notes from an occupied land…

by a lost, diaspora Tamil or a gypsy wanna-be…. this is ma journey from a land called S Lanka to occupiied land called kænədə

Sri Lanka’s new chapter

[bbc]
The authorities in the capital of Sri Lanka have declared the rebel leader of the Tamil Tigers, Vellupillai Prabhakaran, dead and the war over. Chris Morris reflects on the life of Prabhakaran and considers whether there can now be reconciliation.

I was somewhat sceptical when the letter dropped onto my doormat in Colombo.

A summons to the fourth floor of CID (Criminal Investigation Department) headquarters.

“We’ve been asked to question you,” it said, “about the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi.”

A few months after the former Indian prime minister was killed by a suicide bomber at an election rally, I had interviewed the man thought to be behind the murder – the leader of the Tamil Tigers, Vellupillai Prabhakaran.

I had asked him why he had Rajiv Gandhi killed, and he had denied any involvement. India did not believe him, and neither did I.

‘Sun God’

The fourth floor of CID headquarters had a bit of a reputation back then. Rumours of people falling from windows. But they were polite enough with me. We had tea and biscuits.

“Where did you meet Prabhakaran,” they wanted to know. “What was he like?”

It was a house in the Jaffna peninsula, with bodyguards as big as palm trees.
“ Prabhakaran is still a hero to many Tamils, particularly those in the diaspora, scattered around the world ”

And the man himself?

Well, rather unassuming for a leader who was feted by his followers as a “Sun God” – who inspired them to swallow cyanide to avoid capture, or to blow themselves up for the cause.

“I had a brother,” one of the policemen said to me, leaning just a little closer.
“He was also with the police, serving in the eastern province. After he surrendered, Prabhakaran had him and all his colleagues shot dead.”
“So if there’s anything else you can tell me, I’d like to find the man who killed my brother.”

It took another 18 years and tens of thousands of lives, but this week Sri Lanka did finally corner Vellupillai Prabhakaran.

Reconciliation?

Exactly how he died may never be known. TV pictures released by the army showed a corpse dressed in trademark fatigues, with eyes open wide. It looked like he had been shot in the head at close range.

Ironically, the man who identified the body had been the commander of the Tamil Tigers in the eastern province, when all those policemen were killed.

Col Karuna broke with Prabhakaran in 2004, fatally weakening the rebel movement.

Now, he is the minister for national reconciliation in the Sri Lankan government. Life is sometimes strange.

And what are the chances for national reconciliation?

The Tamil community in Sri Lanka is battered and bruised. Thousands of civilians have been killed in the last few months. Hundreds of thousands are now displaced and held in government-run camps.

They have no idea who will protect them, or even who they need protection from.

But Prabhakaran’s death, and the military defeat of the Tamil Tigers, presents an opportunity to break out of the stalemate of the past.

Certainly the outside world is concentrating on Sri Lanka as never before. India – where Rajiv Gandhi’s family are still in power – was never going to do that much while Prabhakaran was still alive. Now it is scrambling to push for a political solution.

It is not just about concern for the suffering of civilians just off its southern shores. Official India is also slightly spooked by the role China played in helping Sri Lanka win the civil war.

New friends

Beijing has provided huge stocks of weapons to Sri Lanka in the last few years, at the same time as it has been building a new deep water port on the island’s southern coast.

It has not gone unnoticed that China’s oil supplies from the Middle East pass through the waters of the Indian Ocean, along the sea lanes just south of Colombo.

And now that China has helped Sri Lanka defeat the Tamil Tigers, it may be looking to call in a few favours, as it slowly extends its influence across the region.

All this at a time when the Sri Lankan authorities are casting around for new friends.

They have bitterly resented Western criticism of their conduct of the war.

Suggestions that the treatment of civilians demands an investigation into possible war crimes are angrily rejected.

Those who speak out are quickly condemned, no matter who they are. A few days ago an effigy of UK Foreign Secretary David Miliband was burnt outside the British High Commission in Colombo.

“Tamil Tiger Headquarters” said the graffiti spray-painted onto the wall.

The real headquarters of the Tamil Tigers are in ruins. Sri Lanka’s northern jungles have become a wasteland – emptied of people.

Post-war challenge

The symbol of the rebel movement – a roaring Tiger on a red background, backed by two automatic rifles – dominated the north for most of the last 25 years. No longer.

And that has led to scenes of great rejoicing in the rest of the country. The fear of the bomb and the bullet, they hope, has finally been lifted.

And yet Prabhakaran is still a hero to many Tamils, particularly those in the diaspora, scattered around the world; many refuse to believe that he is really dead.

He was a man who knew how to fight a war, but had no idea how to win a peace.

Now we have to wait and see if those who defeated him are cut from a different cloth.

