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

Archive for eelam – faces

Why target us for being pro-Maratha, look at DMK: Sena

Agencies Posted: Oct 22, 2008 at 1443 hrs IST



Pune, October 22: : Defending its stir to facilitate jobs for Marathi people in the Railways, the Shiv Sena on Wednesday cited the example of political parties in Tamil Nadu, including the ruling DMK, that were exerting pressure on the UPA Government to protect the interests of Tamilians in Sri Lanka.

“The DMK has even threatened to withdraw its support to UPA at Centre if the Government failed to curb the anti-LTTE offensive launched by Sri Lankan military,” an editorial in ‘Saamana’, the Sena mouthpiece, commented. “These political parties are so sensitive to the Tamilian interests even outside India and Shiv Sena is being condemned for supporting jobs of Marathis in Maharashtra with the labeling of regionalism,” the editorial in the paper, edited by party chief Bal Thackeray, said.

The editorial said just to mention a few, Maharashtra had given to the nation illustrious sons like Babasaheb Ambedkar, C D Deshmukh (who resigned from the Nehru Cabinet on the issue of Samyukta Maharashtra) and Atomic Energy Commission Chairman Anil Kakodkar.

“But the rulers in Delhi always handed a raw deal to Maharashtra and expected it catapult before it. The Shiv Sena will never tolerate this situation and will always support Marathis in their fight for justice,” it said.

[s sent]

In Sri Lanka, Fear of Being ‘Disappeared’ [on being Tamil in "Sri Lanka" - with my red emphasizing and bolded comments in dark green]

Government Offensive Against Tamil Rebels Also Claims Civilian Victims

Grandchildren comfort G.H. Mithralatha, 75, a Tamil whose son was taken by police.
Grandchildren comfort G.H. Mithralatha, 75, a Tamil whose son was taken by police. (By Emily Wax — The Washington Post)

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Washington Post Foreign Service

Tuesday, April 1, 2008; Page A10

MAHA OYA, Sri Lanka — Under thick tropical rains on a rutted country road, a bus packed with ethnic Tamil families screeched to a stop here in eastern Sri Lanka. At a heavily fortified government checkpoint, the families were ordered off the bus.

They were asked many questions. Where had they come from? Why? Whom did they visit? The experience, for many of them, was more than inconvenient. It was frightening. In places like this, they said, amid bungalows battered and burned by war, people go missing.

“It’s not waiting in the lines or the search of our bags that troubles us as much as the chances of being picked out, arrested and never being able to see our families again,” said a 19-year-old Tamil waiter, who was too fearful of government reprisal to offer his name. “I know neighbors it’s happened to. If you are Tamil in Sri Lanka, your trust has been spoiled. You fear rebels and you fear the government, too.”

This country’s war against ethnic Tamil rebels has grinded on for a quarter-century. But under a recent military offensive to wipe out those rebels, government forces have abducted hundreds of members of the Tamil minority group, including civilians, according to human rights groups. Many of the “disappeared” never turn up again.

The government denies that abductions have become widespread and says heightened vigilance at checkpoints is necessary — even if Tamils complain of ethnic profiling. Authorities cite the danger of suicide bombings, like one that killed more than a dozen people, including members of a high school baseball team, in February.

But rights activists say President Mahinda Rajapaksa and his lieutenants are intent on eliminating the separatist insurgency known as the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, or LTTE, no matter the cost. They also say Sri Lanka’s growing ties with Iran, China and Russia have emboldened the government to ignore criticism from the United States and other Western powers.

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Rajapaksa “has a simple message — that the LTTE are terrorists and he’s going to be very, very confrontational,” said Jehan Perera of the independent National Peace Council of Sri Lanka in Colombo, the capital. “He doesn’t need the West. He doesn’t need to worry about human rights.”[west & human rights?! we all know what western democracy is, same old! same old!]

