Wednesday, January 18, 2006
Suspected Rebel Ambush on Sri Lankan Navy Bus Kills 2 Civilians, Wounds 12 Sailors
LTTE 'killed one per day'
Human Rights Watch (HRW) say that Tamil Tiger killings of political opponents reached the rate of one per day by June 2005.
Issuing its world report for 2006 on Wednesday, HRW says that this "alarming rate" owed to to the killing of "particularly of Tamils in opposition to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam".
Stating that "respect for human rights has been seriously eroded" over the past year in several Asian countries, HRW particularly names Nepal, Cambodia, Thailand, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and China,
"Tamil Tigers continued to assassinate political opponents with complete impunity," accuses HRW.
Noting that the December 2004 tsunami "wrought tremendous destruction," particularly to the areas already most affected by the country's protracted civil war, HRW says "sectarian interests hijacked aid distribution mechanisms".
According to this report, since February 2002 Ceasefire agreement, "an estimated two hundred Tamils have been killed for apparently political reasons. Most of the killings have been attributed to the LTTE."
The HRW blames the security forces for extra judicial killings. "While some cases of deaths in custody and torture have been investigated, no one has been prosecuted or punished as yet," the report adds.
Releasing another report on the human rights situation in ten Asian countries The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) reiterated the allegation by saying, "the Sri Lankan police are granted further impunity to commit abuses".
Without a functioning National Police Commission, AHRC say "criminal elements within the police will be encouraged to blatantly flout legal and disciplinary provisions, while complainants receive threats and intimidation".
"A start can be made by implementing the recommendations of the Human Rights Committee and the Committee against Torture."
Norwegian Ambassador to
He said that he had no reason to believe that the Tamil Tigers will go to war and was optimistic that the LTTE wants to come to the negotiation table.
Speaking on the scheduled visit of Norwegian envoy
Tamil Tiger negotiator
He said “it is not the LTTE. It is not the government, but we know who they are”
Howeve,r Haukland did not disclose who is responsible for the attacks.
An explosive devise was set off at the Batticaloa SLMM office on Friday night.
Commenting on the attacks on security personnel in the north and east S.P.Thamilselvan, leader of of the Tamil Tiger political wing said that it was a reaction from the civilians.
“Our people are been handled in a high handed manner and they are reacting ’’ said Thamilselvan.
Friday, January 13, 2006
LTTE kills nine sailors
Nine sailors were killed and eight injured in an LTTE claymore mine blast in Chettikulam on the Mannar-Medawachchiya road at 4.15 p.m. yesterday.
According to the Navy Media Unit, the incident occurred at the 18th mile post in Chettikulam.
The sailors were travelling in three buses from the Pandukabhaya Navy Camp at Punewa towards the Gajaba and Thamenna Navy camps in Mannar when they were ambushed.
The bus carrying 19 sailors ripped apart when the claymore mine exploded. Nine of the 19 sailors were killed and eight others were injured. Two sailors escaped unhurt.
The injured sailors were rushed to the
This was the second attack on the Navy in a week following the attack on a Naval Dvora patrol craft in Trincomalee on Saturday where 13 sailors were killed.
Earlier, 13 sailors were killed in a claymore mine blast at Nadukkuda, Mannar on December 23. The sailors killed in the attack were returning to their homes for the Christmas holidays, Navy sources said.
With yesterday's attack, the number of Armed Forces personnel killed during the past one month has gone upto 76 despite the Ceasefire Agreement signed in 2002. Along with the deaths of Armed Forces personnel, 125 people have been killed in a wave of violence which has escalated in the latter part of last year, sources said.
Meanwhile, it was reported that two members of the
Govt condemns attack
The Government yesterday strongly condemning the LTTE attack said this was another in a series of hostile acts mounted on the Security Forces by the LTTE in the North and East over the last few weeks in blatant violation of the ceasefire agreement.
A release said this attack had come at a time when
The Government also expressed its condolences to families of the Navy personnel killed in the attack.
SLMM questions whether there is still a Ceasefire in Sri Lanka
This attack is yet another serious blow to the Ceasefire Agreement and SLMM believes that if such attacks or retaliation of such attacks continue the Ceasefire Agreement will be over. Over 100 people were killed last month half of which were civilians. Killings and serious attacks continue and the situation is getting worse. It is our assessment that if the Parties don’t react immediately they risk going back to war.
Various actors in the international community have blamed the LTTE for attacking Government troops but the LTTE has continuously denied any involvement. The LTTE claims that “the People” are behind the attacks on the military. SLMM finds this explanation unacceptable. It is safe to say that LTTE involvement cannot be ruled out and we find the LTTE’s indifference to these attacks worrying.
