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, May 6, 2014

U.N. warns Nigeria's Boko Haram over selling schoolgirls as slaves

GENEVA Tue May 6, 2014 
Schoolgirls take part in a protest demanding the release of abducted secondary school girls from the remote village of Chibok, in Lagos May 5, 2014.
Schoolgirls take part in a protest demanding the release of abducted secondary school girls from the remote village of Chibok, in Lagos May 5, 2014. REUTERS/Akintunde Akinleye(Reuters) - The United Nations warned Islamist Boko Haram militants on Tuesday that there was no statute of limitations if they carried out their leader's threat to sell more than 200 Nigerian schoolgirls kidnapped last month.
Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau said in a video released on Monday that Allah (God) had told him to sell the girls taken by his fighters from a secondary school in the village of Chibok, in northeastern Borno state, on April 14.
"We warn the perpetrators that there is an absolute prohibition against slavery and sexual slavery in international law. These can under certain circumstances constitute crimes against humanity," U.N. human rights spokesman Rupert Colville told a news briefing in Geneva.
"That means anyone responsible can be arrested, charged, prosecuted, and jailed at any time in the future. So just because they think they are safe now, they won't necessarily be in two years, five years or 10 years time," he said.
He also urged Nigeria's federal and local authorities to work together to rescue the girls.
Local states have a lot of power and control over their territory, and the authorities in Borno are not of the same political party as the president, Colville said.
"So it is particularly important that there is close cooperation for the greater good, if you like, in this case, which is the release of these girls," he said.
Any buyer could also be held liable, Colville said, noting that enslaved girls are likely to be exposed to "continuous physical, psychological, economic and sexual violence" and that forced marriage can have a "devastating" impact on victims.
"The power differentials between girls and their 'spouses' is likely to undermine all autonomy, all freedom of will and expression of the girls. The situation they will be in will be tantamount to slavery, or slavery-like practices within the so-called marriage," he said.
U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay said after a visit to Nigeria in March that abuses by the security forces are boosting support for the group which has waged an increasingly bloody five-year-old insurgency in the north.
Pillay, a former U.N. war crimes judge, also said at the time that Boko Haram's actions were more and more monstruous.
She wrote to President Goodluck Jonathan on April 28 urging him to spare no effort to ensure the girls' safe return.
Any rescue attempt must be made in line with international human rights standards, Colville said, noting previous "allegations of excessive use of force by the Nigerian military in anti-Boko Haram operations".
Civilians should not be endangered, nor should there be summary executions or arbitrary detentions of suspects, he said.
(Editing by Louise Ireland)

