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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, April 3, 2013
Wednesday
, 03 April 2013
War memorial construction work
was observed by Sri lanka Military Commander Lte.General Jagath Jayasooriya last
week. The new war memorial is erected by the Sri Lanka military at
Kudumbimalai, Batticaloa.
After the defeat of liberation
tigers, monuments are erected in Vanni remembering the war victory by the
forces.
Forces have transformed
localities by erecting monuments at the areas the final war occurred as Sinhala
people’s vital tourist centers.
This war tourist centers and
monuments, will not assist for ethnic reconciliation was reviewed by Medias
worldwide and in this situation, the forces are erecting another monument in the
east.
A memorial monument is erected
at the Kudumbimalai locality was a threat to the soldiers as it was the
stronghold of Liberation Tigers.
Sri Lanka Military Commander
Lte.General Jagath Jayasooriya last week visited the construction towards this
war memorial monument and he observed the activity and gave more guidance.
This is much expected that
this memorial monument would be inaugurated next month on the fourth anniversary
day remembering the tigers defeat.
Defense Secretary Gottabaya
Rajapakse inaugurated the memorial tomb at Karadiyanaru, Ilupadichenai junction,
in memory of demised forces at the battle to capture Kudumbimalai in the year
2007.
Sri Lanka must find aid workers’ killers, charity says
NEW
DELHI, (AlertNet) - The Sri Lankan government must find and prosecute those
responsible for the massacre of 17 aid workers during the country's 25-year
civil war, French charity Action Contre La Faim (ACF) has said.
The
killing of the aid workers, who were shot at point-blank range outside their
office in northeast Sri Lanka in 2006, was the worst attack on humanitarians
since the 2003 bombing of the United Nations compound in Baghdad.
"It's
important that those responsible be held accountable. If we want real peace
and reconciliation and justice in Sri Lanka, any investigations conducted must
be transparent which they have not been so far," Pauline Chetcuti, ACF's
Humanitarian Advocacy Advisor told AlertNet by phone from Paris.
The
"Mutur Massacre", named after the town where the killings took place, occurred
on August 4, 2006, during the civil war between separatist Tamil Tiger rebels
and government forces that began in 1983.
The
mostly ethnic Tamil aid workers were providing water and sanitation to survivors
of the 2004 tsunami when Tamil Tiger fighters launched an offensive against
government troops to take control of Mutur.
Trapped
in their office, the aid workers lost radio contact with their head
office.
Two
days later, the bodies of 15 of them, men and women, were discovered lying face
down in the ACF compound with bullet wounds to the head and neck. The bodies of
two others were found in a vehicle nearby, possibly killed while trying to
escape.
The
war ended in May 2009, but no one has been held accountable for the killings,
let alone arrested and charged, says ACF, which now runs a campaign called "Justice for Mutur."
WEAK
U.N. RESOLUTION
Tens
of thousands of civilians were killed in the final months of the war as
government troops advanced on the last stronghold of the Tamil Tiger rebels
fighting for an independent homeland, a United Nations panel has said.
In
a resolution passed by the U.N. Human Rights Council last month, the
organisation urged Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa to carry out credible
investigations into the killings and disappearances during the war, especially
in the final stages.
It
also voiced concern at reports of continuing violations including killings,
torture, curbs on the right to freedom of expression, and reprisals against
activists and journalists.
Resolutions
such as that brought by the United States are not binding, but the scrutiny by
the U.N. Human Rights Council maintains pressure on the government to prosecute
war crimes.
ACF
said it welcomed the resolution, but noted that the resolution did not demand an
independent inquiry into the deaths of ACF staff and other war victims, but
called on Colombo to undertake its own investigation.
"It's
great that the international community got together to pass this resolution, but
it's really not enough because the terms of the resolution are not strong enough
and it doesn't force Sri Lanka to do something concrete," said Chetcuti.
"What
we are calling for is an international, credible investigation into war crimes.
Asking Sri Lanka to do its own inquiry is ironic as its own army is accused of
being behind some of these human rights violations."
ACF
says it has closely followed three Sri Lankan judicial proceedings on the Mutur
massacre, but says the proceedings, which spanned two years of investigations,
were subject to continuous delays and riddled with errors and political
interference.
An
international group of observers withdrew due to a lack of transparency, and as
a result, ACF also pulled out from the country in protest and to press for the
guilty parties to held accountable.
A
2008 report by a local rights group, The University Teachers for Human Rights,
blamed Sri Lankan security forces for the massacre and accused the government of
a cover-up.
The
Sri Lankan government has denied responsibility and has blamed the killings on
Tamil Tiger fighters.