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

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Namini Wijedasa
Colombo Telegraphhave missed my vocation in life. I should have been a treasure hunter.
I fault my parents for this. They never told me it would be so easy, or so painlessly lucrative. All you need is a good archaeological site (and we’ve plenty of those), some basic implements – and a backhoe. These are large, heavy and conspicuous but easily available. As an added advantage, the police don’t see them. Everyone else does, just not the police.
It used to be difficult to get a backhoe in this country because there were so few of them. But they were recently imported in their dozens for vital rehabilitation activity such as road building. Some countries also donated big batches of backhoes to Sri Lanka. And of what use is road building if it doesn’t involve a little treasure hunting on the side, eh?
Records      Read More

Sri Lanka president rejects U.S. calls to close army bases


Sat May 19, 2012 

Reuters(Reuters) - Sri Lanka's President Mahinda Rajapaksa rejected calls from the United States to close army bases in a former war zone as he celebrated the third anniversary on Saturday of the military's victory over the Tamil Tiger rebels.

Fighter jets flew over Colombo and thousands of soldiers paraded in the streets flanked by tanks to mark the 2009 end to the 25-year civil war, a day after U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton urged Sri Lanka's foreign minister to demilitarize the north of the country and protect human rights.

Rajapaksa said reducing the military camps in the former war zone would be a risk to national security.

"There are many who shout that the security forces camps in these areas should be removed. They ask us why they are not removed," he said, pointing out the north was under civilian, not military rule.

"We must ask if we are in a position to remove the armed forces camps in the north and reduce our attention to national security. That is not possible."

Clinton met Sri Lanka's Foreign Minister G.L. Peiris in Washington on Friday. She stressed the importance of demilitarizing the north and of protecting human rights, including press freedoms, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland told reporters at a briefing.

Sri Lanka says it is implementing the recommendations of a reconciliation report and points to fast economic growth in former Tamil Tiger strongholds as evidence of progress.

In March, the U.N. Human Rights Council passed a U.S.-sponsored resolution asking Sri Lanka to ensure government troops accused of war crimes towards the end of the war are brought to justice.

In a more conciliatory move, Rajapksa is expected to announce in the next few days the release from prison of his former army chief, who the United States says is a political prisoner.

The government rejects a U.N. report that says tens of thousands of civilians were killed in 2009 in the final months of the war as government troops advanced on the ever-shrinking northern tip of the island controlled by Tamil forces fighting for an independent homeland.

The U.N. panel said it had "credible allegations" that Sri Lankan troops and the Tamil Tigers both carried out atrocities and war crimes, and singled out the government for most of the responsibility for the deaths.

Sri Lanka has acknowledged some civilians were killed in the last months of the offensive, but says the numbers cited by the U.N. panel are vastly exaggerated.

(Writing by Frank Jack Daniel; Editing by Sophie Hares)

The Question Of Pluralism In The Post War Context Sri Lanka


May 20, 2012By Rameez Aboobacker -
Rameez Aboobacker
Colombo TelegraphIn May 2009, the present government successfully defeated the Liberation of Tigers of Tamil Ealam( LTTE) militarily, and heralded a new era of inter-ethnic relations and pluralism in Sri Lanka. The historic victory speech made by the President on May 19, 2009postulated the status of minority communities in Sri Lanka. He averred “We have removed the word minorities from our vocabulary three years ago. No longer are the Tamils, Sinhalese, Muslims, Burghers, Malays and any other minorities. There are only two kinds of people in this country now. One is the people that love this country. The other comprises the small groups that have no love for the land of their birth. Those who do not love the country are now a lesser group”.[i]
While the speech was interpreted that all citizens were equal, whether they were majorities or minorities, before the law and to the president and his government, there was also concern raised by some that the statement would be constituted as a denial of the rights of the minority communities in Sri Lanka. Some critics went to the extent of articulating their concerns that the speech was a clear manifestation of the continued hegemony of the majority Sinhalese and a majoritarian mindset.[ii] Having said that, one could posit that this was an ample opportunity presented before the government to advocate pluralism or multiculturalism in the post war context, not because of steering the country towards socio-economic prosperity that was the need of the hour, but because of promoting the country as a unique model of pluralism in South Asia. As a matter of fact, no one can deny that the pluralism was the peculiar feature of the tiny island during the pre-colonial and the post-colonial era. Pathetically, it was, however, the reverse that happened thereafter and brought forth the issues of minorities into academic and public debates and discourses in the post war context.      Read More

