Brutal slaughter of Tamil civilians
SEÁN Ó FLOINN & EMMA CLANCY | 02.05.2009 14:04
A largely defenceless people struggling to survive and hemmed in on a narrow
strip of land while facing ruthless indiscriminate airstrikes, assault from
gun boats and subjected to cluster bombs by a well equipped government army,
conjures up the image of the recent Israeli invasion of Palestine’s Gaza
Strip. However, in Sri Lanka, where since the start of this year government
forces have stepped up their campaign of wiping out the separatist LTTE
(Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) militant group, which has fought a
25-year war for Tamil independence, the situation has culminated with the
brutal slaughter of thousands of Tamil civilians who have literally become
trapped in a war zone. The silence in the media in comparison to the daily
headlines of Israel’s recent wanton destruction of Gaza has been deafening.
UN figures stated that 2,000 people have died in the fighting in the last
month, not including last week; the most brutal. The civilian death toll has
eclipsed 6,500 since the end of January and some 200,000 Tamil civilians
find themselves trapped amongst the LTTE rebels on a tiny sliver of northern
coastline measuring 10 sq km; surrounded by the Sri Lankan army who continue
to pound the area with air strikes and heavy artillery fire, intent on
exterminating the rebels and apparently unconcerned about the growing
civilian death toll.
Sri Lanka is facing a growing humanitarian crisis. US Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton has already accused the Sri Lankan government of “causing
untold suffering”. The vast majority of aid workers have been refused access
to the euphemistically labelled “no-fire zones”, and journalists have been
completely denied entry. Make-shift hospitals are crumbling under the
demand, and people are reportedly dying of malnutrition. The Tamil civilians
who are “rescued” by Government forces are being rounded into internment
camps.
*BLOODBATH*
The international community has been pathetic in its response. Although on
Sunday the LTTE announced a unilateral ceasefire, the government have not
reciprocated insisting that they will push on to secure complete rebel
surrender, at whatever expense. The International Committee of the Red Cross
has described the war zone as a “catastrophic bloodbath”.
Sri Lanka, an idyllic island off the southern tip of India and home to 20
million people, is a tropical paradise boasting golden beaches straddled by
palm trees. It is a land of unquestionable beauty, abundant in resources
from tea and rubber, to coconuts and diamonds. However the ordinary people
of Sri Lanka live in dire poverty and the country has been torn apart by
civil war. Those civilians currently trapped inside the “no-fire zone” are
being forced to endure hell on earth.
Sri Lanka’s current problems can be traced back to the legacy of British
colonialism. It achieved independence in 1948 as Ceylon, changing its name
to Sri Lanka in 1972. The ethnic make-up of the country includes 80 per cent
Sinhalese, and 10 per cent Tamil (both Indian and Sri Lankan). The Tamils,
Sri Lanka’s largest ethnic minority, are mainly concentrated in the north
and east of the island. After independence, the Sinhalese government
introduced controversial discriminatory policies including: stripping the
Tamil plantation workers of their citizenship, unfair education laws;
anti-Tamil employment rules and through the ‘Sinhala Only Act’ made Sinhala
the only official language of the island. Initial Tamil resistance to these
policies were peaceful, but were met with repression. Civil war erupted in
1983. After the LTTE killed 13 Sri Lankan soldiers in an ambush, 3,000
Tamils were slaughtered in government-instigated Sinhalese programs in
‘Black July’. Since then the violence has spiralled out of control, claiming
over 70,000 lives.
The LTTE were formed in 1976 by current leader Velupillai Prabhakaran. They
seek a separate nation for Tamils, to be called Tamil Eelam, in the north
and east of the country. With the failure of politics to achieve any
equality for the Tamil population, the LTTE became stronger, more numerous
and eventually crushed or consumed other Tamil militant groups. It soon
became one of the world’s most feared and best equipped rebel groups. It has
a sea and air force, and previously launched attacks on government military
airports. It killed former Sri Lankan President Ranasinghe Premadasa in
1993. However, it has also attracted negative attention for deploying
suicide bombers and has been lambasted for allegedly recruiting children as
young as twelve to engage in armed combat against government troops.
*CEASEFIRES AND NEGOTIATIONS*
Major military gains by the Tigers and the dire state of the Sri Lankan
economy as a result of the ongoing war were the key factors that forced the
Sri Lankan Government to respond positively to unilateral LTTE ceasefires
declared in 2000 and 2001. The February 2002 Norwegian-mediated ceasefire
agreement has been the longest-lasting attempt to bring peace.
In negotiations the LTTE has sought the establishment of an interim
self-governing authority in the north-east which can facilitate human rights
protection as well as “resettlement, rehabilitation, reconstruction, and
development in the north-east, while the process of reaching a final
settlement remains ongoing”.