It is however clear that people are suffering and unfortunately there have been several reports of civilian harassment by the Security Forces in relation to increased security measures. The harassment often takes a form of harsh treatment of the Tamil population in relation to the attacks. We would like to urge the Government of Sri Lanka and the Security Forces to prevent such actions from taking place.
It is important to emphasise that the current situation also stems from the fact that alternative armed elements have been able to operate freely in the East in Government controlled areas. These forces have destabilised the ceasefire and are one of the major reasons for increased tension between the Parties. We therefore urge the Government of Sri Lanka to face up to its responsibility to disarm these other armed groups so that the rule of law can be reinstated in the affected areas.
Increasing amount of civilians is being caught in the middle leading to major disturbances in the local communities. The conflict between the two sides is hurting civilians and preventing any restoration to normalcy.
We urge both Parties to consider carefully how they can mend the situation instead of merely blaming each other and pointing fingers. The Parties need to come up with firm confidence building measures with the truthful aim of reaching a peaceful solution. Actions speak louder than words and we feel that we need to see more commitment from the two Parties if war is not to break out in
Sunday, January 08, 2006
Hit by attacks, S.Lanka's army takes no chances
Kilinochchi Sarvanandam Anandarajah (R) and his family members wait while their meal is prepared at a refugee camp run by Kilinochchi Development, Relief and Rehabilitation Organization (KDRRO), in Tamil Tiger held Kilinochchi, northern Sri Lanka, January 3, 2006. Hundreds of residents have fled the government army-held Jaffna peninsula in northern Sri Lanka into Tamil Tiger territory, rebel officials said on Tuesday, but while some refugees said they were fleeing military harassment and feared war would resume, others said they wanted to fight alongside the rebels.
JAFFNA, Sri Lanka, Jan 8 (Reuters) - Speeding along the rough roads of the Sri Lankan army-held Jaffna peninsula, guarded by armoured vehicles front and back, convoys transporting troops near Tamil rebel-held areas take no chances.
While a 2002 ceasefire is still technically holding, a string of suspected claymore fragmentation mine attacks on patrols and convoys in December -- the deadliest month by far since the truce -- killed 39 military personnel. Most troops patrolling Jaffna say they expect war.
"Last month, it changed," said 23-year-old Private Waduge Krishan Dehevapiya, like most soldiers one of the island's Sinhalese majority.
"We are scared. But we are soldiers. We know we will have to face that kind of strategy."
Sri Lanka's Tamil minority lives mostly in the island's north and east, where the Tamil Tiger rebels have a de facto state in most areas, except the Jaffna peninsula, which they have held intermittently and now want back.
In the latest violence, a navy Israeli-built Dvora patrol boat exploded off the northeastern coast on Saturday after being rammed by what officers said was a suspected Tiger suicide boat. Only two of the 15 crew were rescued and the others are missing, presumed dead.
Violence in the Tamil-dominated north has risen sharply since a Tiger boycott of the November presidential election helped President Mahinda Rajapakse win -- seen as the candidate least likely to cut a deal with the rebels. Analysts say the boycott suggests the Tigers are tired of the peace process.
Shortly after the election, the rebels warned they would "intensify their struggle" without new concessions and now say army atrocities in Jaffna could force them into war.
They say they are not behind the attacks, but few diplomats believe them. Neither side can agree a venue for talks.
The army deny their soldiers are abusing civilians, but say the language barrier hampers communication. Tamil courses are now being run, but officers say they should have started much earlier in a two-decade old war that has killed over 64,000.
But they say their most serious worry is safeguarding their supply routes, particularly around Jaffna -- which is cut off from the rest of the island by rebel territory, leaving the military to rely on resupply by air and sea.
HAIL OF STEEL
Within the peninsula itself, the army has only two main supply routes: the road from Jaffna town to the Palaly air base and the main road that runs to the northern border of rebel territory.
"If we had enough men, we would line the entire route," one officer said. "But we do not."
Instead, patrols -- some of only a couple of soldiers, some of sixty or so men -- repeatedly comb the roads, cutting back undergrowth and rooting through piles of rubble from the previous conflict for signs of mines or potential ambushes.
Two days before Christmas, the military says the rebels attacked a navy bus near the northwestern Mannar Sea.
A claymore fragmentation mine blasted a hail of steel ball bearings into the vehicle, which was then hit with rocket propelled grenade fire. Thirteen died.
