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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, March 4, 2013
Who Makes War Against Children?
Dr. Paul Newman for Salem-News.com-Mar-02-2013
Article by Dr. Paul Newman of the United Nations Human Rights
Council.
|
(GENEVA) - On the 24th of February, 2013, a panicky
letter addressed to the President of the 22nd UN Human Rights Council was sent
by Ambassador Ravinatha Aryasinha urging him to stop the screening the of the
Channel 4 documentary ‘No Fire Zone: The Killing Fields of Sri Lanka’,
co-sponsored by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch. Perhaps the Sri
Lankan delegation forgot that it is Geneva, where there is ‘Right to Freedom of
Press’, not Colombo, where anyone against the ruling class can be bumped easily.
The screening of the 3rd part of the Killing Fields of Sri Lanka started as
scheduled at 12.00 noon. Paul Hoffman Chair of the International Executive
Committee of Amnesty International moderated the session. youtu.be/gjZlIeiSxxI
Producer of the documentary, Callum Macrae made the opening remarks
calling his work as definitive work and hard evidence very carefully
compiled,checked analysed by forensic pathologists and digital analysts, none of
the footage was fake and it was hard evidence countering the Sri Lankan
government’s claim that there were no civilian casualties. He said he has no
personal agenda and did his duty as a journalist as he has done in the past, it
was about human rights.
Then the lights were shut out at hall no. XX111, the opening scene
was the event of September 8th 2008, outside the UN office at Kilinochchi where
civilians in large numbers urge the UN agencies not to abandon them. Then there
are scenes of multibarrel rocket launchers firing and aerial bombings. Then
Rohitha Bashana Abeywardane spoke of the discrimination of the non Buddhists,
non Sinhalese hatred in which the Tamils were victims since 1948 and traced how
militancy came to the forefront after the failure of all peaceful methods for
equal rights were exhausted.
The scene then shifts to London where Vani Kumar a girl born in
1984, migrated to London in 1994, got married, then separated and moves to live
with her relatives in the Vanni take a break. Then Benjamin Dix, the former UN
staffer, speaks of the de facto government of the LTTE, and then speaks of Isai
Priya, the LTTE Television announcer, news reader, singer, dancer and actor. Her
gentle nature, her charm and how she was always respectful.
Then there is the narration of how LTTE had given up recruitment of
child soldiers and suicide bombings from 2002-2006.
The scene shifts to the 138 most
dreaded days of the Tamils in northern Sri Lanka from January 2nd 2009. There is
a day to day horrific account of the civilian killings and the sight of 350,000
people fleeing in rain to save their lives from the army and airforce attacks.
Then on Day 20, January 21st 2009, the No Fire Zone (NFZ) or Safe Zone was
announced. Peter Mackay, former U.N. staffer, narrates his experience of being
trapped in a war zone for two weeks and witnessing first-hand the shelling of
the NFZ.
“There’s a crucial point to be made on
why the Sri Lankan government declared the no fire zone… There is only one
intent and that is because you don’t really care you are going to kill the
people that are located in that safer zone or more importantly you are actively
targeting them,” Mr. Mckay says in the film. Peter tries to call the Colombo
office to request the army to move the shelling though the army was aware of the
positioning of his GPS. When he tries to contact them the strewn body of a girl
lands on him.
There are scenes of cluster bomb
destruction and children crying. On Day 28, the NFZ is overrun. There is
continous tagetting of the Puthukudiruppu hostpital, on Day 42, a new NFZ is
announced. The attacks on the NFZ continues relentlessly. At the Puthumathalan
hospital, there is severe shortage of doctors, medicine and infrastructure, a
choice has to be made, whom to save and whom not to.
On the International arena, British
Foreign Secretary David Miliband and his French counterpart Bernard Kouchner
make a frantic visit to Sri Lanka to save the civilians, the Government of Sri
Lanka tries to convince them that the civilians are safe, David Miliband calls
the Sri Lankan’s as ‘Liars’ and has to leave the island.
In all there were 65 attacks on the
hospitals alone and finally the hospital had to be abandoned and the civilians
herded into a narrow strip of just 3 kilometers. Here the armed forces shell
relentlessly in the middle of the crowded masses splitting the civilian
population into two zones and taking over one.
Then the government declares the war
as over. From here the scene shifts to the footage and photos taken by soldiers
as war trophies. The cold blooded killing of Col. Ramesh, the white flag bearers
Nadesan and Pulithevan and finally Balachandran is examined by Prof.
Derrick, Professor of Forensic Medicine, University of Dundee who
clearly states that it was murder and then Prof. William Schabas claiming that
these acts constitute, war crimes undoubtedly.
