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War crimes in Sri Lanka- Really heart wrenching article

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DAWN: War crimes in Sri Lanka
By Frances Harrison

THERE are signs that the international community is gearing up for action to hold Sri Lanka accountable for alleged war crimes committed by its forces at the end of the brutal civil war against the Tamil Tiger rebels in 2009.

A resolution is being prepared for next month’s session of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva and Pakistan, where the Sri Lankan president begins a three-day visit today, should not stand in the way of justice for tens of thousands of minority Tamils who perished.

A preliminary investigation by the United Nations said Sri Lanka’s “conduct of the war represented a grave assault on the entire regime of international law” concluding that up to 40,000 Tamil civilians may have been killed in just five months.
There are indications that the death toll could be even higher.

Colombo has promoted its victory over the Tigers as a new way to defeat terrorism, dubbed “the Sri Lankan option”.

This is in fact a terrible euphemism for a scorched-earth policy, failure to distinguish between combatants and civilians and removing independent witnesses.

Between the months of January and May 2009, the Sri Lankan military indiscriminately shelled and bombed hundreds of thousands of civilians trapped in a small rebel enclave in the north of the island, ordering all journalists and international aid workers out first so there would be no one to say what really happened.

The traumatised survivors describe a living hell. Starving women and children cowered in earthen trenches as the army pummelled them with volleys of shells fired from multi-barrelled rocket launchers and dropped bombs from supersonic jets.

In a lull in the fighting, people would emerge to find human body parts strewn around, a leg or baby’s head lodged in a nearby tree. They quickly buried their neighbours’ remains with shovels to prevent the dogs eating them.

Everyone has a tale of a near escape, chatting with someone one minute, the next watching the life literally go out of them.
Families survived on watered-down rice soup they cooked over tiny outdoor fires. A nine-year-old lost half her body weight in months. A mother who’d just given birth in a bunker sold her last gold bangle for a tenth of its value — 16g of gold bought just two kilos of rice.

Farmers and shopkeepers, teachers and civil servants were displaced up to 40 times, finally camping on a tiny stretch of white-sand, palm-fringed beach. Unable to dig bunkers because the dry sand just collapsed, women chopped up their best silk wedding saris to stitch sandbags.

Desperate parents contemplated running into the sea with their children to commit suicide because they couldn’t bear the idea of dying one by one. They hugged their hungry children and covered their eyes with their hands to shield them from the horror of seeing their friends blown to pieces.

Makeshift hospitals staffed by a handful of brave doctors were systemically attacked as life-saving drugs for surgery and bandages ran out. A baby was delivered with a bullet lodged in his leg, having been shot while still in the womb. Surgeons resorted to using butcher’s knives and donating their own blood to keep patients alive. A priest had his leg amputated without anaesthesia after being shelled in his church compound.

To escape tens of thousands of terrified civilians dodged bullets, waded through water full of corpses, and ran barefoot through puddles of human blood, some forced to make agonising choices about abandoning injured relatives in order to live themselves.

It’s not surprising many survivors are now suicidal. A doctor who served there can no longer stand the sight of blood, a photographer can’t look through a camera lens without seeing dead children and a Catholic nun had to struggle to keep her faith in a loving God after what she witnessed.

:cry:

The war crimes and crimes against humanity were not perpetrated by only one side. The Tamil Tiger rebels compounded the catastrophe by refusing to allow civilians out of the war zone, using them as human shields, callously exposing their own people to the fury of the advancing Sri Lankan military.

The Tigers forcibly recruited more and more teenagers to die a pointless death in a jungle trench even in the last months when defeat was certain.

It was a terrible abuse of their own people many of whom hated them for it. The Tigers even sent suicide bombers to blow up refugees trying to flee the war zone, determined that everyone must stay together, in the mistaken hope the international community would intervene.

All along both sides claimed to be saving Tamil civilians, while showing little mercy.

When the Tigers were finally obliterated on May 18, 2009, the killing didn’t stop. In the final hours eyewitness saw the mopping-up operation as soldiers threw grenades in bunkers where injured rebels lay, unable to flee.

Some of the last civilians who walked out say thousands of dead bodies lay sprawled on the ground, ******* in the tropical heat.

All 280,000 exhausted crushed survivors were then detained against their will in a giant refugee camp, guarded by armed soldiers and surrounded by barbed wire.

Thousands escaped, bribing their way out. Eleven thousand suspected rebels were locked up in the world’s largest mass detention without trial. Tamils describe summary executions, gang rape and torture even a year after the end of the war.

The Sri Lankans recently completed their own flawed inquiry into the war but Alice in Wonderland-like they seemed to blame everything on the Tigers and completely exonerate their own security forces.

Human rights groups now want an independent investigation, arguing that accountability is a requirement under international law, not an optional extra.

Tamil survivors also want the truth acknowledged before they can move on with their shattered lives. Without the truth, reconciliation and forgiveness are simply not possible and the grievances that led to conflict in the first place remain dangerously unresolved.