Rs. 3,020 million for the First Family’s air travels


Sunday, 20 May 2012

The Mahinda Rajapaksa administration is to purchase two new air craft for the Sri Lanka Air Force.
The two VVIP helicopters with luxury facilities are to be purchased for the use of the First Family. It is learnt that the aircraft would cost Rs. 3,020 million.
Chief Government Whip, Minister Dinesh Gunawardena on May 8th presented a supplementary estimate to cover the shortfall of funds to purchase the crafts.
The Minister had told several opposition parliamentarians that he was unaware of the allocations although he had tabled the supplementary estimates in the House as the Chief Government Whip.
However, the Rajapaksa government has decided to purchase 14 helicopters from a US$ 300 million aid facility from the Russian government.
The Sri Lanka Air Force purchased four helicopters last year and two of those helicopters are being used for the First Family.

Devolution And The Concept Of Concurrency: Abolition Or Reform?


May 19, 2012By Asanga Welikala -
Asanga Welikala
Colombo TelegraphAmong proponents of devolution as a means of power-sharing in Sri Lanka, one of the key bones of contention about the Thirteenth Amendment has been the Concurrent List. This is the list of competences, or ‘subjects’ as they are called in the constitution, over which powers are shared between the central government and the Provincial Councils. This list is part of the broader distribution of powers and functions that are arranged in three lists in the Thirteenth Amendment, the other two being the Reserved List and the Provincial Council List. This tripartite arrangement was no doubt influenced by the Indian constitution, which was the sole comparative referent during the drafting of the scheme of devolution in 1987. The significant difference of course was that devolution in Sri Lanka was intended to function within the hierarchy of norms and institutions dictated by the foundational constitutional concept of the Sri Lankan republic, the unitary state, whereas the Indian system operates according to a federal logic.Read More

Saturday, May 19, 2012


Mu'l'livaaykkaal Remembrance observed in Vanni



18 May Remembrance, 2012, Vanni

 [TamilNet, Saturday, 19 May 2012, 05:19 GMT]
TamilNetPeople of Vanni on Friday observed Mu'l'livaaykkaal Remembrance amidst threats by the occupying Sri Lankan forces. The only statue for the fallen in Mu'l'livaaykkaal is situated within the premises of a church besides the statue in remembrance of a priest who had succumbed due to torture under incarceration by the SL military. In the meantime, Saivita devotees went to temples for special poojas. 

Hundreds of Saiva devotees attended Ki'linochchi Murukan temple. 

Some of the devotees were seen breaking coconuts in front of the temple, praying for safe return of their kith and kin still believed to be in the custody of the Sri Lankan military after the war ended on 18 May 2009. 

18 May Remembrance, 2012, Vanni18 May Remembrance, 2012, Vanni

18 May Remembrance, 2012, Vanni

Groundviews

Groundviews

Three years after the war in Sri Lanka: To celebrate or mourn?
Photo courtesy Vikalpa
For the 3rd successive year, the Sri Lankan government has made elaborate arrangements to celebrate the end of the war in Colombo. This year, May was declared as “war hero’s commemoration month”. For the last few days, roads were closed in Colombo causing great inconvenience, as preparations were being made for celebrating the end of the war.
However, in the North, among Tamils, where the last phase of the war was fought, the mood was far from celebratory, but outright mourning and grieving. In the morning of 18th May, I joined a commemorative Mass in a church that was yet to be rebuilt after the war. More than the church building, two monuments stood out. One for Fr. Sarathjeevan (popularly known as Fr. Sara, who died on 18th May 2009) and another for all people who had been killed in the war. Villagers including school children and Hindus flocked to this church. Amongst those present were families of those killed and disappeared. About 20 priests participated. After the Mass,  flowers and garlands were laid for those killed. A Tamil priest from Jaffna welcomed the small group of Sinhalese from Negombo, Colombo, Anuradhapura etc., who had joined the mourning and the simple commemoration, while most other Sinhalese were seen celebrating.