But far from offering the Tamil people anything in negotiations that could
lead to a lasting peace, the United National Party (UNP) Government failed
even to implement the provisions of the ceasefire agreement. It failed to
allow Tamils to return to their homes in the ‘high security zones’ occupied
by the SLA, or have the SLA vacate public buildings in Tamil towns. It also
failed to disarm the pro-Government paramilitary death squads.
As a result, the LTTE suspended its participation in negotiations in 2003.
The UNP was replaced in 2004 elections, which were boycotted almost totally
by the Tamil population, by the even more chauvinist Government of President
Mahinda Rajapaksa.
As peace talks stalled, Sinn Féin’s Martin McGuinness travelled to Sri Lanka
twice in 2006 to meet with representatives from the LTTE and the Government
in an attempt to promote a peaceful, negotiated solution to the conflict.
But the Government pulled out of the ceasefire agreement in January last
year, opting for annihilation rather than negotiation. Since then the army
have unleashed a massive military operation aimed at ultimately destroying
the rebels, winning back almost all of LTTE-held territory, where the latter
had set up government-like services.
*INTERNATIONAL RESPONSE *
Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaska has been widely accused of presiding
over a racist regime, intent on crushing any dissent. The Asian Development
Bank named Sri Lanka as one of the “world’s most politically unstable
countries”. Human Rights Watch labelled the Sri Lankan government as one of
the “world’s worst perpetrators of enforced disappearances”. It is the
fourth most dangerous place on earth for journalists to venture.
The international community must act to force the Sri Lankan Government to
halt its bloody offensive and Tamil civilians must be granted freedom of
movement and provided with sufficient humanitarian aid. The government-run
internment camps, housing fleeing civilians, are horribly overcrowded,
surrounded by barbed wire and controlled by government troops, and should be
shut down. Those civilians escaping the violence deserve access to adequate
food, shelter and health care.
All Sri Lankans need an all-inclusive political process, based on equality,
inclusion and mutual respect. There can never be peace without social
justice, and Tamils should no longer be treated as the inferior race. The
International Community, through the UN, should facilitate this process. The
root cause of the conflict needs to be addressed, that is the grievances of
the Tamil population, those very civilians that have been risking their
lives to flee to India in ramshackle boats. Civilians must stop being used
as disposable pawns in this bloody political power struggle. The time has
come for not only peace, but also prosperity and social justice for this
majestic island and all who inhabit it.
strip of land while facing ruthless indiscriminate airstrikes, assault from
gun boats and subjected to cluster bombs by a well equipped government army,
conjures up the image of the recent Israeli invasion of Palestine’s Gaza
Strip. However, in Sri Lanka, where since the start of this year government
forces have stepped up their campaign of wiping out the separatist LTTE
(Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) militant group, which has fought a
25-year war for Tamil independence, the situation has culminated with the
brutal slaughter of thousands of Tamil civilians who have literally become
trapped in a war zone. The silence in the media in comparison to the daily
headlines of Israel’s recent wanton destruction of Gaza has been deafening.
UN figures stated that 2,000 people have died in the fighting in the last
month, not including last week; the most brutal. The civilian death toll has
eclipsed 6,500 since the end of January and some 200,000 Tamil civilians
find themselves trapped amongst the LTTE rebels on a tiny sliver of northern
coastline measuring 10 sq km; surrounded by the Sri Lankan army who continue
to pound the area with air strikes and heavy artillery fire, intent on
exterminating the rebels and apparently unconcerned about the growing
civilian death toll.
Sri Lanka is facing a growing humanitarian crisis. US Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton has already accused the Sri Lankan government of “causing
untold suffering”. The vast majority of aid workers have been refused access
to the euphemistically labelled “no-fire zones”, and journalists have been
completely denied entry. Make-shift hospitals are crumbling under the
demand, and people are reportedly dying of malnutrition. The Tamil civilians
who are “rescued” by Government forces are being rounded into internment
camps.
*BLOODBATH*
The international community has been pathetic in its response. Although on
Sunday the LTTE announced a unilateral ceasefire, the government have not
reciprocated insisting that they will push on to secure complete rebel
surrender, at whatever expense. The International Committee of the Red Cross
has described the war zone as a “catastrophic bloodbath”.
Sri Lanka, an idyllic island off the southern tip of India and home to 20
million people, is a tropical paradise boasting golden beaches straddled by
palm trees. It is a land of unquestionable beauty, abundant in resources
from tea and rubber, to coconuts and diamonds. However the ordinary people
of Sri Lanka live in dire poverty and the country has been torn apart by
civil war. Those civilians currently trapped inside the “no-fire zone” are
being forced to endure hell on earth.