After that and similar attacks near Jaffna, buses and trucks travel in convoy, often protected by South African-made Buffel armoured personnel carriers. Soldiers stand in bus doors and out of hatches on truck cab roofs, with AK-47s at the ready.
Some soldiers strap their flak jackets to the truck cab doors, hoping to protect the driver from any claymore blast so the vehicle keeps moving until it is out of the danger area.
But while soldiers say the attacks are pressuring troops -- some of whom have spent four years in the north and east, only rotating out for training -- they expect before long to be facing a Tiger offensive aimed at taking Jaffna.
"We are ready every day," said a senior officer. "We have to be. We cannot say it will happen. It is down to politics."
R E G I O N: US concerned over violence in Sri Lanka
Washington plans to dispatch a senior official to the troubled tropical Indian Ocean island soon to discuss the conflict, the department said on Friday.
Rice “expressed concern over the recent upsurge in violence in northern and eastern Sri Lanka” during talks with visiting Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera on Thursday, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters.
Meanwhile, Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera, capping an official visit to Washington where he sought American help to avoid a slide back into war in the island state, said Colombo was “still willing to walk that extra mile for peace.”
“This is not because of any weakness but because we are a government committed to a negotiated settlement to this problem and we do not think that war is an option,” he told reporters.
“We want to bring international pressure on the LTTE to come and sit with us at the table to discuss the weaknesses of the cease-fire and find ways and means of strengthening it so these dastardly acts do not happen again,” Samaraweera added.
Rice and Samaraweera discussed the current status of the Sri Lankan peace process and the importance of strengthening the ceasefire, McCormack said.
“Secretary Rice reiterated the United States hope that talks between the Sri Lankan government and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam on ways to strengthen the ceasefire could resume soon,” he said.
“She also lauded the Sri Lankan government for its restraint in the face of the Tamil Tigers’ provocations.”
Rice said the United States, co-chair of the Sri Lanka Donors Group along with Japan, the European Union and Norway, remained committed to working with Sri Lanka “to defeat terrorism and to promote peace.”
Washington has tagged the LTTE as a terrorist organisation.
Rice told her Sri Lankan counterpart that State Department Undersecretary Nicholas Burns ‘does intend to travel’ to Sri Lanka to discuss prospects of restoring peace.
“I think he’s (Burns) going to talk about a number of different issues: talk about facilitating the peace between the government and the LTTE, as well as other issues of regional concern,” McCormack said.
Amid the upsurge in violence, many are concerned Sri Lanka would descend again into civil war.
President Mahinda Rajapakse won November polls promising a brand new peace process that would have sidelined Norwegian peacebrokers. But he has now invited Oslo to continue its role, despite staunch opposition by his allies.
LTTE chief Velupillai Prabhakaran had warned that unless Colombo - which has already ruled out a separate homeland for minority Tamils - gives them wide autonomy, the Tigers would ‘intensify their struggle’.
Rice praised Norway’s ‘important role’ in trying to facilitate the peace process even as Oslo struggled to bring the two parties to the table following a dispute over the venue of potential peace talks.
Tuesday, December 27, 2005
Resolve to face all challenges with greater strength: President
"There are many challenges that we Sri Lankans as a country and a Nation have to overcome. We should resolve today to face all those challenges with greater strength," President Rajapakse added.
In his address at the State function to remember the first anniversary of the tsunami tragedy that hit the Nation on December 26, from Peraliya, Hikkaduwa where thousands of lives perished in the 'train of death,' President Rajapakse said it was on that basis he launched the Jaya Lanka programme.
Jaya Lanka programme was launched to carry forward with new and greater energy, the task of building homes and properties destroyed by Tsunami," the President added.
He said the Jaya Lanka programme will be carried out under his personal direction and supervision.
"I address you today standing on part of the ground that underwent great tragedy in a devastation caused by nature. I believe that the voices of those friends and relations snatched away from us will continue to linger in the wind that blows towards us from the sea.
I believe there is a question, which I should ask myself and you from yourselves. It is the question whether as a Nation we have been able to do maximum justice by those who sacrificed their lives as victims of that terrible tragedy?
Have we been able to take forward this effort unbroken towards the progress of this country, the immense strength of our people that was manifest together with that great tragedy?", the President asked.
"It is my belief that both you and I are unable to answer these questions to our entire satisfaction," the President added.
President Rajapakse said in the same manner that the country accepted the challenge directed at us by the sea that surrounds the country one year ago, it is necessary that country is ready and prepared to face any challenge, in an even stronger manner and successfully overcome them.