Abductions are carried out in various ways, according to activists and relatives of those who have disappeared. Sometimes Tamil men of fighting age are rounded up at checkpoints, hurried into white vans and never heard from again. Sometimes they are arrested with little explanation in house-to-house raids at night.

Regardless of the method, the disappearances often leave deep economic and psychological wounds on Tamil families.

With her five grandchildren at her side, G.H. Mithralatha, a 75-year-old Tamil, said her 42-year-old son was working at a local harbor as a driver last year when police arrived on the scene. Without explanation, she said, they bundled him away. The family has not heard from him again, despite frequent visits to the police. The children’s mother left to be a housemaid in Kuwait.

“I’m suffering so much with these children to care for,” Mithralatha, whose body is frail and back is hunched, said as she wept. The grandchildren range in age from 2 to 14. “I wish we could find their father.”

In its annual human rights report, released in March, the U.S. State Department said the Sri Lankan government’s “respect for human rights continued to decline due in part to the escalation of the armed conflict.” The report cited near-daily extrajudicial killings in the government-controlled Jaffna peninsula and accounts of the army, police and pro-government paramilitary groups participating in attacks against civilians.

In an interview, Foreign Secretary Palitha Kohona said the rebels have exaggerated reports of abductions for propaganda purposes. He also said that after U.S. diplomats provided a list of 355 missing people, the government launched an investigation and found that most of the missing had left the country of their own volition.

“We reviewed the lists meticulously; 23 people were found alive and kicking. But there were repetitions on the list,” Kohona said. Other names “were suspiciously similar to those recorded by immigration officials as people who had left the country.”

He emphasized that the Tigers are recognized as a terrorist organization by the U.S. government and others across the world. He also said the Tigers were using violence and intimidation abroad to fund the rebel group, shaking down Tamil shopkeepers from London to Virginia for contributions.

“We are fighting a brutal terrorist group,” Kohona said. “Our friends abroad must look at the pressures they are putting on us very carefully. They may be throwing a lifeline to a brutal terrorist group.”

On Web sites and in statements, the rebels holed up in the north say they are part of a populist movement that wants a separate homeland on this island off the coast of southern India. They claim to be defending the rights of Hindu and Christian Tamils, who they contend are discriminated against by the Buddhist Sinhalese majority. The government does not permit journalists near the front lines.

Sri Lanka’s ethnic tensions are rooted in history. The British colonized Sri Lanka with the help of Tamil administrators, giving Tamils, then about 15 percent of the population, political power way beyond their numbers. After independence in 1948, the Sinhalese gained back power, often with a nationalist program that Tamils say excluded them from government posts.


Mano Ganesan, a Tamil member of Parliament who heads a civil monitoring commission on disappearances, said that the unexplained arrests only further marginalize the Tamil community and breed anger among frustrated youth.

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“The government arrests Tamils for being Tamil,” Ganesan said. “And they ask questions later. I hate terrorism. I don’t want bombs to go off. But that doesn’t mean the government should conduct mass arrests without even giving proof or updates to the families.”

In a neighborhood where alleyways hold tea shops and temples with shrines to Hindu gods, many Tamils worry and wait for their missing relatives to appear.

Mithralatha, the grandmother whose son is missing, said she was surprised how the war has affected her family. Her son married a Sinhalese in what is known here as “a mixed-fruit marriage.”

“My son was Tamil, but he was never involved in anything with the rebel movements,” she said. “I can’t believe that this has happened.”

Her oldest granddaughter, Vartha Rasta, spends her afternoons caring for siblings. She doesn’t see the issue as complicated.