Sri Lanka’s current problems can be traced back to the legacy of British
colonialism. It achieved independence in 1948 as Ceylon, changing its name
to Sri Lanka in 1972. The ethnic make-up of the country includes 80 per cent
Sinhalese, and 10 per cent Tamil (both Indian and Sri Lankan). The Tamils,
Sri Lanka’s largest ethnic minority, are mainly concentrated in the north
and east of the island. After independence, the Sinhalese government
introduced controversial discriminatory policies including: stripping the
Tamil plantation workers of their citizenship, unfair education laws;
anti-Tamil employment rules and through the ‘Sinhala Only Act’ made Sinhala
the only official language of the island. Initial Tamil resistance to these
policies were peaceful, but were met with repression. Civil war erupted in
1983. After the LTTE killed 13 Sri Lankan soldiers in an ambush, 3,000
Tamils were slaughtered in government-instigated Sinhalese programs in
‘Black July’. Since then the violence has spiralled out of control, claiming
over 70,000 lives.
The LTTE were formed in 1976 by current leader Velupillai Prabhakaran. They
seek a separate nation for Tamils, to be called Tamil Eelam, in the north
and east of the country. With the failure of politics to achieve any
equality for the Tamil population, the LTTE became stronger, more numerous
and eventually crushed or consumed other Tamil militant groups. It soon
became one of the world’s most feared and best equipped rebel groups. It has
a sea and air force, and previously launched attacks on government military
airports. It killed former Sri Lankan President Ranasinghe Premadasa in
1993. However, it has also attracted negative attention for deploying
suicide bombers and has been lambasted for allegedly recruiting children as
young as twelve to engage in armed combat against government troops.
*CEASEFIRES AND NEGOTIATIONS*
Major military gains by the Tigers and the dire state of the Sri Lankan
economy as a result of the ongoing war were the key factors that forced the
Sri Lankan Government to respond positively to unilateral LTTE ceasefires
declared in 2000 and 2001. The February 2002 Norwegian-mediated ceasefire
agreement has been the longest-lasting attempt to bring peace.
In negotiations the LTTE has sought the establishment of an interim
self-governing authority in the north-east which can facilitate human rights
protection as well as “resettlement, rehabilitation, reconstruction, and
development in the north-east, while the process of reaching a final
settlement remains ongoing”.
But far from offering the Tamil people anything in negotiations that could
lead to a lasting peace, the United National Party (UNP) Government failed
even to implement the provisions of the ceasefire agreement. It failed to
allow Tamils to return to their homes in the ‘high security zones’ occupied
by the SLA, or have the SLA vacate public buildings in Tamil towns. It also
failed to disarm the pro-Government paramilitary death squads.
As a result, the LTTE suspended its participation in negotiations in 2003.
The UNP was replaced in 2004 elections, which were boycotted almost totally
by the Tamil population, by the even more chauvinist Government of President
Mahinda Rajapaksa.
As peace talks stalled, Sinn Féin’s Martin McGuinness travelled to Sri Lanka
twice in 2006 to meet with representatives from the LTTE and the Government
in an attempt to promote a peaceful, negotiated solution to the conflict.
But the Government pulled out of the ceasefire agreement in January last
year, opting for annihilation rather than negotiation. Since then the army
have unleashed a massive military operation aimed at ultimately destroying
the rebels, winning back almost all of LTTE-held territory, where the latter
had set up government-like services.
*INTERNATIONAL RESPONSE *
Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaska has been widely accused of presiding
over a racist regime, intent on crushing any dissent. The Asian Development
Bank named Sri Lanka as one of the “world’s most politically unstable
countries”. Human Rights Watch labelled the Sri Lankan government as one of
the “world’s worst perpetrators of enforced disappearances”. It is the
fourth most dangerous place on earth for journalists to venture.
The international community must act to force the Sri Lankan Government to
halt its bloody offensive and Tamil civilians must be granted freedom of
movement and provided with sufficient humanitarian aid. The government-run
internment camps, housing fleeing civilians, are horribly overcrowded,
surrounded by barbed wire and controlled by government troops, and should be
shut down. Those civilians escaping the violence deserve access to adequate
food, shelter and health care.
All Sri Lankans need an all-inclusive political process, based on equality,
inclusion and mutual respect. There can never be peace without social
justice, and Tamils should no longer be treated as the inferior race. The
International Community, through the UN, should facilitate this process. The
root cause of the conflict needs to be addressed, that is the grievances of
the Tamil population, those very civilians that have been risking their
lives to flee to India in ramshackle boats. Civilians must stop being used
as disposable pawns in this bloody political power struggle. The time has
come for not only peace, but also prosperity and social justice for this
majestic island and all who inhabit it.
SEÁN Ó FLOINN & EMMA CLANCY
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