New Violence in Sri Lanka Kills 4
26 December 2005
Mine hits truck carrying Sri Lankan soldiers, 10 dead, four wounded in Jaffna Peninsula
``We now have confirmation that 10 have died and four are wounded,'' military spokesman Brig. Prasad Samarasinghe said. The soldiers were traveling in a military truck when the Claymore anti-personnel mine was triggered.
Initial report said that there were 15 people on the truck, but Samarasinghe said ``all 14'' had been accounted for.
He blamed the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam for the attack.
``Who else can do that?'' he said of the rebels, who want to set up a separate homeland for the country's 3.2 million ethnic Tamils in the northeast.
The soldiers were on leave and en route to the airport when the mine exploded.
Violence has escalated in
``They are trying to provoke the military and draw them into open hostility,'' said Goonetilleke, who is also former head of the
The Norwegian-backed peace talks that started after the 2002 cease-fire were halted in 2004 after the rebels demands for wide-ranging autonomy. Efforts to resume the talks have failed to bring about a resolution, with the two sides unable to agree even on a venue.
Sri Lankan shares plunged a provisional 7.5 percent Tuesday after the attack, in one of the biggest drops this year. The benchmark All Share Index fell 153.16 points to close at 1880.15 points, Dow Jones Newswire said.
The attack follows Monday's killing by Sri Lankan soldiers of two suspected rebels in eastern
With Tuesday's fatalities, a total of 43 Sri Lankan security forces personnel have died this month in violence blamed on the rebels.
Sunday, December 25, 2005
Co-Chairs’ Envoys meets Thamilchelvan; LTTE firm on venue for talks
The envoys of the Co-chairs engaged in the peace process between the LTTE and government met the rebel leaders in Kilinochchi today. The envoys decided meet the LTTE political leadership after 13 sailors were killed yesterday in Mannar by suspected LTTE cadres, endangering the already stalled peace process and the CFA.
Speaking to media after a two hour-long meeting with the delegation the LTTE's political wing leader Thamilchelvan said "The Tamil leadership is firm and will oppose
Thamilchelvan also charged that rape by the Navy personnel in Punguduthivu and the attempted cover up of the incident by dumping her body in an abandoned well have raised the specter similar crimes against women in the past, including Sarathambal, Krishanthi and many more young Tamil women who were raped and murdered, and the Chemmani graves where many mass graves of disappeared Tamil youths were found.
Saturday, December 24, 2005
President shuns Solheim again
The purpose was to discuss matters relating to the resumption of the peace talks and discussions with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) on the working of the Ceasefire Agreement.
The move stems from Government's keenness to have
Matters relating to this had been explained to
President Rajapakse's decision not to meet up with Mr. Solheim during his three-day visit will mean there will be a delay in the latter's visit to
An official Government statement on Friday accused the LTTE of showing scant regard for the provisions of the Ceasefire Agreement. Their continued attacks, the statement added, raises serious doubts about the LTTE's commitment to a political solution.
The envoys flew by a Sri Lanka Air Force aircraft to Vavuniya. They crossed the Omanthai checkpoint in vehicles provided by the Sri Lanka Monitoring
It came after Prime Minister Ratnasiri Wickremanayake and Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera held a meeting with envoys of the Donor Co-chairs at Temple Trees on Friday. Present at the meeting were envoys from the European Union, the
Mr. Wickremanayake appealed to them to ascertain from the LTTE whether it was still committed to the Ceasefire Agreement of February 2002. If they were in fact bound by it, Mr. Wickremanayake said the Government of
The clarification on the CFA and a date to resume peace talks if they are committed had been sought in the wake of rising violence for which the Government has categorically accused the LTTE. The immediate cause for the meeting of envoys of Donor Co-chairs was Friday's incident in Mannar where 13 soldiers were killed in a claymore mine and Rocket Propelled Grenade attack.
Besides Premier Wickremanayake meeting the envoys of the Donor Co-chairs, President Mahinda Rajapakse also chaired a meeting of the National Security Council on Frdiay where several important decisions were made. Special envoy for peace process. President Mahinda Rajapakse is to appoint a special envoy for the peace process.
A Presidential source told The Sunday Times yesterday that such a special envoy would spearhead the peace process and remain a main link between the President and others on the Government side. A suitable candidate will be appointed shortly, the source said.
Pro-Tamil Tiger rebel Parliament member fatally shot in eastern Sri Lanka amid escalating violence
Unidentified gunmen shot and killed Tamil legislator Joseph Pararajasingham during midnight Christmas mass at a church, the Defense Ministry said Sunday - as escalating violence threatened to shatter the country's cease-fire.