There is still scepticism, but there is also every chance to prove the sceptics wrong.

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  shahra wrote @

BBC correspondents say Poddala Jayantha was named by government politicians as an anti-government campaigner who had been instrumental in tarnishing the name of the government.

As a result of earlier threats and intimidation – which included an armed group trying to kidnap him from his residence – Mr Jayantha spent a brief period abroad, returning to Sri Lanka only a few weeks ago.

The government is facing mounting criticism from press freedom groups for what they say is a failure to protect journalists from attacks and for the lack of prosecutions against those who do so, our correspondent says.

Earlier this year, the government told parliament that nine journalists had been killed and more than 25 assaulted since the beginning of 2006.

Amnesty International says at least 20 journalists have fled the country because of death threats.

Media rights groups say Sri Lanka is one of the most dangerous countries in the world for journalists.

  shahra wrote @

Government infuriated

During the final phase of the war, the group of doctors treated wounded and ill patients admitted to the makeshift health posts in the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eeelam (LTTE)-held zone encircled by government forces.

Two of them had been senior local health directors and the United States said they had “helped save many lives” while the UN called them “heroic”.

FROM BBC WORLD SERVICE

More from BBC World Service

But the Sri Lankan government was infuriated by the doctors’ media interviews from the zone, in which they said some of the shelling there came from the government side and had killed civilians.

Human Rights Minister Mahinda Samarasinghe told the BBC they are being detained at the Criminal Investigation Department on “reasonable suspicion of collaboration with the LTTE”.

“I don’t know what the investigations would reveal but maybe they were even part of that whole conspiracy to put forward this notion that government forces were shelling and targeting hospitals and indiscriminately targeting civilians as a result of the shelling,” he said.

The government says not a single civilian died as a result of its final offensive, despite international allegations to the contrary.

The minister says the doctors must be produced in court every month while investigations proceed pending possible charges.

He said the investigation could last up to a year, but there might be extensions to that.

Separately, Sri Lanka’s foreign secretary, Palitha Kohona, has been speaking of the government-run camps where more than 250,000 Tamils from the war zone are detained.

He said everyone there had to be carefully screened, adding that it was “quite likely” that even many elderly people were “with the LTTE, at least mentally”.

  shahra wrote @

Call to release S Lanka displaced
By Charles Haviland
BBC News, Colombo

An aerial view of UNHCR tents for internally displaced Sri Lankan people are seen at Menik Farm refugee camp in Cheddikulam on May 23, 200
Aid agencies that the needs of displaced people are immense

An international rights group has said many displaced Tamil people in camps in Sri Lanka have places to stay if they are allowed by the government to leave.

It has called for an end to the internment of 250,000 displaced people.

But the government continues to defend the confinement, saying that Tamil Tiger rebels “infiltrated” the camps at the end of the war last month.

Meanwhile one of several doctors who worked in the zone controlled by the rebels has been produced in court.

Dr T Satyamurthy is being detained on suspicion of collaborating with the Tigers in the final stages of the war which ended last month.

‘National disgrace’

People streamed out of the warzone as the war drew to a close and many were subsequently kept in government-run camps.

Human Rights Watch says in a statement that a significant number of people in these camps have close relatives in the region with whom they could stay if they were let out.

Sri Lankan troops
The military has denied that shell attacks killed civilians

The government has prevented everyone in camps it controls between the ages of 10 and 60 from leaving, citing security reasons.

The lobby group said it was a “national disgrace” that all those detained were being treated “as if they were Tamil Tiger fighters”.

It said international law prohibited arbitrary detention and unnecessary restrictions on freedom of movement.

In recent days government ministers have told the BBC they do not view all those in the camps as supporters of the Tigers – or LTTE – but said that there had been heavy infiltration by the former rebel group as the displaced people left the war zone.

They say that anyone espousing the ideals of the Tigers is violating Sri Lankan law and that they believe many refugees, including elderly ones, are still with the LTTE, “at least mentally”.

They have admitted that the degree of support is hard to determine.

But they say strict security screening must continue and that people cannot leave the camps on a piecemeal basis.

Earlier this week more than 2,000 refugees did return from camps to their home villages in the north-west, having been screened.

On Tuesday the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said the needs of people in the camps were still “immense” and that those separated from their families desperately wanted to hear from them.

In a separate development, Dr Satyamurthy was produced before a magistrate’s court in Colombo in accordance with the country’s continuing state of emergency and identified before being sent back into custody pending further inquiries.

The government alleges that he and his companions, who were government health employees, supplied false information when they gave interviews to the foreign media from the war zone during the final months of the war.

In the interviews they said some of the shelling in the war zone came from the government side and had killed civilians.

Dr Satyamurthy said nothing during his brief court appearance.

The US says the doctors “helped save many lives” and has called them “heroic”.


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