Colombo TelegraphBy Colombo Telegraph -Women came in numbers, broke 108 coconuts
“We request you to liberate our surrendered and disappeared relatives from the state of Sri Lanka through international pressure.” Relatives of the Surrendered and Disappeared Persons said. Issuing a press statement they further said ”Our complaints to the government officials, politicians and NGOs have been futile. We went to the crime division of Vavuniya on 14th May 2012 as per the announcement made by the Ministry of Defense, Sri Lanka, on 13th May 2012. But we were disappointed that we could not find any details about them. We became subject to their intimidation.”
Below we give the full statement;
Collective Appeal
Kilinochi, Mullaitheevu District
2012.05.15
The Relatives of the Surrendered and Disappeared Persons

Sri Lanka's Frontline Denial


It isn't rocket science to see that Sri Lanka needs outside monitoring.
http://salem-news.com/graphics/snheader.jpgMay-18-2012

It isn't rocket science to see that Sri Lanka needs outside monitoring.
Sri Lanka meeting illustration
(LONDON) - The room was packed. The panel, consisting of journalists, activists and relatives of the victims, were speaking to an audience made up mainly of Sri Lankans. I was there too, partly because I admire the work of the film maker Callum Macrae and partly because this kind of bunfight is worth watching, however painful.
The representative of the Government of Sri Lanka, Rajiva Wijesinha, in fine pudding-basin style haircut, was fighting the corner for the ruling party. In a long and rambling discourse, part stream of consciousness, part shaggy-dog story, he unravelled the contents of his mind. Well some of it, at least.
Sitting next to him was a Sri Lankan victim of the LTTE whose testament of horror from the reign of Tiger terror (he was abducted and tortured at the age of thirteen before his parents were killed) was being shamelessly mis-used by Our Man From Sri Lanka for its own ends.
There was also Jan Jananayagam, spokesperson for Tamils Against Genocide, Callum Macrae of course, Yolander Foster, Amnesty International's excellent Sri Lankan researcher and the Chair, Stephen Sackur from the BBC's programme Hardtalk.
Pudding Basin had brought a few books for which he wanted one pound. The reason for this nominal sum, he informed the audience, was because he knew British fellows respected anything they paid for. The title of one of them.
The Road to Reconciliation & its Enemies [Documented Evidence & Logical Arguments against Emotional Exaggeration & Soundbites.]

The Road To Urbino

Roma Tearne is currently working on a short film Letter from Urbinoto be shown at the National Gallery, London, on June 15th. The film is based on an idea taken from her latest novel The Road To Urbinothat was then developed into an independent narrative. Shot in an unusual location in Italy to give the appearance of a hand-tinted postcard it combines a personal view of the paintings of Piero della Francesca with the Italian landscape.
Further details will be posted shortly.

Huh?
What with his slender grasp of anything much, his denial of the authenticity of Callum Macrea's Sri Lanka's Killing Field and his generally vague logorrhea, Pudding Basin was giving the Chair a hard time of it. I thought he did rather well, considering. The Chair, I mean, not PB, whose deathless oratory lulled me into gentle slumber only to find myself woken up with a start when the gushing, 1940's pre-Empire prose, finally stopped. This man was a member of the Sri Lankan government?
The audience, those one removed from the sorrow and the pity of Sri Lanka's genocide, tittered. What else could they do in the face of such stupidity? At one point I marvelled at the way in which the other panelist, victim of the Tamil terrorist group, was being so shamelessly used for government propaganda. Why was it that this man's terrible loss could not be treated with objective understanding? And then, because there was nothing else I could do, because the discussion had reached its most formless stage, I opened my sketchbook and began to draw instead.
I noticed one or two murderous looks, coming from the Singhala side of the audience, present undoubtedly to defend their assets in their homeland.
Finally the woman lost it and began to shout. And had to be told to sit down. Grief, it was. Her voice was that of Grief held in check for years and years.
I noticed too for the first time how some younger, middle class Singhala and Tamil were uniting now in their desire (at least) for a kind of peace. Don't talk about the war, seemed to be the slogan. Move on, use the word peace, rebuild. Fine words, great sentiments. I agree.
But what of those who cannot move on, who do not have closure for their grief, whose loved ones are dead, disappeared, without a grave or in one with masses?
A lone woman stood up; beautiful, elderly, small. I had heard her say earlier that she would not cry tonight as she had spent the whole day crying. In a voice that rose like the waters of a tsunami she talked about the underlying causes of the civil war, the discrimination, the loss of life that had gone on for years. Since British Crown Rule had ended in fact. Brava, I wanted to shout. For hadn't I myself, in 1958 aged only four, seen a Tamil man burnt to death?
So what of this voice? Who will treat her grief as a sacred thing, give it dignity, rock it to sleep? Pudding Head closed his eyes and tilted his head back. The audience rumbled, agreeing and disagreeing, If grief and denial and greed and violence could coexist so seamlessly in an upstairs room in London imagine what it must be like, unchecked, in Sri Lanka itself.
It isn't rocket science to see that the country needs outside monitoring and that both victims and perpetrators need help in order to stop this terrible cycle.
The comedian Eddie Izzard once joked that the international community was happy to turn a blind eye on those countries engaged in killing their own people. It is only when they go next door, as Hitler did with Poland, do they intervene. If that is indeed still the case, Pudding Head and his henchmen will be just fine for the foreseeable future. Helped by those young middle class Sri Lankans who simply want to move on, whatever that means.

