is currently being debated which calls on Sri Lanka to further investigate allegations and report back to the UN.
Callum Macrae, director of the documentary, Sri Lanka's Killing Fields - War Crimes Unpunished, told Channel 4 News: "India has avoided taking a decision on the UN resolution.
"The uproar today came mostly from opposition MPs in the huge Tamil south of India, and they are demanding that India take a clear stand in support of the UN resolution."
Sri Lanka's Killing Fields - War Crimes Unpunished, will be aired on Channel 4 tomorrow night at 10.55pm.

Sri Lanka's Killing Fields

uk 12/03/2012
WARNING: THIS BLOG CONTAINS GRAPHIC IMAGES WHICH SOME READERS MAY FIND DISTURBING 


The boy is naked from the waist up and lying on the ground. He has five neat little bullet holes in his chest. Beside him lie five men, also all dead, blood spilling from their gunshot wounds.
The camera which is filming this scene drifts unsteadily over the bodies - and then back towards the corpse of the boy.
The boy's name is Balakandran Prabhakaran, and he is the 12-year-old son of the Tamil Tiger leader Velupillai Prabhakaran. It is May 2009 and we are in the final few hours of the brutal 26-year-old civil war between government forces and the secessionist rebels of the Tamil Tigers, (LTTE).
These few moments of video footage - which we will be revealing for the first time in our new film,Sri Lanka's Killing Fields: War Crimes Unpunished, to be broadcast at 10.55 this Wednesday on Channel 4 in the UK - represent more than just a record of a grotesque individual crime. They represent the latest in a mounting catalogue of evidence of war crimes and crimes against humanity; evidence which points - ever more firmly - to the highest levels of the Sri Lankan government. Full Story>>>

Sri Lanka's sinister white van abductions

BBC 13 March 2012
Ramasamy Prabagaran's wife and daughter have had no news of his fate
Ramasamy Prabagaran's wife, Shiromani, and daughterAlmost three years after the end of the civil war, Sri Lanka is still dogged by allegations of human rights violations. Amid fresh moves in the UN's Human Rights Council to hold Sri Lanka to account, the BBC's Charles Haviland in Colombo reports on a rise in sinister abductions by anonymous squads in white vans.

At a small shrine in her home, Shiromani lights a candle and rings a bell, offering prayers to the Hindu deities. She has few consolations now.
Her life has been a nightmare since her husband, Ramasamy Prabagaran, a Tamil businessman, was snatched by eight men outside their front door last month, in front of Shiromani and their three-year-old daughter, and taken away in a white van.
"He was screaming, calling for help, hanging on to the gate," Shiromani said tearfully.
"There were people and vehicles in the street but no-one came to help as they had T56 guns and pistols. They pushed me down. I pleaded: 'Sir, don't do anything'."
But the vehicle disappeared and she was unable to follow in her own car.
Lalith at a demonstrationMr Prabagaran was abducted shortly before his case accusing the police of torture was due to be heard. He had been held for two-and-a-half years by them and, he claimed, badly tortured before being released without charge.
Unidentified bodies

Human rights campaigners say there were 32 unexplained abductions between last October and this February, mostly in Colombo or northern Sri Lanka, the victims a mix of Sinhala, Tamil and Muslim.

In addition, 10 mostly unidentified bodies were found in February alone. It's not clear how many of these, if any, are linked to the disappearances - but their discovery has added to a heightened sense of unease here.
Of the kidnappings that were witnessed, most were said to have taken place in white vans - which for years have been the vehicle of shadowy gangs behind enforced disappearances.
One victim was seized right outside the Colombo law courts - snatched from prison guards bringing him for a bail application. Five of the 32 escaped but seven bodies have been found, including a woman in her 60s. The other 20 have simply vanished.
The witnessed disappearances include the case of two young activists, Lalith Weeraraj - half Sinhala and half Tamil - and a Tamil, Kugan Muruganathan. They spent 2011 organising a number of demonstrations, bringing to Colombo people from the former war zone whose family members disappeared as the war ended - mostly, they claim, at the hands of the security forces.

