Daily News Online
Ad Space Available HERE  

DateLine Monday, 19 January 2009

News Bar »

News: No devaluation No IMF bailout ...        Political: Vote for UPFA is vote for motherland - President ...       Business: First Yacht Marina at Galle ...        Sports: Blue Star enter semis by edging out Renown ...

Home

 | SHARE MARKET  | EXCHANGE RATE  | TRADING  | PICTURE GALLERY  | ARCHIVES | 

dailynews
 ONLINE


OTHER PUBLICATIONS


OTHER LINKS

Marriage Proposals
Classified
Government Gazette

A strange ‘Liberation’ in deed!

While the LTTE propaganda constantly drones on about the supposed repression of Tamils by the Sri Lankan Government, the world occasionally catches a glimpse of reality. And it is very different.

The fact is that the Sri Lankan Government is working hard to provide the basic needs of all its citizens, particularly those affected by the fighting in the Vanni, and the LTTE is doing everything possible to deprive them of their basic rights.

A particularly telling story was reported this week. Civilians who sought refuge with the Sri Lankan Army at Paranthan in the Kilinochchi district on Saturday told officials that the LTTE cadres had fired at them as they were trying to escape, killing five adults and two children. Forty-nine civilians, including two men with gunshot injuries, reached the frontline.

The Government has long been calling for the LTTE to allow civilians to move to the safety of territory held by the Sri Lankan Army. Efforts have been made to set up welfare centres to make sure that they will be able to live comfortably until they can return to their homes. The displaced will be given meals, dry rations, cooking utensils, drinking water, infant food, clothes and other essential items.

The Sri Lankan Army has built good quality shelters from locally appropriate materials, and the necessary sanitation and other facilities have already been set up, along with electricity, healthcare services and plans for schooling. Vavuniya is serving as a hub for IDPs, but similar arrangements are also in place in the Jaffna and Mannar districts, and attention will be given to Kilinochchi too once demining work is completed.

In the East, thousands of people moved away from the disputed areas while military operations were going on, but the vast majority of IDPs returned to their homes within a few months. Civilians largely escaped the fighting, and there was only one incident in which deaths and injuries were reported.

The United Nations confirmed that the process was effectively handled. If the LTTE allowed a similar thing to happen in the North, there would be absolutely no danger of civilians getting hurt in their engagements with the Sri Lankan Army.

It isn’t only a question of morality. The LTTE is breaking international law by using civilians as a human shield. While NGOs and other international agencies were slow to criticise the LTTE for this, just as they were over the use of child soldiers and the practice of forced recruitment, they began to speak out when the LTTE refused to allow their workers to move out of the Vanni. Human Rights Watch published a report last month that was severely critical of the LTTE for this policy of holding civilians, which it described as a war crime.

Recognising the seriousness of the issue, the Government banned the LTTE after it ignored an ultimatum to release civilians from the Vanni. While other countries have maintained a ban on the LTTE for years, Sri Lanka deproscribed the organisation after the signing of the Ceasefire Agreement in 2002, and the Government didn’t reinstate the ban even after it became clear that the LTTE wasn’t adhering to the pact.

This was a symbol of the willingness on the part of the Government to pursue negotiations and find a solution to the conflict by peaceful means, but such a gesture is clearly inappropriate when the LTTE is inflicting so much suffering on civilians.

The LTTE efforts to maintain a human shield also give the lie to its claims about the Sri Lankan Army killing large numbers of civilians. Its mouthpieces use words like genocide and ethnic cleansing with gay abandon, but without any evidence.

If that were actually happening, there would be little point in attempting to build up a human shield. If the Sri Lankan Army weren’t determined to avoid civilian deaths, it could barge ahead with its campaign at a much faster rate than has been the case so far.

Tamils have recently been voting with their feet. Over 1,000 people came out of the Vanni in the second half of last year to the safety of territory held by the Sri Lankan Army, and they have since been trying to get word back to family members and friends who stayed behind to try their luck.

As we have tragically seen this week, it means risking their lives. The distance between civilians and the frontlines has been a constraint too, but this situation is changing with the advances being made. Almost 1,000 people reached Sri Lankan Army positions last week, which gives some cause for hope.

The sad truth is that it is the LTTE that is suppressing Tamils, the people it claims to represent and for whom it says it is fighting. The Sri Lankan Government is doing the opposite. Violations of basic freedoms have always been the norm under the LTTE, up to and including the right to life.

The LTTE has murdered dozens of Tamils in the last couple of decades, but there is something especially disturbing about the thought of them shooting at the backs of people trying to find their way to peace.

Communications Division Secretariat for Coordinating the Peace Process

EMAIL |   PRINTABLE VIEW | FEEDBACK

Gamin Gamata - Presidential Community & Welfare Service
ANCL TENDER for CT Machines with Online Processors
http://www.victoriarange.com
www.liyathabara.com
www.defence.lk
Donate Now | defence.lk
www.apiwenuwenapi.co.uk
LANKAPUVATH - National News Agency of Sri Lanka
www.peaceinsrilanka.org
www.army.lk
www.news.lk

| News | Editorial | Business | Features | Political | Security | Sport | World | Letters | Obituaries |

Produced by Lake House Copyright © 2009 The Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Ltd.

Comments and suggestions to : Web Editor