Roma Tearne: Salem-News.com Contributing Writer / Author
Roma Tearne is a Sri Lankan born artist and writer. Her first novel, Mosquito, has been shortlisted for the 2007 Costa Book Awards first Novel prize.
Currently a Fellow at Oxford Brookes University, she has had many exhibitions including "Nel Corpo delle cittá" at the prestigious MLAC ( Museo Laboratorio Arte Contemporanea ) in Rome.
She became the artist in residence at the Ashmolean Museum Oxford in 2002 and while there, worked on "Happenings in a Museum"
Salem-News.com is extremely pleased to work with this esteemed author, and to be able to utilize her approach in communicating stories about war and ethnic strife that cross all boundaries; those things that make the very soul of our earth bleed needlessly.


Amnesty International Calls on Secretary Clinton to Seek Direct Answers and Push Sri Lanka's Foreign Minister for Action on Past and Continued Abuses


MAY 17, 2012
Human Rights Organization Urges U.N. to Begin Independent International Investigation as Sri Lanka Continues to Stall Efforts for Accountability
Contact: Sharon Singh, ssingh@aiusa.org, 202-675-8579, @spksingh
(Washington, DC) – Frank Jannuzi, head of Amnesty International's Washington D.C. office, issued the following statement in advance of the bilateral meeting between U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Sri Lanka's Foreign Minister, G. L. Peiris on Friday, May 18, in Washington, D.C.:
"Secretary Clinton should use this meeting to follow up on her decisive action during the March session of the United Nation's Human Rights Council to press the Sri Lankan government on accountability for abuses committed during its 30-year internal conflict. Sri Lankan authorities have stated that they would conduct an internal investigation into the abuses, yet they continue to dither, refusing to bring those accountable to justice."
"The international community cannot wait while the Sri Lankan government makes empty promises amid smoke and mirrors. It must establish an independent international investigation immediately. Only then will victims have a real chance at realizing their right to truth, justice and reparations."
Amnesty International has alerted Secretary Clinton of several concerns regarding the ongoing abuses in Sri Lanka, including a sharp rise in enforced disappearances of those critical of the Sri Lankan government. There also continues a culture of impunity for alleged crimes committed at the end of the war and for earlier abuses.
In addition, Mr. Jannuzi will be presenting thousands of signed petitions to Ambassador Robert Blake, Assistant Secretary of State, South and Central Asian Affairs, urging the U.S. government to push for an international inquiry into abuses committed during the Sri Lanka conflict.
Amnesty International is a Nobel Peace Prize-winning grassroots activist organization with more than 3 million supporters, activists and volunteers in more than 150 countries campaigning for human rights worldwide. The organization investigates and exposes abuses, educates and mobilizes the public, and works to protect people wherever justice, freedom, truth and dignity are denied.