The attackers fired at Pararajasingham, 71, while he was at the St. Michael's church after midnight in Batticaloa, eastern
His wife, Sugunam Pararajasingha , and eight others with him, escaped with injuries. Pararajasingham's bodyguards had opened fire, but it was not known if any of the assailants were wounded.
Pararajasingham represented the Tamil National Alliance, a proxy party of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, which wants to create a Tamil homeland for
On Saturday, envoys from Asia and
But violence continued, with one soldier and five rebels dead in a battle in the rebel's heartland, the
``The terrorists attacked our troops and we had to open fire in self defense,'' said Defense Ministry spokesman Samarasinghe.
``We have found weapons and evidence that the deceased were terrorists,'' he said.
The day before on Friday, 13 members of
In response to the violence, envoys from
``The delegation briefed Mr. Thamilselvan on the ... concern over the escalating violence and the necessity to start talks on effective implementation of the cease-fire agreement since it is felt that the (truce) is running into grave risk,'' the rebels said on their Web site.
Thamilselvan assured the envoys of the rebels' ``commitment to the peace process and the cease-fire,'' said the statement.
Violence has escalated in
This month alone, at least 34 government security personnel were killed and many more injured in attacks blamed on the rebels.
Wednesday, December 21, 2005
Another Army soldier killed in an ambush
An Army soldier was killed and six others including two officers were injured when unknown gunmen ambushed an Army vehicle along Kachchai-Kilali road in Thenmaradchy late afternoon, today.
Solheim calls for urgent talks
With the international community's rising concern over the escalation of violence in the
20,000 houses for tsunami homeless
Caritas Sri Lanka-SEDEC will complete the construction of 20,000 new houses to be given to those who lost their houses a year ago due to tsunami.
Executive Director Caritas Sri Lanka-SEDEC, Rev. Fr. Damian Fernando told a media conference at the BMICH that SEDEC the Social Arm of the Catholic Bishops Conference of Sri Lanka has undertaken the responsibility of building 20,000 new houses in the country to be given to those who lost their houses, but could complete only 700 houses so far due to reasons beyond their control.
The media conference was held to announce the program organised by the Caritas Sri Lanka-SEDEC to mark the First Year of Tsunami Disaster of December 26, 2004. He told the media that
According to statistics available over 90,000 families have been directly affected by the disaster and around 79,000 houses either destroyed completely or partly damaged.
Fr. Damian said the delay in completion of the building of houses was mainly due to the unavailability of suitable land to construct houses in the respective districts and said that issue had now been resolved with the government providing land necessary.
The SEDEC Director said that they were honoured and awarded by the former President for building 6,530 transitionary houses for the tsunami affected families on record time as an immediate measure and they have provided assistance to 17,000 school children in the disaster-hit areas to continue with their schooling.
His Lordship Rt. Rev. Dr. Kingsly Swamipillai, the Bishop of Batticoloa-Trincomalee said that his people were living disaster-prone areas close to the sea and pointed out the need to construct houses that could withstand any disaster. He commended the decision of the government to relax the 200 meter buffer zone which was partly responsible in delaying the construction of houses. "The fishermen wish to live close to the seas and that is a justifiable demand as they are fishermen and they cannot go away from the sea despite danger to their lives", the Bishop said.
Rt. Rev. Dr. Harold Antony Perera, the Bishop of Galle said the tsunami was a disaster the country experienced, it was an occasion for all to come together to help those who were affected by the calamity. "It was a moment of truth. It was an occasion we shared our common brotherhood putting aside all man made differences. We are accused of trying to convert by helping those affected.
Despite this unfounded allegation levelled against the Catholics of this country, we helped the Buddhists, they were the majority affected by the disaster as we share the common brotherhood san all ethnic or religious differences. What we do is show our love, charity and affection to all affected ".
Nation to observe two minutes silence at 9.30 am on Dec.26
This day will also be marked by religious observances islandwide conducted by Buddhist, Hindu, Christian and Islamic faiths.
The Ministry of Public Adminstration has already issued circulars to all State Departments with regard to the programme,a Government Media release stated. A special feature on this day will be a two minute silence to be observed islandwide at 9.30 a.m.
During this period all citizens are requested to stop whatever activity they are engaged in and remember those who lost their lives in the catastrophe and commit their dedication towards rebuilding the nation. The Government requests all citizens to join hands for this national duty.