In Colombo, there is celebrations,
where as in the Vanni there are massive clearance operations going on. There are
scenes of women cadre of the LTTE taken in the army trucks, seen for the last
time, nobody heard of them ever after. Those who survived had to starve for 3
days without food and water before being shunted into the Menik farm camps. At
these camps, many women were raped and went missing, none of these were reported
as the army controlled the camps.
Dixie then speaks of the post war
militarization, Sinhalisation and the incentive given to the soldiers posted in
the north when they have a third child. Bashana speaks of increased injustice
and colonization. Vani has resettled in life after marrying again, yet she is
unable to forget the haunting past.
The explanation of Vani on how blood
was collected from the wounded civilians filtered with a piece of cloth and
reinduced into the victim’s body makes one hate war. For the first time she sees
blood flowing on the ground along with rain water. One wonders how can a war be
described as a humanitarian operation?
After there the screening, there was a
thunderous applause for the movie maker and the floor was given to the Sri
Lankan ambassador. He protested the use of UN premises for a vicious campaign
against Sri Lanka. He described the documentary as ‘distorted, dubious, cynical,
concerted and orchestrated campaign that is strategically driven, and clearly
motivated by collateral political considerations”. cynical, concerted and
orchestrated campaign that is strategically driven, and clearly motivated by
collateral political considerations”.
He asked whether these human rights
groups could take ownership of the documentary. He described the Journalists for
Democracy as a shadowy group, which was behind the campaign. He called both Vani
Kumar and Isai Priya as members of the LTTE and left the hall immediately. It is
true in the case of Isai Priya, because she was a member of the LTTE, does it
give the Sri Lankan soldiers the right to rape and desecrate her body?
Mr.Ravinatha should answer this as a true Buddhist.
He calls all the footage as stage
managed by the LTTE and sang the same old song of the army rescuing 300,000
civilians, providing food, rehabilitation etc and said that LTTE sympathizers
were vote banks in the west and the Channel 4 was undermining the efforts of
reconciliation.
Then it was Yasmin Sooka’s turn to
speak, she spoke of denial and refusal as the strong arsenal of the Sri Lankan
government. Her assessment of the key aspect of the Sri Lankan government as
part of the three member UN Panel of Expert’s was the keeping out of media,
NGOs, UN since September 2009.
Nowhere she had come across thousands
of civilians killed in such a short period. As part of the Panel of Expert’s she
had estimated about 40,000 civilian deaths, it increased to 70,000 in the
Charles Petrie report of November 2012, but the Bishop of Mannar is consistent
about more than 100,000 civilans deaths, this is where an International Inquiry
is necessary to get an independent estimate.
She spoke of the starvation of the
people, bombing of the hospitals, firing at the NFZSs, violation of the
International Humanitarian Law. Tamils even now lived under military control.
The LLRC report was not implemented, ‘can the government be trusted to
investigate themselves, the military court exonerated itself’, she said.
People were increasing targeting for
speaking the truth, civilians need justice, the onus is on the International
Community to get justice for the victims, the media and clergy were under
threat, the triumphalism was translated into chavunism, now the national anthem
was only in Sinhalese, the Tamils were the only people who were denied even the
right to mourn their dead.
She reiterated that since 2009 nothing
has happened, people of Sri Lanka needs justice. This was not a Tamil issue, it
is a human issue.
Gordon Weiss, the former UN
Spokesperson in Colombo, spoke of Dr.Dayan Jayatileke, who defended Sri Lanka at
the UN in 2009, now speaking of quasi occupation of the Tamil areas in the north
and posed the question of Who is pulling the wool over who’s eyes?
Sumanthiran, the TNA Member of
Parliament, thanked McRae on behalf of the Tamil people and demanded an
Independent International Investigations, he noted that the SL government
branded the Channel 4 videos as not authentic, but the LLRC wanted the videos to
be investigated. He assured that TNA would cooperate with any independent
investigations.
The vote of thanks was proposed by
Julie de Rivero of Human Rights Watch who wanted the UN to respond to the rights
of the victims and urged the diplomats present there to respond as human beings.
At the end there was silence and grief.
The one sentence that echoed in
everyone’s mind and heart was the question posed by Yasmin Sooka, ‘WHO MAKES WAR
AGAINST CHILDREN?’, of course Sri Lanka does and continues to do as the world
pretends to be blind to the plight of the Tamils.
Dr. Paul Newman from UNHRC
22,Geneva 1st March, 2013
Source: Trans National Government of
Tamil Eelam Media