SRI LANKA: Former AG, Mohan Peiris summoned to court in disappearance inquiry of Prageeth Eknaligoda


May 18, 2012

AHRC LogoThe former Attorney General, Mohan Peiris, has been ordered to appear before the Homagama Magistrate's Court and to reveal what he knows about the whereabouts of Prageeth Eknalilgoda, the journalist who has been missing since January 24, 2010. At the official session of the United Nations Committee against Torture, held last November, the former Attorney General representing Sri Lanka as a state party told the Committee that he had learned that Prageeth Eknalilgoda is living in a foreign country. Prageeth Eknalilgoda's wife, Sandaya Eknaligoda, through her lawyers made a request to the Magistrate's Court inquiring into the circumstances of the disappearance of her husband, to summon the former Attorney General and to request him to divulge the information he has on the whereabouts of her husband. The state represented by a solicitor general objected to this request. Yesterday, May 17, the court made order allowing her request.

Meanwhile Sandaya Eknaligoda has also written to the Human Rights Committee requesting it to call the Attorney General and question him about his statement. In a letter written on May 14, 2012 she has detailed her communications with the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka (HRCSL) on this matter. We reproduce below a translation of the full text of her letter.

The HRCSL is designed in terms of internationally known principles which require it to be a victim-friendly institution. The very mandate of the HRCSL is the protection and promotion of human rights. However, it is regrettable to note that the HRCSL's performance is disappointing to the victims and it has become an institution which protects the alleged perpetrators. The following words of Sandaya Eknaligoda echo the feelings of many other victims of human rights violations including the victims of forced disappearances and abductions.
"There are medicines even for victims who were subject to cruel physical torture. Yet the mental torture is more fearsome. It haunts in the daytime and the nighttime. Because there are no scars on the surface, the trauma cannot be seen by society."
The moral legitimacy of an institution like the HRCSL lies in the humane sensibility with which it approaches the victims of alleged abuses of human rights. Among such victims the worst sufferers are those who have lost loved ones. They approach the institutions such as the HRCSL with their agonies in the hope that at least some semblance of humanity is still left for those like them in such institutions. When the HRCSL disappoints them the very reason for its existence becomes questionable. 

We reproduce below the full text of the translation:    Read More…

North have become inmates of an open air prison Dharmasiri Lankapeli


Saturday, 19 May 2012

Firstly, at this historic rally I apologise to the people in the North for not being able to address them in the Tamil language, as well as for the inability to provide them my speech in Tamil translation.
I would like to mention that while this historic demonstration and rally of the joint opposition is taking place in Jaffna, leftist parties including the Nava Sama Samaja Party (NSSP) and the Frontline Socialist Party (the breakaway wing of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna) are celebrating May Day in a grand scale at the Price Park in Colombo under some common slogans:
• Equalise the minimum wage of the workers of the public and the private sectors at Rs12,500
• Provide a minimum cost-of-living allowance of Rs5000
• Gazette the value of the cost-of-living index at Rs280 per point
• Raise the minimum daily wage of the plantation worker to Rs500
• Provide an acceptable political solution to the national question
• Remove the military from civil administration in the North and East
I would also like to state that not only the government and the pro-government media, but some so-called members of the opposition strived to sabotage this rally. The success of this rally is a good lesson to all of them. For those who act like ‘mini-Mahindas’ while talking about Mr. Sajith Premadasa as the opposition’s alternative to Mahinda [Rajapakse], this is a slap across the face. This country does not need two ‘ Mahindas’ .
I would like to tell you first that the joint opposition including the Tamil National Alliance is holding this historic protest rally today against the anti-democratic ways of Mahinda Rajapakse’s government, particularly against the extreme suppression unleashed on the Tamil people in the North.
You can see that from Vavuniya to Jaffna there are more than 15 army brigades. There are also three or four security forces headquarters in the North alone. There is not space for the Tamil people even to breathe freely. It was not only that, thousands of people were buried in the land that they were born by the war; and now they face the horrible tragedy of losing all they own including home, property and other resources. People in the North have become inmates of an open air prison. This is a rally which demands an acceptable solution to the national question.
It is not only the people in the North who have become prisoners. Let me tell you an interesting story. Recently I had the chance to travel through the North to see the extent of destruction by the war. The vehicle we were travelling broke down and while waiting for it to be repaired, I walked a little further away from the vehicle. There were four or five youths further away. One of them came towards me and asked whether I was from the media. I thought that it was the end for me, because as an active street protestor against the government’s suppression my name has been on top of their ‘hit list’. At that moment I also remembered about the abductions by white vans.
“Sir, please write about us as well. We are called Ranaviru (‘war heroes’) but our status is lower than that of a wage-earner. A wage-earner has to work only 8 hours a day but we have to work 24 hours. There is no way for us to take leave. We were given a tie. Rs450 was deducted from our salary for it. It is not even worth Rs200. What do we do with a tie? We were given a coin as a souvenir and Rs. 2500 was deducted from our salary as its worth. We were also told that any bank will accept the coin (if we needed to pawn it for quick cash). But no bank accepts it now. Sir, please write about these things,” said that young man.
This is the reality. The soldiers thought of living harmoniously in that prosperous world which was to be created after the war, with their families. However, at present it is not only the people in the North who are prisoners – even these soldiers have become prisoners of the regime.
Today there is no freedom to raise dissenting political views; and no freedom of expression. This government has imposed oppression on all. When the workers protest, court procedures are used against them. Lalith Kumar Veeraraj and Kugan Muruganandan were abducted and still they are missing. The Uthayan newspaper was set on fire. Media personnel are being assaulted and killed. Uthayan journalist, Kuganathan, was brutally assaulted near an army checkpoint.
Victory to the struggle of the joint opposition to attain a country with freedom and democracy for the people by removing this anti-people government which suppresses the workers and abducts those who hold opposing views!
On behalf of the Nava Sama Samaja Party, I salute all those who defied the conspiracies and the challenges to attend this rally in person. Jayawewa! [Victory for all!]
Jaffna – 1 May 2012