Monday, December 12, 2005
Situation Report
Grenade attack in Valaichenai
Monday, 12 December 2005
A civilian was wounded when two unidentified men on a motorbike lobbed a grenade at Army personnel of road patrol at Pethalai in Valaichenai around this afternoon the police said. S. Uthayakumar, 38, who was at a bus stop waiting for a bus, was wounded and admitted to
Two more Claymore attacks in North-East
Monday, 12 December 2005
Police sources said a claymore mine was detonated this morning around 7:00 a.m. near an Army post on Vavuniya - Mannar road at Varikuddiyoor.
No causalities are reported in the explosion. Police said that additional Army and Special Task Force (STF) and policemen personnel were deployed and the security was tightened in and around Vavuniya.
Meanwhile two Army soldiers were seriously injured when claymore mine was detonated at an Army foot patrol of twelve soldiers in Vantharumoolai.
The attack took place this morning around 7:30 a.m. near the
Wounded personnel are identified as S. Kalaratna, 23, and Corporal T.M.G Appuhamy, 40, were rushed to
Suspected Tamil Tiger rebels attack army patrol, wound two soldiers
Suspected Tamil Tiger rebels detonated a land mine and opened fire on an army foot patrol Monday in eastern
The attack on the 12-member army contingent occurred in the town of
The soldiers returned fire but there were no reports of rebel casualties. Tamil Tiger representatives couldn't immediately be reached for comment.
Meanwhile, the military said Monday that about 10 rebels stormed a state-run hospital in northern
The rebels entered the hospital Sunday in the government-held town of
They then took away the woman, who apparently survived after swallowing cyanide when she was arrested on suspicion of being a member of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. Vavuniya town borders territory held by the rebels.
Tokyo's offer reflects Colombo's stand
The offer by
"The Government told me that it is willing to have negotiations outside the country, preferably in
Mr. Akashi, who announced
In a departure from his routine as
Asked about media reports that India could join Norway, Japan, the E.U. and the U.S. as a co-chair for the efforts to back the peace process, Mr. Akashi said: "I don't think that question arises," as the current co-chairs had hosted the aid support conference in 2003.
Saturday, December 10, 2005
Fanoos spares Jaffna
Speaking to Sunday Observer, Deputy Director of Met Department S.H.Kariyawasam said "based on previous motions of the cyclone we could say that it would not hit the coastal belt. But Northern part of the island would experience strong winds and heavy intermittent showers".
However, he said, timely warnings had been given to people living in coastal areas and fishers were told not to go fishing and engage in any naval activities.
The sea areas off the coast extending from Mannar to Mullaitivu through
Meanwhile, Additional District Secretary, Mannar Nicholas Pillai confirmed that there were no reports of cyclone experience or damages caused by strong winds so far. There has been a continuous drizzle in Mannar, he said.
An NGO official based in
Tamilnet website reported that strong 50-60 kmph wind has caused damages to roofs and houses in the low lying areas had been flooded. Some families in Vadamarachchi North and East have sought shelter at schools and community centres.
Rebels warn Sri Lanka last chance to avert war
The Tigers, who used suicide bombers to devastating effect in their drive for autonomy and have threatened to resume their struggle next year unless given political powers in the north and east, said their deadline depends on new President Mahinda Rajapakse’s response.
“We don’t prefer war. If a war is thrusted on the Tamil people, the Tamil people and the LTTE (will) make use of all the resources available to fight back,” S.P. Thamilselvan, head of the Tigers’ political wing, told Reuters in the northern rebel stronghold of Kilinochchi in an interview late on Friday.
“We consider this is an important final opportunity,” he added, saying the Tigers would give
“Whether the short space is going to be first half, mid or the latter half (of 2006) is in the hands of
Rajapakse, allied to hardline Marxists and Buddhists who detest the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), has already ruled out a separate homeland for Tamils outright.
A surge in attacks against the military, which culminated in two claymore mine blasts this month that killed 14 soldiers in the northern Jaffna peninsula, have raised fears of a return to a war that killed over 64,000 people up until a 2002 truce.
The Tigers, accused of assassinating the island’s foreign minister in August, deny any hand in attacks on military patrols and sentries -- which analysts say is a stock denial -- and the ceasefire is at its lowest ebb.
Some tsunami aid workers are considering pulling out of coastal rebel territory and
Fighting words
“Any living being if challenged or if tortured or if threatened of its existence will fight back, that is nature’s law, and we human beings are no exception and we Tamils are no exception,” Thamilselvan, 38, said in his native Tamil through a translator.
The armed forces’ claim on Friday that they could defeat the Tigers if war resumes was a provocative mistake, he added.