Ukraine is close to war, warns German minister

Frank-Walter Steinmeier says Ukraine is 'a few steps away' from military conflict as dozens are reported dead near Slavyansk
A burnt-out car parked on a road near Semyonovka village, near Slavyansk. Photograph: Itar-Tass/Barcroft Media
A burnt-out car parked on a road near Semyonovka village, near Slavyansk
 in Donetsk,   
Tuesday 6 May 2014 
Ukraine  is Close to War, the German foreign minister, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, has warned in interviews Published On Tuesday in Four European Newspapers.
Dozens are feared to have died in Slavyansk On Monday As Ukrainian troops clashed with exponents outside PRO- Russia  separatists.
"The bloody pictures from Odessa have shown us that we are just a few steps away from a military confrontation," Steinmeier told El PaĆ­s, Le Monde, La Repubblica and Gazeta Wyborcza. He added that the conflict had taken on an intensity "that a short time ago we would not have considered possible".
The acting Ukrainian interior minister, Arsen Avakov, claimed that more than 30 pro-Russia separatists had been killed in fighting outside the key rebel town on Monday.
Location of Monday's clashes
"We estimate that the terrorists lost more than 30 people," Avakov wrote on his Facebook page. The Guardian was unable to confirm the figure.
According to officials, four Ukrainian soldiers have been killed and at least 30 injured in clashes with separatists as the army attempted to regain control of eastern Ukraine. The fighting on the outskirts of Slavyansk, the base of the armed movement that has taken over a number of cities, was triggered when pro-Russia rebels reportedly ambushed Ukrainian forces.
The separatists reported deaths in the fighting but could not confirm the number of fatalities. A military helicopter was shot down although both pilots survived, according to the defence ministry.
On Tuesday morning, Donetsk airport was closed for departing and arriving flights because of a government order. Ukraine's government gave no information about the closure, and the airport spokeswoman said she had not received any information about how long the closure would last.
As well As the exponents in the East, the fallout and Violence From the  Late Last Week Fatal fire  in the Southern City of Odessa On Monday continued to be Felt.
Under a leaden sky at the edge of a cemetery in Odessa, family and friends laid to rest Vladimir Markin, a local politician who was killed in the vicious street battles that convulsed the city last week.
A short distance away, the funeral of another man who died fighting pro-Ukrainian crowds was also taking place. The burials were the first of dozens over the next few weeks as the port city struggles to come to terms with Ukraine's most violent day since the new regime swept to power in February.
Markin, 44, was a key supporter of a semi-permanent protest camp in Odessa against the current Kiev government that was burned to the ground on Friday before fighting moved to the nearby trade union building. At some point during the melee he was badly beaten and died in intensive care in a local hospital the following day.
The other funeral was of Maksim Nikitenko, 31, who was also killed early on during the struggle inside the trade union building. "They fought and cracked open his skull and then he was thrown out of the window," said Petya, a friend.
Nikitenko was not a separatist or an extremist, but he ran to defend the building when he heard it was under attack, Petya added.
Before the burials, Markin's open casket lay in the local parliament building for friends, colleagues and residents of Odessa to pay their last respects.
Outside, an angry crowd gathered and the regional governor, who had come to lay flowers, was assaulted and forced to flee ignominiously down a corridor. When pallbearers carried the coffin out of the building people clapped and chanted: "Odessa is a Russian city," "Hero, hero, hero!" and "Odessa will not forgive nor forget."
The Ukrainian interior ministry said on Monday morning that 42 people detained during the violence had been transferred to other parts of the country. The move came after an angry mob forced police to release more than 60 detainees on Sunday.
Avakov said a special forces battalion had been transferred to the city to help maintain order.
The Ukrainian government has said the violence was initiated by Russian provocateurs, while Russia has referred to the deaths - many of which were caused by a fire that broke out inside the building - as a massacre inspired by "neo-Nazis". The horrific events have worsened an already tense situation.
Supporters of closer ties with Russia, who made up the majority of the mourners, blame the government in Kiev - which they describe as a junta and illegitimate, mirroring Russian state propaganda about the Ukrainian authorities - for the deaths last week. They accuse the police of failing to act swiftly enough to stop the violence.
Ukraine has accused Russia of directing the separatists, providing weapons and using proxy figures on the ground. Most analysts think Russia does not want a Crimea-style annexation of eastern Ukraine, but merely to stir up discontent and disrupt elections at the end of May.
In recent days, Russia's president, Vladimir Putin, has made no public statements about the situation, but the Russian foreign ministry again pinned the blame on Kiev in a statement on Monday evening.
"The so-called authorities in Kiev continue to wage war against the people of their own country," said the ministry, adding there was a humanitarian catastrophe brewing in the east of the country and calling on Kiev to stop the bloodshed.
Ukrainian authorities have likewise repeatedly called on Russia to stop stirring unrest in the region, as accusations continue to fly between the two countries.
Germany said on Monday it was pushing for fresh diplomatic talks in Geneva between Russia, Ukraine, the EU and US, to push for a return to the accord reached last month that encouraged all sides to put down their weapons.
Steinmeier said new talks were needed to reach a "clear conclusion as to how this conflict can be brought to a halt".
In eastern Ukraine, surveys show the vast majority of people want more autonomy from Kiev but only a minority want to join Russia. However, the mood has turned nastier in the last week, with crowds burning Ukrainian flags and many speaking about a "point of no return".
In Odessa, 52-year-old Igor Bulatov, an engineer who attended the funerals, said that while there were few separatists among current pro-Russia protesters, the deaths last week might change that. "I came to pay my respects to people who were murdered ... when you kill people for their ideas it is fascism," he said.
"Recent events mean a lot of people are now wondering about what country they want to live in. There is an atmosphere of shock. It is a moment of self-definition: people have to decide who they are and what they want."