TGTE and GTF issue symbolic message via joint statement

The Full Text of the statement
Press Release May 17, 2012
Mullivaaikkaal Remembrance Message
18 May 2012
Today marks the third anniversary of the genocidal events that the Tamils had to endure in Mullivaaikkaal. On this day, we remember with deep sorrow and solemn responsibility all the people who perished in Mullivaaikkaal and in the long freedom struggle of Eelam Tamils in preceding years. Many thousands of civilians were murdered by the Sri Lankan government forces in inhumane ways, under the guise of a war on terrorism, having abandoned all international norms and conventions of war.
History has recorded the abject failure of the international community, including the United Nations, to take any form of sensible action to prevent the mass killings of Tamils in Mullivaaikkaal. The Tamil people deserve justice for all the brutal inhumanity suffered by them. Those who committed the crimes should be brought before justice. It is also prudent to ensure that in the future no other people are subject to the same cruelty and pain that the Tamils were meted out. Our struggle for justice is, therefore, not for Tamils alone. It indeed becomes the struggle for setting the limit on any state that might intend using brutality and violence on its own people.
A substantial body of evidence is in our hands and those of the international community incriminating the Sri Lankan Government of its mass killings, war crimes and crimes against humanity. It is not incomprehensible for the international community that the Sri Lankan State has neither the intention nor the capability of inquiring into its war crimes through an internal mechanism in an adequate manner. The longer it takes for the outside world to act on Sri Lanka, faster it seems would be the rate of destruction of the Tamil people and their land by the same State. Therefore, we call upon the international community to act decisively to bring about an international and independent investigation on the events of Mullivaaikkaal.
The Tamils in Sri Lanka are longing for relief and a life of dignity to take them out of the miserable conditions in which they are trapped at present. It is essential that an international protection mechanism for safeguarding the lives of the Tamil people is created urgently.
It is timely that we seek the attention of the international community in our clamour for justice through unified sets of action. In this, Tamils in Eelam, those in the Diaspora and in Tamil Nadu would need to work with the support of the wider community of Tamils from around the world and the international civil society concerned with human justice matters.
The absolute power and the arrogant ways of the present Sri Lankan regime are earning the disgust of the international community. This in turn is creating conditions favourable to our cause. In addition, there are noticeable and encouraging changes in the mind set and approach of the international community following the disaster at Mullivaaikkaal. It is up to our ingenuity and political intelligence how we take advantage of these turn of events in the way we act. We should strengthen our ability to collaborate across differences with a shared understanding and collective action.
With this in mind, representatives of the Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam and the Global Tamil Forum got together in San Francisco on the 13th and 14th of this month. We are pleased to announce that following discussions on several areas of joint action, agreements were reached on some of these areas. This is indeed an important milestone as we move through the third phase of our struggle for freedom coinciding with the remembrance of Mullivaaikkaal.
The Global Tamil Forum intends to liaise with other Diaspora Tamil organisations and representatives of Tamil speaking people in Sri Lanka in its efforts to build similar forms of shared understanding. The Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam, for its part, is engaged in building a power base among the world Tamil community, particularly in Tamil Nadu, and with sections of the international civil society.
On this occasion, while we remember the mass atrocities in Mullivaaikkaal, it is incumbent upon us to jointly and solemnly declare that the pursuit of freedom by our people shall remain incessant.
Visvanathan Rudrakumaran Rev Dr S J Emanuel
Prime Minister President
Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam Global Tamil Forum


