A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, March 3, 2013
Chilling documentary accuses Sri Lanka of war crimes
GENEVA
(AFP) - The Sri Lankan military committed numerous war crimes during the final
months of the country's 26-year civil war, according to a documentary aired for
the first time Friday, amid vigorous protests from Colombo.
Using
graphic video and pictures taken both by retreating Tamil Tiger rebels,
civilians and victorious Sri Lankan troops, "No Fire Zone -- The Killing Fields
of Sri Lanka" presents a chilling picture of the final 138 days of the conflict
that ended in May 2009.
Filmmaker
Callum Macrae insisted before the screening that the film at the UN Office at
Geneva that it should be seen as "evidence" of the "war crimes and crimes
against humanity" committed by government troops.
"The
real truth is coming out," he said.
Sri
Lanka's ambassador in Geneva, Ravinatha Aryasinha, strongly protested the
screening of the film on the sidelines of the ongoing UN Human Rights
Council.
He
described it as "part of a cynical, concerted and orchestrated campaign" to
influence the debate in the council about his country.
Human
Rights Watch and Amnesty International, which hosted the screening, are calling
for the council to order an international probe.
They
charge that Sri Lanka's domestic Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission
(LLRC) has glossed over the military's role.
The
film for instance alleges that a "no fire zone" set up by the government in
January, 2009, basically functioned as a trap for the hundreds of thousands of
civilians who flooded into it in the hope of finding safety.
The
area was heavily shelled, and in the film maimed and bloodied bodies, of men,
women and children, lay strewn.
The
UN has estimated that some 40,000 people were killed in the final months of the
war, most of them due to indiscriminate shelling by the Sri Lankan
military.
Peter
Mackay, a UN worker who was trapped inside the zone for two weeks, questioned in
the film why the government would set up the "no fire zone" within range of all
of their artillery.
"Either
you don't care if you kill the people in that safe zone or you are actively
targeting them," he said, adding that he believed the latter was true.
He
and others describe how aid-centres and make-shift hospitals were shelled soon
after UN or Red Cross workers informed the government of their coordinates,
which is ironically standard practice to ensure that such places are spared in
bombing campaigns.
The
footage provided by the retreating Tamil Tigers and civilians is devastating,
showing parents wailing over their dying and dead children, but the images
provided by the government forces are perhaps even more shocking.
Video
of a Tamil commander first being interrogated, and then a picture of his
mutilated body in the dirt; naked and bound prisoners coldly executed; dead,
naked women, who have clearly been sexually abused filmed amid degrading
comments by onlooking soldiers.
And
then there is footage of the 12-year-old son of Tamil Tiger leader Velupillai
Prabhakaran, Balachandran, whose body is seen with five bullet holes in his
chest.
He
was not caught in cross-fire: a separate video shot two hours earlier, shows him
sitting in military custody in a bunker eating a biscuit.
The
Sri Lankan government has cast doubt on the authenticity of the footage, with
Aryasinha insisting Friday it was of "dubious origin".
Macrae
however insisted that all the footage had been carefully checked and analysed to
ensure none of it had been tampered with.
"All of it is, I'm afraid,
genuine," he said.
02
March 2013
Cairn Lanka has abandoned an oil exploration well
in the Mannar basin, after no traces of oil or gas were found.
“The well was plugged and abandoned and
the rig is being demobilised. The Petroleum Resourced Development Secretariat
(PRDS) is being notified,” said Cairn India, which owns Cairn
Lanka
In an interview to the Daily Mirror, Cairn India and Cairn Lanka Director Sunil
Bharati said that there were several paths Cairn Lanka could take in going
forward.
Graphic courtesy of
DailyMirror.lk
|
“Depending on the results of the second phase,
there could be two or three different paths available to us, as envisaged in the
Petroleum Resources Agreement. Either we can choose to proceed to the third
phase, which will again require drilling a commitment well and have a time
period of one to two years, or not to enter the third phase but enter into an
appraisal phase followed by a development phase.”
“If we opt to enter the development stage, we
will have to do a detailed appraisal to establish the volume of oil or gas
available in the block, which will take one to two years. Only then will we know
whether the block is commercially viable,” he said.
Meanwhile Sri Lanka is preparing to auction more
blocks in the Mannar and Cauvery basin.
Posted by
Thavam