“We take it as an egotistic and supremacist thinking mode in which the Sri Lankan forces behave,” he said. “It is a ridiculous thing for the military to say things like that and most irresponsible... What type of a victory would that be?”
“Even after facing defeat in several instances at the hands of the LTTE, the military has not learnt proper lessons.”
Any resumption of hostilities would be a major setback for plans to restore crumbling infrastructure like roads, hit by years of under-investment as war swallowed state resources.
The road from
Analysts say the Tigers have used the ceasefire to regroup and rearm, and say the fact they scuppered the chances of Rajapakse’s moderate rival during last month’s presidential election with a boycott that scared hundreds of thousands of Tamils from voting, shows they are not ready for lasting peace.
The rebels, who have also sustained losses blamed on feuding with a renegade faction they accuse the military of supporting, have called on the international community to ensure Rajapakse and the military implement the terms of the ceasefire.
“The ceasefire agreement is the bedrock of the entire peace process and is at grave risk,” Thamilselvan said.
“In the event of all else failing, after exhaustion of all avenues of considering viable alternatives, then the Tamil people will have to exercise their right to self determination.”
Tigers demand urgent talks to defuse Sri Lanka war fears
A report on the website of the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) says they have told
"Our commitment to the ceasefire and the peace process remains undiluted and what we request now is to urgently arrange a high-level meeting between the parties...," said the LTTE's political wing leader S. P. Thamilselvan.
In a report on their official website, the LTTE said only face-to-face negotiations could "bring about normalcy and avoid confrontational postures between the civilians and the occupying military."
There was no immediate comment from the government or the Norwegians.
The LTTE leader flatly rejected a call by new President Mahinda Rajapakse to revise the ceasefire and dismissed Rajapakse's election pledge to abandon plans to turn the country into a federal state in exchange for ethnic peace.
The government of Rajapakse -- who had earlier promised to overhaul the peace bid and review the role of the Norwegians -- on Wednesday did a U-turn and asked
"It is true that Mr. Mahinda Rajapakse went to town with rigid stances relating to the 'unitary state' and the necessity to review the ceasefire," said Thamilselvan.
"But the ground realities and hard facts dictate there is no need to review the ceasefire for it is comprehensive and all-encompassing and what is needed is implementation of what has been agreed upon between the parties," he said.
He said the "rigid stance" of sticking to a unitary state may have been an election campaign ploy, but it was not helpful to resolving the decades-old ethnic conflict between the majority Sinhalese and minority Tamil communities.
Rajapakse was elected president last month.
The Tigers agreed in December 2002 to settle for a federal state rather than full independence, but direct talks between the guerrillas and
Diplomatic efforts to revive the process also remain deadlocked.
Following a surge in violence in the embattled northern and eastern regions that began last week, the military declared Friday it was ready to meet "any terrorist challenge."
The chief of defence staff, Daya Sandagiri, however, said it did not expect the country to slip back into full-scale war.
Rajapakse asked Norwegian envoy Brattskar to keep up peace brokering efforts even though two key allies of his government had insisted
Friday, December 09, 2005
CFA, Muslim Tamil amity, key to peace - Thamilchelvan
Mr. P. Nadesan, Head of Tamileelam Police and the Head of LTTE's Peace Secretariat Mr. Pulithevan also participated in the meeting with Norwegian Ambassador Mr. Hans Brattskar. Second secretary of the Norwegian embassy, Tom knappskog accompanied Mr Brattskar to the meeting.
Referring to Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse's invitation to Norway to continue with its facilitatory role to the peace process in Sri Lanka, Thamilchelvan told reporters that the change of Government in Colombo is a southern affair, and that the Norwegian facilitation and the monitoring are continuing uninterrupted in LTTE controlled areas. "Our leadership has always been positive to and supportive of the Norwegian facilitatition," LTTE's political head told the reporters.
Norwegian Ambasador Mr. Hans Brattskar [right] with Tom Knappskog, second secretary of the Norwegian Embassy.
Referring to the situation in the East, LTTE's political head said LTTE was fully aware of the forces attempting to cause dissension between the Muslims and Tamils in the east. LTTE leader Mr. V. Pirapaharan has issued clear directives to district level political and military wings of the LTTE to be vigilant and to take all efforts to strengthen relationship between the two communities, Thamilchelvan told the reporters.
Thamilchelvan said the LTTE was aware of the anonymous handbills issued by nefarious forces to threaten and create fear among resettled Muslims in
The Norwegian Ambassador briefed LTTE's Politicall Head on his meetings with SL President Mahinda Rajapaksa, his visit to New Delhi with former peace envoy and Norway's Minister for Development, Mr. Erik Solheim, the concerns related to the tense situation prevailing in the Jaffna peninsula and the urgent necessity for the parties to meet and find ways of effectively implementing the Cease Fire Agreement, LTTE's Peace Secretariat said.