“We just want our father back,” she said as her grandmother cried.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

related:

http://hrw.org/english/docs/2008/03/06/slanka18203.htm

//Most of the victims are ethnic Tamils, although Muslims and Sinhalese have also been targeted. In many cases, the security forces “disappeared” individuals because of their alleged affiliation with the LTTE. Clergy, educators, humanitarian aid workers, and journalists also were targeted – not only to remove them from the civil sphere, but also to warn others to avoid such activities.//

Beginning the end of war with Tamil right to self determination

October 19, 2008 at 3:20 am · Filed under eelam - faces

[TamilNet, Saturday, 18 October 2008, 08:06 GMT]
Those who peruse the demands raised by major political parties in Tamil Nadu may notice that the focus is merely on stopping the war but nothing said by any on the fundamental issue of the sovereignty of the Tamil nation in the island of Sri Lanka, the question on which war has been thrust upon the Eezham Tamils. Any meaningful way to end the war and the suffering of the masses in Sri Lanka should therefore begin from recognizing the right to self-determination of Eezham Tamils and the integrity of their homeland, writes Opinion Columnist Chivanadi.

All wars end at negotiation table, but how to end a war?

We don’t live in the times of the Second World War when mere capitulation of Germany, death of dramatis personae or surrender of Japan ended the war. Military victory is of no meaning and is a boomerang in our times.

A suitable postmodern ideology to recognize the rights of peoples and a convincing credibility in its implementation are what counted today. [??] The current money crisis of the so-called International Community and of those who are tagged behind has actually nothing to do with economy. It is essentially resulted by the loss of credibility in their global policies. They are losing a war on the global front.

Unfortunately Sri Lankan president Rajapaksa, his conventional military commanders and the Sinhala chauvinists behind them don’t seem to realize the hard truths of contemporary times.

The Sri Lanka president is trying to sell a deceit to Eezham Tamils, Tamil Nadu, India and elsewhere that a political package will be meted out once the LTTE is defeated militarily. There may be organs of vested interests in India to blow a media image of him, but people couldn’t have forgotten so easily of his talks of Panjayat Raj solution (village level local government), or of the century old successive deceits of the Sinhala polity to Tamils.

Can war be stopped by external pressure in our times? Yes, it may be possible in the case of small countries that have already pawned their interests to powers, but it is a half-backed solution.

The surge of agitation to stop the war in Sri Lanka, joined by all political parties in Tamil Nadu has become a mind-boggling question to many those who face as well as watch the Sri Lankan crisis.

Apart from the spontaneous and genuine sympathy of the people of Tamil Nadu and the political compulsions of parties when the elections are around the corner, there are also speculations about hands working behind the present scene in Tamil Nadu, trying as a last resort to nullify the Tamil national question in Sri Lanka by pre-emptive measures of inadequate solutions.

Those who peruse the demands raised by major political parties in Tamil Nadu may notice that the focus is merely on stopping the war but nothing said by any on the fundamental issue of the sovereignty of the Tamil nation in the island of Sri Lanka, the question on which war has been thrust upon the Eezham Tamils.

Any meaningful way to end the war and the suffering of the masses in Sri Lanka should therefore begin from recognizing the right to self-determination of Eezham Tamils and the integrity of their homeland.

The genuineness of this beginning and guarantees to it only may pave way for positive talks on political modalities, demilitarization and end of war.

Soon Mahinda will be sending emissaries to Delhi and Chennai to sell the age-old deceit. The political parties in Tamil Nadu and the Tamil groups in the Rajapaksa camp in Sri Lanka should keep in mind that this is not the narrow question of the LTTE, but a question of utmost historical importance not only deciding the fate, well-being and prestige of all Tamils but also the security of the region.

Whether one likes it or not the LTTE is a manifestation of a society at a given time, circumstances and compulsions. Its aims are local, confined to its vision of liberation of a people. It is not an international organization with global ambitions for the international community to make fuss. The future of the LTTE has to be decided by the very society that created it and not by anybody else.

Centuries of historical and geographical heritage, a century old political legacy of struggle in the colonial and post colonial times and more than three decades of war have made the right to self determination of Eezham Tamils a foregone conclusion.

Those who claim Sri Lanka a Sinhala country may well have it happily. But, let them concede Eezham to Tamils peacefully.