US sponsors elaborate war games in Philippines involving over 5000 troops as show of force against China

Young Philippine Marines prepare for war games sponsored by US.
Young Philippine Marines prepare for war games sponsored by US.


Author: RobertTilford-MilitaryNews | Posted: 05/05/2014 


Over 5,000 US and Filipino soldiers have begun war games exercises on the edge of the South China Sea at a time of increased tension and territorial disputes with China.

Many in Southeast Asia question the US decision in this matter and see the war games as a “provocative move” on the part of the US – which is spread painfully thin all across the world and straining under the pressure of operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan- America’s longest and most expensive war in modern history. The cost of which is over $1 billion dollars US.

According to the Pentagon Secretary Hagel also welcomed the opportunity for U.S. forces to train with the Armed Forces of the Philippines in the BALIKATAN (“shoulder to shoulder”) exercises, which commences today.



Secretary Hagel noted the importance of the exercise to regional security
The war games will involve the participation of an undisclosed number of advanced US F-18 fighter jets and soldiers involved in live ammo exercises, on the main island of Luzon.
Philippine Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario made reference to China, with whom Manila has had territorial conflicts, when he said the exercises would help counter “excessive and expansive maritime and territorial claims.”
“The aggressive patterns of behavior, aimed at changing the status quo, threaten peace and stability in the region. Balikatan 2014 with its focus on maritime security strongly supports our capabilities to address these challenges.”
China and the Philippines have exchanged threats over ownership rights to the Spratly Islands, an archipelago in the South China Sea, which is believed to contain a vast quantity of oil and natural gas reserves. The islands, which spread over more than 425,000 square kilometers (164,000 square miles) of water, are also claimed by Brunei, Malaysia, Taiwan and Vietnam.
See related video: 2013 Balikatan Exercise Philippines&United States http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4TOYDHipJHg

Monday, May 5, 2014

UNP, JVP and TNA MP Sumanthiran unite to call for Right to Information Act
05 May 2014




Karu Jayasuriya signs petition, M.A. Sumanthiran stands behind. Photographs DailyMirror

The acting leader of the UNP, Karu Jayasuriya, K.D.Lalkantha of the JVP, and TNA MP M.A. Sumanthiran came together to sign a petition calling for a Right to Information Act to be established. 



The petition was tabled at an event organised by the Action Committee for Media Freedom to mark World Press Freedom Day on Saturday. 

South African Initiative Is Opportunity For Govt. To Restore Its Credibility


By Jehan Perera -May 5, 2014
Jehan Perera
Jehan Perera
Colombo TelegraphThe government’s inability or unwillingness to provide the international community with the quantum of evidence required to ban the 16 Tamil Diaspora groups and 424 individuals it listed under a UN anti terrorism resolution has led to both the United States and Canada refusing to ban them.   The government spokesperson on the issue had stated that it banned them all following extensive investigations in which 65 arrests had been made.  But the government also weakened its case by stating that the compelling evidence it had found could only be provided after the investigations had been completed.   It would have been more appropriate to list the organizations and persons it suspected, but only ban them after getting more solid information.   The reluctance that the government has shown in convincing the international community about the threat posed to the country’s national security by those Diaspora groups and individuals it has banned will only serve to further undermine its credibility.
The government is also releasing some of those it had arrested in the recent past alleging threats to national security.  The first two who were released were well known human rights defenders, Ruki Fernando and Fr Praveen Mahesan, whose arrests led to protests by international and local human rights organizations who had a personal knowledge of them and their work.  These two human rights defenders were fortunate as they had many in the human rights field who were prepared to vouch for their commitment to non-violence.  However, in the case of many of the others who have been arrested, and for whose human rights they have worked, there have been no similar interventions on their behalf.  Both Ruki Fernando and Fr Praveen Mahesan were personally known to many of those who lobbied on their behalf whereas those others who have been arrested in the North on similar charges have no such personal relations with more influential persons.
The fact that the lesser known persons who were arrested in the anti-LTTE crackdown are now being released, even though after several weeks of incarceration and interrogation, is to be welcomed.  It shows that there is a sense of justice within the security establishment that does not wish to see innocent persons being kept in detention just to make a political point.   However, the problem with these arrests is that there is little or no judicial supervision or review over their arrests and subsequent detentions.  It looks like the security forces have the discretion to arrest and detain, and the discretion to release them after interrogation, while the judiciary is like a passive postbox for whatever comes in and goes out.  It very much appears that there is no check and balance where it comes to arrests and detentions in regard to national security especially in the North and East.  The credibility of the government suffers as a result in comparison with international standards.                      Read More