Start Quote

In a sinister development in December, Lalith and Kugan themselves vanished in northern Sri Lanka, seemingly abducted as they prepared another demonstration.
Death squads?
All sorts of people are disappearing, but many of them appear to have been at loggerheads with the authorities.
As well as human rights workers and ordinary businessmen, those who have disappeared include some accused of being part of organised crime networks or the so-called "underworld".
Campaigners are privately pointing the finger at pro-government forces and security personnel. But the government and security forces deny being responsible for disappearances.
In fact the police spokesman, Superintendent Ajith Rohana, says special police teams have been deployed to investigate them.
"There are abductions. It happens. But generally we are conducting investigations into the matter," he told me.
I put it to him that, in effect, death squads are operating in Sri Lanka despite the end of the war.
"No. Not at all," he responded.
"We don't have them. We totally deny that allegation. We don't have any type of squads like that."
Meanwhile, the disappearances continue. At least one more person, a Colombo restaurateur, disappeared this week.
Mr Prabagaran was a successful businessman with an electronics business based in a well-known Colombo mall, Majestic City.
'Law of the jungle'
One of the few parliamentarians who regularly speaks out on human rights issues is Jayalath Jayawardana of the opposition United National Party.
"The human rights situation in Sri Lanka is deteriorating day by day and there is no rule of law in this country," he told me at his office in Colombo.
"Jungle law is prevailing... Without the protection or blessings of the government in power or the security forces these type of things cannot take place," he said.
And recent days have seen some unexpectedly revealing remarks from within the government.
An unnamed senior police officer in Colombo told a Sinhala-language newspaper that, as a precaution against possible street protests, "we have arranged to bring tear gas, and we have plenty of white vans in Sri Lanka".
And a cabinet minister, Vasudeva Nanayakkara, told the same paper: "The government should answer for this [missing people]. They can't say we don't know about it."
He said the military was getting excessively involved in civil affairs, stopping the country from being democratic and inviting international criticism.
Unusually, last Saturday a man publicly said he had foiled an attempt to abduct him - just weeks after his own brother disappeared.
With the help of a crowd the intended victim, the mayor of a Colombo suburb, Ravindra Udayashantha, confronted the would-be abductors who were in a white van. They were soldiers.
The military denied plans to kidnap anyone.
Whatever the facts behind that incident, the rule of law is being flouted in Sri Lanka and disappearances are continuing.

Sri Lanka's point unlikely to find takers in U.N.

Return to frontpage March 14, 2012
R. K. RADHAKRISHNAN

Sri Lanka's argument at the United Nations Human Rights Council is unlikely to win it many friends since it insists that for the purpose of fixing accountability, the clock started ticking only on December 16, 2011 — the day a committee that probed the root causes of the ethnic problem submitted its report to Parliament.
Sri Lankan forces had overwhelmed the Tamil Tigers on May 19, 2009.
Sri Lanka says following the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Committee's report, three committees were set up to oversee the implementation of the recommendations — the subcommittee, the Cabinet committee, and a court of inquiry by the Army. Hence, it questions the need for international pressure .

Statement by ICJ at the UN Human Rights Council March 13, 2012

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United Nations Human Rights Council 19th Regular Session, 27 February- 23 March 2012 Agenda Item 4
Sri Lanka: ICJ Oral Intervention in the General Debate under Item 4 Concerning Human Rights Situations that Require the Council's Attention
13 March 2012
Madam President,
The International Commission of Jurists (ICJ) welcomes the initiative of the United States of America to introduce a draft resolution on promoting reconciliation and accountability in Sri Lanka. The time for assurances, commitments, plans and intentions has long passed. The time now is for action by the Government of Sri Lanka, and time for this Council to take responsibility in the face of a Government that is clearly unwilling to comply with its international obligations to undertake prompt, independent and effective investigations into serious and credible allegations of gross violations of international. human rights law and serious violations of international humanitarian law, including torture, unlawful killings and other crimes under international law.
The key to this initiative must be to treat it as a first step. The Council must remain actively seized of the matter to ensure action, not just words. It is almost three years now since President Rajapaksa undertook to ensure accountability for violations of international humanitarian law and human rights. The Government of Sri Lanka has a long history – since 1977- of using national commissions of inquiry as a means of circumventing the criminal justice system and of not implementing commission of inquiry recommendations. This is compounded by the very recent examination of Sri Lanka by the Committee Against Torture, where the Committee referred to information from the Government of Sri Lanka that over 100 police and intelligence personnel had been indicted or were being investigated on allegations of torture. It transpires, however, that there have been only four convictions under Sri Lanka's Convention Against Torture Act since its inception in 1994.
It is therefore critical that this initiative receive wide support by Council members, and that it be treated as a first step. The credibility of the Human Rights Council depends on this. Words must be translated into action.
I thank you.
Statement delivered by: Mr. Alex Conte, ICJ Representative to the United Nations