For a question on the LTTE's stand to Mahinda Rajapakses framework of Unitary state, Thamilchelvan replied that a clear answer was provided in LTTE leader's Heroes day speech. The movement is prepared wait some time to see Mr Rajapalse'sa appraoch to peace to ascertain if the stand was a pre-election necessity, and if the new President has grasped the fundamentals of the struggle, Thamilchelvan said.
A High level delegation of the Norwegian Government would meet LTTE leadership to discuss the process forward, Mr. Thamilchelvan added and said the meeting did not focus on the process forward. It was a meeting where the official stand of the new Sri Lankan Government with regards to Norwegian facilitation was expressed, he added.
News in Brief
Muslim, Tamil factions clash in Muttur, one critically injured
Mr. Hakeem made this suggestion when he met
The SLMC leader told Mr. Akashi that just as much as there was a need to review the ceasefire, there was also a necessity to re-evaluate the role played by Nordic truce monitors so that they could overcome the shortcomings in their mission and perform better.
The Nordic Council which was formed in 1952 has five member countries -
Mr. Hakeem also told the Japanese Peace Envoy that he saw the decision by President Rajapakse to re-invite
Commenting on the violence unleashed on Muslims in the East, the SLMC leader suggested that Japan got stronger commitments from both the government and the LTTE that they do their maximum to ensure the maintenance of law and order in the areas. Mr. Akashi in response said
Weather warning
It is moving to the West. Under its influence, especially the deep sea areas off the coast extending from
The Meteorology Department requested people to refrain from fishing and Naval activities in the seas and be vigilant about latest weather advisories.
No fear of war but prepared to face any LTTE threat: Admrl Sandagi
Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), Admiral Daya Sandagiri, who is also the head of the Joint Operations Headquarters (JOH) said that all necessary steps had been taken to deal with the situation following the two claymore mine attacks in the Jaffna peninsula that left 15 soldiers dead within three days, keeping in mind the existing Ceasefire Agreement with the LTTE.
''The specific challenge for the armed forces at present is that the LTTE is trying to provoke the troops in
We are fully aware of it and not getting ourselves trapped into it. We are mindful of the situation and act with full restrain to ensure that the ceasefire agreement is continuing.
We will not breakaway from this position,'' Admiral Sandagiri, flanked by tri-service chiefs, told reporters here today.
Commenting on the current security situation in the Jaffna peninsula that has created a kind of tension within Sri Lanka and abroad, Admiral Sandagiri said that the armed forces have taken full charge of the situation and in the process of introducing some security measures to prevent the recurrence of such incidents.
''The LTTE is trying to provoke the armed forces to meet their own strategy. But the government is standing that the peace process should continue and the negotiations should start.
Having these two situations in parallel, the government forces are well prepared to face any challenge from the LTTE. We have taken charge of the situation. One should not get exited about the small incidents of this nature,'' he said.
Claiming that those two claymore explosions ''are not acts of war, but of terrorism,'' Admiral Sandagiri said that the war was not at all imminent in the island nation.
''There are so many ceasefire violations by the LTTE.
But that does not mean that we are going for war. Under these conditions, the act of war is not something that we are mindful of. I do not consider the word war is a right application here, because it is not what we are really thinking of,'' Admiral Sandagiri said.
He, however, said that with the available defence allocation the government forces are in the process of acquiring new weapons to meet the future challenges, but refused to divulge the details of those weapons.
Meanwhile, the LTTE's political wing head, S P Thamilselvan has welcomed President Mahinda Rajapakse's move to have formally invited the Norwegian government to resume its role as facilitator ''as a reciprocal act'' to rebel leader Velupillai Prabhakaran's annual speech on November 27.
He has made these remarks at a meeting with Norwegian Ambassador Hans Brattskar in the rebel-held Kilinochchi region today.
Claming that the organisation remained committed to the truce pact, Mr Thamilselvan has urged the facilitators to organise a top level meeting with the government to ''effectively implement'' the shaky truce.
''Our commitment to the CFA and the peace process remains undiluted and what we request now is to urgently arrange the high level meeting between the parties to effectively implement the CFA, for this alone can bring about normalcy and avoid confrontational postures between the civilians and the occupying military,'' an LTTE website has quoted Mr Thamilselvan as saying at the meeting with the Norwegian Ambassador.