Pope Expresses Concern, Calls for Reconciliation in Sri Lanka

NDTV
Pope Expresses Concern, Calls for Reconciliation in Sri Lanka
AFP
Pope Francis is greeted by faithfuls as he arrives to lead a mass at the San Stanislao parish on May, 4 2014 in Rome.
May 5, 2014 
Colombo:  Pope Francis has expressed concern over growing ethnic tensions in Sri Lanka and encouraged bishops from the country to promote reconciliation and human rights to address the issue.

The Pope said much work needs to be done to achieve peace and harmony among people divided by ethnicity. 

The Pope conveyed the message yesterday to a delegation of bishops led by Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith as part of their ad Limina Apostolorum visit to Vatican to brief the pontiff about the state of the diosces, local Catholic Church said.

Much work needs to be done to "promote reconciliation, to respect the human rights of all the people and to overcome the ethnic tensions that remain," the ColomboPage quoted him as saying.

The "rise of religious extremists who, in promoting a false sense of national unity based on a single religious identity, have created tensions through various acts of intimidation and violence," he noted.

Father Benedict Joseph, the local Catholic Church spokesman, said that the Pope took note of the reconciliation efforts being undertaken after more than 25 years of the civil war, which experts and rights groups claim killed 40,000 Tamil civilians.

The pope expressed concern over the rise of inter-religious tensions in the region, he said.

Sri Lanka has seen isolated acts of inter religious violence with Muslims coming under harassment by extremist Buddhist nationalist groups.

Last week, the activists of Buddhist nationalist groups like the Bodu Bala Sena stormed the offices of a senior Muslim minister.

President Mahinda Rajapaksa last month ordered setting up of a special police unit to maintain religious harmony in the country. 
5 years today - Vanni starves, LTTE condemns genocide and calls on international community to support diaspora aid initiatives


05 May 2014
05 May 2009 - 5 years today - Vanni starves, LTTE condemns genocide and calls on international community to support diaspora aid initiativesA NGO providing food to civilians within Vanni, in a monthly situation update, said that over 100 Tamil people had died of starvation.

See full report here.

The LTTE in a statement condemning the Sri Lanka government’s denial of aid to No Fire Zone’s urged the international community to support diaspora initiatives to provide aid directly the Tamil civilian sin the No Fire Zone, reported TamilNet.

Professor Boyle of University of Illinois College of Law, warned that the Sri Lankan government’s genocide against Tamils could exceed the atrocities of Srebrenica.
Speaking to TamilNet he said, 

“The World Court later found that the Serbian extermination of 8000 Bosnian Muslim men and boys at Srebrenica was genocide in violation of the Genocide Convention. Since the outset the latest crisis in January, the GOSL has exterminated about 7000* Tamils in Vanni, certainly a ‘substantial part’ of the Tamil population in Vanni and Sri Lanka. If not stopped now, the GOSL’ toll of genocide against Tamils could far exceed recent horrors of Srebrenica."