Published on: 03/13/12 11:45

Lanka minister for boycott of US brand names

Zeenews 

Lanka minister for boycott of US brand namesColombo: Sri Lankans should boycott American products in protest against the US sponsored resolution against Sri Lanka at the UN Human Rights Council, a government minister said on Tuesday. 

"I will stop using my gmail account. Let us boycott Pepsi, Coca Cola, Google and McDonalds", Wimal Weerawansa, the Minister of Housing and Construction said, addressing an anti-US demonstration here.
Weerawansa's National Freedom Front is a constituent party of the ruling coalition of President Mahinda Rajapaksa. 

"This is an US-LTTE resolution", Weerawansa charged adding that the ulterior motive was to haul Rajapaksa and the Sri Lankan military leaders before the International Criminal Court (ICC). 

"There will be representatives from five countries coming to Sri Lanka if the resolution gets passed at the UNHRC", Weerawansa said. That would be the first step to charge Sri Lankan President with war crimes, he added. 

The US resolution aimed at committing Colombo to implement its own Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) recommendations is being branded as interference in Sri Lanka's sovereignty. 
The LLRC was cited as Colombo's answer to international calls for accountability over alleged rights abuses that took place during the final phase of the military campaign against the LTTE, who fought to set up a separate homeland for the Tamil minority. 
PTI

Sri Lanka’s shameful record on detention without trial



Prisoners have been held for extended periods without charge at Welikada Prison
Prisoners have been held for extended periods without charge at Welikada Prison
© Private

Hundreds of people languish in arbitrary, illegal and often incommunicado detention in Sri Lanka, vulnerable to torture and extrajudicial execution, despite the end of the country’s long conflict, Amnesty International said in a new report.

Locked away: Sri Lanka’s security detainees reveals that arbitrary and illegal detention and enforced disappearances remain routine in Sri Lanka, where human rights abuses of all types go uninvestigated and unpunished.

Counter-terrorism legislation allows authorities to arrest people without evidence and to hold them without charge or trial for extended periods. For years, the Sri Lankan government justified this legislation as necessary for combating the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

Statement on the human rights situation in Sri Lanka at the Human Rights Council

 MARCH 2, 2012
Oral statement during the Interactive Dialogue with the High Commissioner



In her statement,the High Commissioner noted that the report of the Sri Lanka Lessons Learned and Reconciliation Commission falls short of the comprehensive accountability process recommended by the Secretary-General's Panel of Experts and encouraged the Council to consider the matter.
Minister Mahinda Samarasinghe, addressing the 19th session of the HRC on February 27, recited a laundry list of steps the government of Sri Lanka says it is taking to address accountability and reconciliation. What he failed to mention was that many of these measures were set up in haste on the eve of a possible resolution on Sri Lanka at the Council.  As such, they represent little more than cosmetic gestures intended to avoid international action to promote accountability in the country.  The recently announced army court of inquiry, for instance, had its members picked by Gen. Jagath Jayasuriya, head of security forces in the conflict’s main battle zone.  An inquiry appointed by the commander who oversaw and was a colleague of senior officers who might themselves have been implicated in serious abuses cannot possibly be expected to be an independent and impartial finder of fact.  Full Story>>>