Beginning the end of war with Tamil right to self determination

October 19, 2008 at 3:20 am · Filed under eelam - faces

[TamilNet, Saturday, 18 October 2008, 08:06 GMT]
Those who peruse the demands raised by major political parties in Tamil Nadu may notice that the focus is merely on stopping the war but nothing said by any on the fundamental issue of the sovereignty of the Tamil nation in the island of Sri Lanka, the question on which war has been thrust upon the Eezham Tamils. Any meaningful way to end the war and the suffering of the masses in Sri Lanka should therefore begin from recognizing the right to self-determination of Eezham Tamils and the integrity of their homeland, writes Opinion Columnist Chivanadi.

All wars end at negotiation table, but how to end a war?

We don’t live in the times of the Second World War when mere capitulation of Germany, death of dramatis personae or surrender of Japan ended the war. Military victory is of no meaning and is a boomerang in our times.

A suitable postmodern ideology to recognize the rights of peoples and a convincing credibility in its implementation are what counted today. [??] The current money crisis of the so-called International Community and of those who are tagged behind has actually nothing to do with economy. It is essentially resulted by the loss of credibility in their global policies. They are losing a war on the global front.

Unfortunately Sri Lankan president Rajapaksa, his conventional military commanders and the Sinhala chauvinists behind them don’t seem to realize the hard truths of contemporary times.

The Sri Lanka president is trying to sell a deceit to Eezham Tamils, Tamil Nadu, India and elsewhere that a political package will be meted out once the LTTE is defeated militarily. There may be organs of vested interests in India to blow a media image of him, but people couldn’t have forgotten so easily of his talks of Panjayat Raj solution (village level local government), or of the century old successive deceits of the Sinhala polity to Tamils.

Can war be stopped by external pressure in our times? Yes, it may be possible in the case of small countries that have already pawned their interests to powers, but it is a half-backed solution.

The surge of agitation to stop the war in Sri Lanka, joined by all political parties in Tamil Nadu has become a mind-boggling question to many those who face as well as watch the Sri Lankan crisis.

Apart from the spontaneous and genuine sympathy of the people of Tamil Nadu and the political compulsions of parties when the elections are around the corner, there are also speculations about hands working behind the present scene in Tamil Nadu, trying as a last resort to nullify the Tamil national question in Sri Lanka by pre-emptive measures of inadequate solutions.

Those who peruse the demands raised by major political parties in Tamil Nadu may notice that the focus is merely on stopping the war but nothing said by any on the fundamental issue of the sovereignty of the Tamil nation in the island of Sri Lanka, the question on which war has been thrust upon the Eezham Tamils.

Any meaningful way to end the war and the suffering of the masses in Sri Lanka should therefore begin from recognizing the right to self-determination of Eezham Tamils and the integrity of their homeland.

The genuineness of this beginning and guarantees to it only may pave way for positive talks on political modalities, demilitarization and end of war.

Soon Mahinda will be sending emissaries to Delhi and Chennai to sell the age-old deceit. The political parties in Tamil Nadu and the Tamil groups in the Rajapaksa camp in Sri Lanka should keep in mind that this is not the narrow question of the LTTE, but a question of utmost historical importance not only deciding the fate, well-being and prestige of all Tamils but also the security of the region.

Whether one likes it or not the LTTE is a manifestation of a society at a given time, circumstances and compulsions. Its aims are local, confined to its vision of liberation of a people. It is not an international organization with global ambitions for the international community to make fuss. The future of the LTTE has to be decided by the very society that created it and not by anybody else.

Centuries of historical and geographical heritage, a century old political legacy of struggle in the colonial and post colonial times and more than three decades of war have made the right to self determination of Eezham Tamils a foregone conclusion.

Those who claim Sri Lanka a Sinhala country may well have it happily. But, let them concede Eezham to Tamils peacefully.

Desecration of Amman Statue

September 23, 2008 at 12:34 am · Filed under eelam - faces

[2008 sept, colombo.]

links:
lankan newspaper
tamilnet

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