(
*The Internal Review Panel Report on Sri Lanka, published by the UN in 2012 estimated the total civilian death toll to be around 70,000.)

Sonali Wickrematunge in a statement made after receiving her murdered husband’s UNESCO World Press Freedom Prize, condemned the Sri Lankan government’s ‘racist war’ against Tamils.

Highlighting dominant government war slogans relating to race, she said,

“That this is a racist war is not a secret. The government itself has plastered the countryside with enormous placards lauding the military with the slogan, in Sinhala, the language of the Sinhalese majority which I too, belong, stating: ‘Soldiers, our race salutes you!’ Not ‘the people’, not ‘the country’, but the race. Interestingly, none of these hoardings are in Tamil, the language of the people the government claims it is seeking to liberate.” 
“I beseech you and anyone who will listen not to allow Sri Lanka's government, under the cover of a war against terror, to engage in acts of terror or crimes against humanity. Soon it will be too late, and history will not forgive us if we do not act now,” she added. 

Gearing Up For The Times Ahead


Colombo Telegraph
By Chandra Jayaratne -May 5, 2014
Chandra Jayaratne
Chandra Jayaratne
Arjuna Herath Esq.
President,
Institute of Chartered Accountants of Sri Lanka,
30A, Malalasekera Mawatha,
Colombo 7.
Dear Arjuna,
“Gearing Up For the Times Ahead-The Need to Remain Relevant and Stay Ahead of Times”
I am writing this open letter to you, after months of watching in silence, the many professional bodies, chambers and others organizations with strategic core value commitments to its key stakeholders, failing to duly discharge their accountability with transparency and openly advocate for essential reforms and change, in line with expected best practices. This silence is mainly due to the prevailing external environment.
The current authoritarian governance environment is driven by a “carrot” and “stick” based “rewards” and “punishments” system and is exercised with a lack of transparency and with scant respect for compliance with expected best practices. Such an environment  promotes a value system that has no regard to “fear” and “shame” to do wrong, and further restricts and sometimes compels not only public institutions and regulators, but also professional bodies, chambers and others organizations, to sacrifice hallowed principles and adherence to core value commitments.
I heartily cheered in silence your recent election to office and watched the many creative, innovative and sustainable value adding initiatives launched by the Institute under your leadership, especially in developing the quality of education contents; enhancing member professionalism and skills; member job market opportunity enriching initiatives; and member personality development programmes; as well as those initiatives targeting fellowship amongst members.
I was heartened reading the core theme of the Annual Report titled “Gearing Up For the Times Ahead-The Need to Remain Relevant and Stay Ahead of Times”.                       Read More
 
MaRa further degrading the judiciary by appointing mediocre lawyer with putrid history to SC
(Lanka-e-News- 05.May.2014, 3.30PM) Medamulana MaRa has decided in keeping with his eccentricity and dementia which are manifestly growing rather than diminishing has decided to appoint judges to the already degraded and disgraced supreme court who could only further contribute to its declining standards rather than rebuild its moth eaten image. (it is none other than the MaRa regime which is the architect of this debacle ).

It is learnt there are three vacancies for judges of the bench of the supreme court (SC), and the Rajapakses, the notorious devil incarnates are getting ready to appoint a mediocre lawyer and non entity in the legal profession as one of the judges ,simply because he is an all in one lackey ,bootlicker and lickspittle of the Rajapakses. This lawyer , Priyantha Jayawardena’s only qualification leave alone his legal (dis)qualification is , he was in the committee of lawyers of Basil’s Divineguma draft resolution which eventually led to the impeachment motion against the former chief justice. This is the same mediocre low breed lawyer who during the period when the impeachment motion was being tabled took special pains to backbite and sneak upon the other lawyers of the legal fraternity to the Rajapakses round the clock, as he knew deep within his bones that he is the lowliest of lawyers from every angle who has no place in the sun if he is to conduct himself otherwise as an honorable lawyer upholding professional ethics and personal scruples.