No evidence of war crimes found so far: Sri Lankan army



2012-03-13  COLOMBO, March 13 (Xinhua) -- An army inquiry into alleged human rights abuses by Sri Lankan troops during the final stages of the war against Tamil Tiger rebels has so far found no evidence to back such claims, the Sri Lankan army said in a statement posted on its official website on Tuesday.
Army Commander Lieutenant General Jagath Jayasuriya is quoted as saying that false allegations are being leveled against the army and the Sri Lankan government because some people are not prepared to admit defeat of terrorism in Sri Lanka.
The Sri Lankan military defeated the Tamil Tigers in May 2009 but later faced allegations of killing surrendering rebels and also civilians in an attempt to end the war.   More

A SMALL MATTER OF MURDER

The Global Mail 

The government released photograph of the dead Tamil Tiger leader Velupillai Prabhakaran, May 20, 2009.


The battlefield execution of a 12-year-old boy is fresh evidence of war crimes. Gordon Weiss was close to the drama as UN spokesperson in Sri Lanka.  
Celebrating the military victory over the Tamil Tigers, May 19, 2009. IN death, the boy’s face is a picture of youthful repose, lips lazily agape as though sleeping. But five neat bullet holes in his bare chest prove otherwise. One puncture is skirted by what looks like a bruise, “speckling from propellant tattooing,” an indication, according to a forensic pathologist, that his killer fired from a distance of a few feet. 
As the United States reels this week from the consequences of a soldier’s rogue killing of nine Afghan children, it is worth considering the government-sanctioned murder of young Balachandran. Not sanctioned by the US government of course, but by the government of Sri Lanka, which for almost three years has bristled at suggestions that it acted 
A new documentary due to air this Wednesday on Britain’s Channel 4 presents overwhelming new evidence of war crimes. 
illegally when wiping out the guerrilla Tamil Tigers in May 2009. A new documentary, Sri Lanka's Killing Fields: War Crimes Unpunished, due to air this Wednesday on Britain’s Channel 4 presents overwhelming new evidence of war crimes.

 While the killing of civilians has been notably well-documented in Afghanistan, and is under intense scrutiny in Syria, the contrary was true in Sri Lanka in 2008 and 2009. There, in the final stages of a civil war between the minority Tamils and the majority Sinhalese, the Sri Lankan army trapped 330,000 civilians