Love affair kills two



A soldier had shot the mother, Father and a twenty one year old girl from Katugastota after the girl had rejected the soldier’s plea to enter into a relationship with her. The mother and daughter were found dead on admission to the Thittajjala hospital.

The soldier was also injured after he attempted to shoot the brother of the girl who had managed to disarm the soldier. The suspect is receiving treatment at the Kandy hospital. Kandy police are conducting further inquiries into the incident. (J.A.L.Jayasinghe)


Mullivaikal Remembrance Day : Message from Rt. Hon Ed Miliband MP
Friday, 18 May 2012


Today we commemorate the third anniversary of the end of the armed conflict in Sri Lanka. My thoughts are with you all, as you remember the appalling loss of life and as you honour the memory of family, friends and loved ones who died.
Read More

Lanka itself will probe war abuses, including by forces


 May 19,2012
From Lalit K Jha Washington, May 19 (PTI) Sri Lanka today said it will conduct its own investigation into allegations of war abuses including those by its armed forces, rejecting calls for setting up an international tribunal. "The Sri Lankan Attorney general has started the inquiry into the alleged war abuses and human rights violations that occurred during the last few months of end of the civil war," Foreign Minister G M Peiris, told reporters at a news conference held here at the end of his four-day US trip. "The investigations would include alleged violations by the security forces too," he said. Peiris made these comments after meeting Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, where he presented a detailed reconciliation plan to the US administration. During the meeting, Clinton strongly urged "accountability", in probing the war crimes allegations "to strengthen reconciliation, public confidence inside and outside Sri Lanka, and, frankly, to speed the healing of the country," according to the State Department spokesperson Victoria Nuland. The meeting comes in the wake of strained ties between Washington and Colombo over the American sponsorship of a UN human rights resolution calling on Sri Lanka to conduct an independent probe into civilian deaths in the final phase of the country's civil war that ended in 2009. Nuland said that Colombo had presented a "serious and comprehensive" plans for recommendations of a probe into human rights abuses that now needed to be made public and put into practice. MORE

STEPHEN HAMMOND STATEMENT ON REMEMBERENCE DAY !

Saturday, 19 May 2012
I am sorry that I am unable to join you today because of commitments in my constituency
I was one of the first MPs to speak about the plight of the Tamil citizens and to urge recognition of their plight.
I have worked with local Tamils in Wimbledon and Kingston to raise awareness of the killings and persecution; and support local events
I have also worked with British Tamil Forum and British Tamil Conservatives.
I have also visited the north of Sri Lanka in 2008 and 2010.
It is indeed right that the Tamil People mark the anniversary of the atrocity which saw 40000 Tamil civilians killed. The enormity of the loss of life and the grief of so many was overwhelming.
There are some who might say Sri Lanka is the other side of the world and there is little we can do. But we should not turn our backs. We must ensure that;
Persecution of the Tamils must stop
Civil administration and full political rights must be restored
The demining process must be completed as soon as possible so everyone can return to their homes
The freedom of expression, movement and assembly must be allowed freely and fairly without fear
I believe Sri Lanka must implement the recommendations of the "Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission" quickly and fully.
I wish your vigil, peace and success
Stephen Hammond