He has also another qualification that enabled him to ingratiate himself into the favor of the equally uncouth and barbaric Rajapakses , that is , he is possessed of a tongue that is longer than that of a stray dog in the streets, not only to lick but to roll in and out of the mouth to utter ‘Sir’ every second when addressing Namal Rajapakse the only synthetic lawyer SL has produced. Taking into account all these (dis)qualifications, Medamulana MaRa who prefers such disqualifications decided after the impeachment motion then to appoint him as a President’s Counsel (PC).

Minus these sordid qualifications Priyantha is a zero in specialized professional qualifications. He had not appeared in any important cases . If at all he is entrusted with a case by a client , it is because he can play a ‘pimp’ and tout role exploiting the position of his sister who is a registrar of the SC , and arrange for his case to be heard by the panel of judges who are his favorites. His sister , Mahesha Jayawardena ( Mahesha Jayasekera after marriage ) too has an equally horrible antecedence . She was chased out from her post of Registrar on charges based on a number of fraudulent transactions . However after the impeachment motion she was reinstated .

Inordinately power greedy Rajapakses who are ever ready to sell themselves whole and even their souls , want unscrupulous stooges and lickspittles like Priyantha who only can serve their sordid aims best . Being themselves dishonest and inefficient , the Rajapakses cannot ever imagine of appointing honest competent individuals to high positions. They are only looking for sycophants who would carry tales to them . After judge Sathya Hettige who was discharging this sordid duty for the Rajapakses retired , the Rajapakses had a need to appoint someone who would be equally shameless or worse . They have found unscrupulous Priyantha the black coated shark who is born without any sense of shame as the right choice. 

Already the Bar association of SL (BASL) had announced its objection to this prospective appointment simply because of the ridiculous criterion applied to make this lofty position look most ludicrous by appointing a court jester of MaRa’s Kangaroo court. 

When former CJ Shiraneee Bandaranaike was also to be appointed as a SC judge this way , the BASL raised objections . However , Ms. Bandaranaike had by that time proved herself as an intellect having secured a professorial position in law .

On the contrary , Priyantha is just a mediocre lawyer and is only 53 years old , but of course he is indisputably an infamous fawner who would stoop to any cesspit level to bootlick the Rajapakses. He can officially continue in the SC for another about 12 years. It is the general consensus among legal luminaries that the Rajapakses are deliberately appointing these low breed least qualified incompetent lawyers to the SC to achieve their selfish calculated objective of making the SC too another hotbed of vice , violence and lawlessness in which climate the Rajapakses have clearly demonstrated they thrive best.

Kaanamylnathan; 1 Out Of The 100 ‘Information Heroes’


Colombo TelegraphMay 3, 2014 
For the first time ever, Reporters Without Borders is publishing a list of profiles of “100 information heroes” for World Press Freedom Day (3 May).Through their courageous work or activism, these “100 heroes” help to promote the freedom enshrined in article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the freedom to “to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.” They put their ideals in the service of the common good. They serve as examples.“World Press Freedom Day, which Reporters Without Borders helped to create, should be an occasion for paying tribute to the courage of the journalists and bloggers who constantly sacrifice their safety and sometimes their lives to their vocation,” said Reporters Without Borders secretary-general Christophe Deloire.
M. V. Kaanamylnathan
M. V. Kaanamylnathan – Sri Lanka 
M. V. Kaanamylnathan had 50 years’ tough experience in journalism and had worked for every Tamil-language newspaper in Sri Lanka when he took the helm of the main Tamil daily Uthayan in 1985, two years after the civil war flared up. Dozens of members of the paper’s staff were among the conflict’s 100,000 dead. Bombings, shootings, grenade attacks and murders were used to try to silence a voice that tried to keep to a middle course between the central government and the Tamil rebels. Five years after the official end of the conflict, Kaanamylnathan, who himself escaped an attack in 2001, and his newspaper are still making waves. Last year, a series of articles on land seizures by the Sri Lankan army was followed by a brutal attack on the paper’s offices by six masked men.
Read the full list here