Supplied photograph of the body of Balachandran Prabhakaran the 12 year old son of guerilla leader Velupillai Prabhakaran.
and a small number of Tamil Tiger (LTTE) fighters. It then pounded them with artillery fire, starvation and, compelling new evidence suggests, the summary execution of fighters and civilians. There was no independent reporting of events.
The murder of Balachandran is more
The five men were trussed and blindfolded, and shot while the boy watched. He was then neatly executed… 
than just nasty. It is a loose thread in a shabby tapestry of lies woven for years by the government of Sri Lanka and its proxies as it has denied all wrongdoing. The video sequence suggests that the son of guerilla leader Velupillai Prabhakaran was captured with his 
An Australian engineer, Peter Mackay, provides eyewitness testimony of other killings of civilians. 
bodyguards on May 18, 2009, the final day of battle. The five men were trussed and blindfolded, and shot while the boy watched. He was then neatly executed, a final few bullets pumped into him as he lay on the ground. 
But as well as Balachandran’s murder, there is another sequence which I was shown in secrecy many months ago by a source. A frightened man in civilian clothes is being questioned by Sri Lankan army officers in a room. He is then filmed inside an armoured personnel carrier, changing into fresh military fatigues. He is driven to a place of execution. The 
corpse of the LTTE commander known as Colonel Ramesh is filmed on a pile of rubble, his brains oozing from the death wound. His body is then set alight.
The killing of Ramesh is not especially terrible so far as wars go. But it is more evidence of war crimes, evidence that the
The media review system is meant to redress legitimate claims of bias, not create onerous conditions for fair reporting on issues of vital public interest. 
government of Sri Lanka decries as trickery, deception and a foreign conspiracy to besmirch a victory they describe to this day as a “humanitarian operation”. A Channel 4 documentarylast year showed a “trophy” video shot by 
The international community, and Australian politicians, were being duped by the government’s blanket denial of any wrongdoing. 
Sri Lankan soldiers of the execution of prisoners and the apparent sexual violation of captured women and the defiling of bodies. The film, called Sri Lanka’s Killing Fields, was dismissed by Sri Lanka’s government as “a fake”. So who is duping whom?
In the new documentary, an Australian engineer, Peter Mackay, provides eyewitness testimony of other killings of civilians, allegedly by the Sri Lankan military. He says that the Sri Lankan army deliberately targeted thousands of Tamil civilians who had been drawn to an area declared a “no fire zone” by the
government of Sri Lanka. Mackay knows that at least dozens were killed, because he was there, trapped with a United Nations food convoy inside the siege zone. I describe the fate of UN Convoy Eleven in my book.
In March 2011, a UN inquiry found widespread credible evidence contradicting the Sri Lankan government line. Right now, the government of Sri Lanka is effectively on trial before a jury of its peers at the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva. Four dozen Sri Lankan ministers and officials are trying to fight off a resolution that questions the version of events produced by their government’s own inquiry. However it’s not just the government of Sri Lanka that’s on trial. It’s the credibility of a system of laws and covenants meant to restrain governments from doing whatever they like during wars.
It’s now a given that the government’s denials have stretched all credibility to the point of farce. But let’s assume, as they argue, that any honest reckoning will torpedo alleged government efforts to reconcile Tamils with Sinhalese. In July 2011, former Sri Lankan President Chandrika Kumaratunga, who said that her own children were embarrassed to call themselves Sri Lankans after watching last year’s Channel 4 documentary, said that the current government’s “winner takes all” policy is driving minorities from Sri Lanka, a nation now “terribly divided”. The word ‘reconciliation’ tumbles too easily from the mouths of those officials now in Geneva.
The reason the events of 2008 and 2009 are poorly understood is because the battlefield was controlled entirely by the government of Sri Lanka. Just how
dangerous it was to report from Sri Lanka’s war was evident from the eye patch of Marie Colvin, the American journalist recently killed in Syria. She lost an eye reporting from Sri Lanka. While foreign journalists were turned back at immigration or tightly controlled in the final war, courageous Sri Lankan journalists were intimidated, beaten or killed by government hit squads.
After last year’s Channel 4 documentary, Sri Lankans mobbed the UK’s media regulatory body with complaints of bias. So too in Australia, when the ABC TV program Foreign Correspondent, which questioned the Sri Lankan government’s squeaky clean version of the war, was bogged down by a year-long inquiry following complaints by Sri Lankans that the national broadcaster was biased. As in the UK, the complaints here were dismissed. The review system is meant to
redress legitimate claims of bias, not create onerous conditions for fair reporting on issues of vital public interest.
I left the UN in December 2009 to write an account of the war which questioned the government’s claims of a “bloodless victory” and its compliance with the laws of war. Since February 2010, I have suggested in numerous interviews (including last year’s Channel 4 documentary and a number of ABC programs) that the international community, and Australian politicians, were being duped by the government’s blanket denial of any wrongdoing. What will they say now of the body of Balachandran?
I went to Sri Lanka as a supporter of the Sri Lankan state’s right to wrest back control of its territory and people from a
guerrilla group that had sold its soul. The Tamil Tigers, under its leader Velupillai Prabhakaran, had bombed, terrorized and assassinated all varieties of Sri Lankans, including huge numbers of Tamils. I left with that belief intact, but questioning the right of a government to do whatever it liked with its people. As we watch the US deal with its rogue uniformed murderer, and the international community deal with the rogue Syrian regime, watch how the UN deals with rogue Sri Lankan accountability.
Gordon Weiss took part in last year’s Channel 4 documentary Sri Lanka’s Killing Fields, and is the author of The Cage: The Fight for Sri Lanka and the last days of the Tamil Tigers. Gordon was also UN spokesperson in Sri Lanka for the final three years of the war.