Suffering of civilians cornered by HRW
Rajiva Wijesinha
The Anglo American Corporation Human Rights Watch (HRW) is now
engaged in a campaign, along with its patrons, to denigrate Sri Lanka in
the eyes of the Human Rights Council in Geneva. This follows its
campaign throughout 2009 to dissuade civilians from leaving the LTTE
controlled territory to refuge with the Sri Lankan Government.
In both cases, the HRW agenda fits in with that of the LTTE. This may
not be deliberate, but it is certainly convenient for the LTTE. Now that
the LTTE is reduced to using the civilians it has entrapped, not just as
a shield, but as a weapon of mass destruction, HRW has begun to issue
lengthy descriptions of their suffering. It ignores completely its own
contribution to this suffering, through its protracted campaign to
suggest throughout 2008 that the civilians were as well off with the
LTTE as they would be with Government.
Security Forces distributing drinking water to civilians.
Picture by Rukmal Gamage |
In July last year, when it became clear that the Tigers were forcing
civilians to accompany them as they retreated into smaller and smaller
areas, HRW began the game of claiming that the facilities the Sri Lankan
Government provided for refugees were internment camps.
Rousing emotions associated with what the British did to the Boers
and the Nazis to the Jews, forcibly taking people from their homes, HRW
thus sought to persuade the world that the civilians the LTTE were
forcing to go along with them would suffer just as much if they
succeeded in escaping.
This year the campaign continued, with vicious falsehoods about
conditions in the welfare centres, and claims of shortages of food and
medicine in February, when we were looking after fewer than 40,000. No
one else made such claims, so HRW obviously had an ulterior motive in
continuing to insinuate that people would suffer if they succeeded in
getting away from the LTTE.
Despite this dissuasion, nearly 30,000 more fled to us in March, and
over a 100,000 in April. Finally now the penny seems to have dropped,
that conditions of life with the LTTE are much worse than those in
Government welfare centres. But even so, HRW manages to write a whole
article on the horrors of the No-Fire Zone without a single mention of
the fact that the LTTE will not let people leave.
This is evil evasion. HRW provides a description of refugees who left
the No-Fire Zone on April 20, and spent nine days at sea, but omits to
mention that that was the day on which the Sri Lankan Forces managed to
breach one of the walls the LTTE had built, enabling 40,000 people to
flee to safety with the Government, followed by another 70,000 on the
next two days.
There is no mention of this rescue operation in the article, no
demand that the LTTE set free the hostages it has taken. Instead HRW’s
senior Asia researcher, yet another in the band of mercenaries paid to
denigrate Sri Lanka, claims that ‘The Sri Lankan Government is doing
everything it can to keep these stories of suffering from reaching the
world’.
Nonsense. The Sri Lankan Government knows there is suffering,
suffering because the Tigers ration the food we are sending in as those
who have fled to us make clear (but HRW will doubtless claim that we are
starving them in internment camps); suffering because the Tigers have
piled up heavy weaponry in the zone and are using it in particular
against civilians trying to get away (but why should anyone want to get
away, according to HRW, since conditions are equally bad everywhere);
suffering because of the landmines the Tigers have strewn in profusion,
and which caused the bulk of the injuries of those who succeeded in
fleeing to us (and also a number of the deaths TamilNet declared
occurred on that day).
According to Human Rights Watch, in its latest bombshell, timed to
explode as its mentors strive to rouse feeling against Sri Lanka at the
Human Rights Council, just as the LTTE flag waving demonstrators are
doing in Western capitals, all this is the fault of the Sri Lankan
Government. Even the one mention of LTTE firing is accompanied by the
assertion that this puts civilians at risk from retaliatory fire.
The story of the boat people is truly horrifying. The owner of the
boat lost six members of his family, a mason lost five, and seems to be
left with just his 8-month old son. But it never occurs to Human Rights
Watch that the root cause of this suffering is the wickedness of the
LTTE, in holding these people for so long, in firing at those who tried
to flee by land, in building walls and laying mines to stop them getting
away.
But there is more to it than this. There is also the contribution of
Human Rights Watch, which strove so hard for so long, in its bitterness
against Sri Lanka, to deny the magnitude of the LTTE horrors. They may
find it easier to continue to blame Sri Lanka. But if they are at all
bothered about their immortal souls, they should stop to consider how
their connivance with an LTTE agenda has helped that terrorist
organization.
Human Rights Watch has thus contributed to the immeasurable suffering
of the Tamil people trapped by the LTTE, seeking to escape, dying so
tragically even when in sight of freedom. The LTTE may be appallingly
evil. Human Rights Watch exemplifies the banality of evil, as Hannah
Arendt described it, the triviality and self-centredness that has
contributed to so much destruction in this world.
The writer is the
Secretary General, Secretariat for Coordinating the Peace Process
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