Lanka refutes BJP leader’s accusation of terror training

The Sri Lankan military today refuted as “baseless” an allegation by a senior BJP leader in Tamil Nadu that Pakistan-backed extremists are being trained in the country.
“In the backdrop of the Indian elections, an accusation has been made that terrorists are being trained in Sri Lanka. This is a baseless allegation,” military spokesman Brigadier Ruwan Wanigasooriya said.
“Sri Lanka is a country which suffered from terrorism for over 30 years. We will not support terrorism in whatever form,” Wanigasooriya stressed.
A Tamil Nadu BJP leader L Ganesan had yesterday charged that Pakistan-backed extremists were being trained in Sri Lanka and would be infiltrated into India to execute terror attacks.
Ganesan said the training was being carried out despite both Pakistan and Sri Lanka being aware of it.
(This article was published on May 4, 2014)

Lankan Tamils Safer Abroad


The New Indian ExpressBy V Suryanarayanan-05th May 2014 
Soon after the UN Human Rights Council passed a resolution calling for an international inquiry into human rights violations that took place in Sri Lanka, Colombo began to explore new policy initiatives. In addition to strengthening relations with friendly countries like China and Pakistan, Colombo was determined to curb the increasing influence of the Tamil diaspora. It is apparent that as and when international inquiry begins, the Tamil diaspora will be in the forefront submitting evidence against the Sri Lankan government.
The Sri Lankan government has recently identified 16 organisations and 424 individuals as financiers of terrorism. As a first step, the government has frozen their assets in Sri Lanka. The regulations are based on the UN Security Council Resolution 1373 of 2001, sponsored by the US following the aerial attack on the World Trade Centre. The regulations have made it a criminal offence for Sri Lankan citizens to maintain contacts with banned outfits and listed individuals. The banned organisations include Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam (TGTE), Global Tamil Forum (GTF) and Tamil Rehabilitation Organisation (TRO). Prominent individuals listed by the government include V Rudrakumaran of the TGTE, Fr S J Emmanuel of the GTF and Tiger leaders Nediyavan and Vinayagam.
The LTTE has been proscribed, designated or banned as a terrorist group in several countries. India was the first to ban the LTTE in May 1992 following Rajiv Gandhi’s assassination. Sri Lanka banned it only on January 7, 2009. It should be mentioned that the Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF), at heavy cost of men and materials, had bottled up the Tiger guerrillas in the jungles of Vavuniya. The two hitherto antagonistic entities, Prabhakaran and Premadasa, came together to get IPKF out of Sri Lanka. Colombo provided large sums and arms to the Tigers, thus enhancing their fighting capabilities. It should also be mentioned that Anton Balasingham, the ideologue of the Tigers, told The Times of London, “India has no moral or legal right to talk of the security of the Tamil people. This has to be worked out between the Sinhalese and the Tamils. Foreign intervention has failed to bring peace.” The honeymoon, however, did not last long. Premadasa fell victim to the cult of the human bomb perfected by the LTTE.
Sri Lankan Tamils had always been a migratory community. Since Jaffna was relatively arid, educated Jaffna Tamils, during the colonial period, migrated to Malaya, Singapore and other British colonies to take up white-collar jobs. Their remittances sustained Jaffna’s economy. In fact, Jaffna was known as post office economy. Post-independence, highly qualified Sri Lankan Tamils—academics, doctors, engineers, lawyers and technocrats—migrated to England, the US and Australia in search of greener pastures. Following ethnic fratricide of July 1983, Tamils from all strata of society began to leave Sri Lanka to escape persecution and military reprisal. The period synchronised with labour shortage in many European nations. What’s more, the governments in these nations viewed the Tamils as a persecuted group deserving compassionate treatment. Contrast this with the present policy of the Australian government who perceives illegal immigrants as “unwelcome intruders”. Today, the Sri Lankan Tamil diaspora numbers more than one million spread across the globe.
Unlike India, in the developed world, asylum is the first step towards citizenship and eventual integration. Thus, Sri Lankan Tamils have become a permanent feature of the demographic profile of the developed world. They are unlikely to return to Sri Lanka on a permanent basis. However, they would like to visit Sri Lanka as tourists and maintain contacts with their relatives. It should be mentioned that enlightened sections among the diaspora are taking keen interest in the rehabilitation of the war ravaged economy. They assist self-help groups, institute scholarships for the needy and are involved in restoration of temples and churches.
Experiences of refugees are traumatic illustrations of social change. They are uprooted from one socio-cultural setting and transplanted into another. In June 1998, I met Selvi, who was born in Jaffna. Her father died in 1988. Her mother died a year later. In 1989, Jaffna came under LTTE. Selvi paid three sovereigns to the Tigers as “exit tax” and went to Colombo. After working for a few years as domestic servant, she decided to migrate to Canada. She contacted a travel agent who gave her a false passport and false visa on payment on Lankan rupees equivalent to 20,000 Canadian dollars. On her first venture, Selvi and five others were detained by immigration authorities in Dhaka and sent back. Six months later she went to Singapore and reached Toronto via New York. When I met her in the Siva temple in Toronto, a favourite haunt of the Sri Lankan Hindus on weekends, she was awaiting a final decision on her asylum application.
To look at Lankan Tamil diaspora as a monolith will be a fatal mistake. After their bitter experience in Sri Lanka many have become apolitical and would like to lead normal lives in host nations. There are others who belong to the non-LTTE groups, but they had to withdraw into silence for fear of physical violence. Pro-Tiger groups had a free run and they fuelled the war machine of the Tigers.
Following the decimation of Tigers and killing of Prabhakaran, the diaspora went into a disarray. The TGTE and GTF were formed to meet the new challenges. The myth that Prabhakaran was invincible got exploded. They also realised Tamil Nadu politicians were more interested in making political capital out of the sufferings of Lankan Tamils. Complicating the situation Colombo did not make any effort to win over moderate sections among the diaspora. Colombo’s systematic negation of the 13th amendment, combined with its failure to institute a credible mechanism to inquire into human rights violations, is slowly, but surely, leading to its international isolation.
While the diaspora is hitting headlines, the continuing tragedy of Lankan Tamils goes unreported. A few years ago, well-known human rights activist Paul Caspersz visited Jaffna for a study. According to Caspersz, everyone, without exception, yearned for peace. He expressed the anguish and hope of the Tamils by quoting from a poem, The Siege of Hope, by Mahmoud Darwish, the Palestinian poet. The poem opens with the lines, “There in the hillside, gazing into the dusk and canon of time, near the shadow-crossed gardens, we do what prisoners and the powerless always do, we try to conjure up hope.”
The writer is former senior professor, the Centre for South and Southeast Asian
Studies, University of Madras.
Email:suryageeth@sify.com

US slash military links with SL

us flagThe US has sent a strong message to the Mahinda Rajapaksa government to get it’s together by slashing a majority of the military cooperation between the US and Sri Lanka.
One of the key actions taken by the US government is to stop all military training provided by the US to Sri Lankan military personnel. Apart from the de-mining programme in the North, the US has drastically scaled down its military links with Sri Lanka.
The US has said it is committed to working with the Sri Lankan government and the people to strengthen democracy.
The US has also expressed disappointment at the government's failure to take adequate steps to support accountability and reconciliation.
Assistant Secretary of South and Central Asian Affairs Nisha Desai Biswal has said Sri Lanka is still undergoing a fragile transition although the war ended in 2009.
“In Sri Lanka, while we saw the end of a brutal conflict in 2009, the country is still undergoing a fragile transition.”
Biswal has made this remark to the House Foreign Affairs Committee's Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacific on Wednesday, at a hearing to assess the U.S. foreign assistance priorities in South Asia.
“While we are disappointed that the government has failed over the past four years to take adequate and meaningful steps to support accountability and reconciliation, the United States is committed to working with the people and the government of Sri Lanka to strengthen its democracy and to help the country move towards a more durable peace,” she has told the subcommittee.