The writer is a former BBC foreign correspondent based in Sri Lanka and Iran. Her book of accounts of survivors from Sri Lanka’s civil war Still Counting the Dead will be published by Portobello Books in London this summer.


This is brutal and really heart wrenching..This is nothing but butchery of humanity..

What is the difference between SL armed forces and LTTE!!:angry:

i implore GoI to support any international Human rights investigation even if it is a strategically wrong move. Sometimes we have to do what is right.
 
War crimes in North East India even more heart wrenching. Woman are raped and children slaughtered and yet certain members on this forum resist and openly try to express other countries views and repress what is happening to their own countrymen. Nationalism is always second to human rights and people need to understand it. I can post the links if interested.[
 
War crimes in North East India even more heart wrenching. Woman are raped and children slaughtered and yet certain members on this forum resist and openly try to express other countries views and repress what is happening to their own countrymen. Nationalism is always second to human rights and people need to understand it. I can post the links if interested.[

War crimes !! There is no war in North East...Go and check the recent elections in North eastern states..may be u can check that link..
Human rights violations are present..but India itself investigated and prosecuted its own soldiers when found guilty unlike some nations.
 
DAWN: War crimes in Sri Lanka
By Frances Harrison




This is brutal and really heart wrenching..This is nothing but butchery of humanity..

What is the difference between SL armed forces and LTTE!!:angry:

i implore GoI to support any international Human rights investigation even if it is a strategically wrong move. Sometimes we have to do what is right.

SL army didn't target civilians, created no-fire zones for the civilians. Tamil Tigers used them as human shields and some got killed by Tamil Tigers when they trying to cross towards to SL Army.

Hope "Super Democracy" India won't train another terrorist group against another country for their advantages.
 
I completely support what Sri Lanka Government did to stop the civil war
It was a very hard decision but it's something they had to do and there
was no other way around it.

I wonder when Sri Lanka for 35 year burned in the fire of Civil War where
were these human right groups ? why we could not hear any complain from
them . these people are only bunch of hypocrites .

can they tell me who would get the food and supplies if government allowed
supplies to be sent to the region . Tamil Tiger terrorists or Civilian .
 
I completely support what Sri Lanka Government did to stop the civil war
It was a very hard decision but it's something they had to do and there
was no other way around it.

I wonder when Sri Lanka for 35 year burned in the fire of Civil War where
were these human right groups ? why we could not hear any complain from
them . these people are only bunch of hypocrites .

can they tell me who would get the food and supplies if government allowed
supplies to be sent to the region . Tamil Tiger terrorists or Civilian .

would they have shelled Sinhala regions??

coz to them Tamil blood is cheap so they can be killed..looks like Srilanka found an arrow with which they could kill two birds..

One- to finish the LTTE.
second- to drastically reduce the Tamil population so that they can be controlled.
 
would they have shelled Sinhala regions??

coz to them Tamil blood is cheap so they can be killed..looks like Srilanka found an arrow with which they could kill two birds..

One- to finish the LTTE.
second- to drastically reduce the Tamil population so that they can be controlled.

There is no regions based on ethnic in Sri Lanka, you express your ideas based on your ethnic mind which you're experiencing in India.
If SL army wanted to reduce the Tamils then they can have done it very easily, don't need to wait for many years or the last 2 weeks of operation.
 
Sri Lanka did well to destroy the terrorist LTTE. :tup:

And China will protect Sri Lanka in the UN with our veto, so this talk of the "international community gearing up for action against Sri Lanka" is just BS.
 
There is no regions based on ethnic in Sri Lanka, you express your ideas based on your ethnic mind which you're experiencing in India.
If SL army wanted to reduce the Tamils then they can have done it very easily, don't need to wait for many years or the last 2 weeks of operation.

Your fellow Sri Lankans like samv were bragging in this very forum that they have reduced the Tamil population in Sri Lanka and they dont have a political say any longer. When the Sinhalese including you show such open hatred for Tamils, its hard to believe your words. The government sponsored persecution is still continuing and the Tamils are suffering. The rich and influential Tamils have always been safe but the poor tamils are the ones who bear the brunt.
 
Your fellow Sri Lankans like samv were bragging in this very forum that they have reduced the Tamil population in Sri Lanka and they dont have a political say any longer. When the Sinhalese including you show such open hatred for Tamils, its hard to believe your words. The government sponsored persecution is still continuing and the Tamils are suffering. The rich and influential Tamils have always been safe but the poor tamils are the ones who bear the brunt.


More ex-LTTE cadres reintegrated


Another group of rehabilitated ex-LTTE cadres was handed over to their parents and guardians at the Deyata Kirula venue at Anuradhapura yesterday.

Accordingly, forty (40) ex-LTTE cadres who underwent a rehabilitation programme at centres run by the Rehabilitation and Prison Reforms Ministry entered normal life with the assistance of the Government.

According to the Department of Rehabilitation 10, 490 ex-LTTE cadres have now been rehabilitated and reintegrated into society so far.

At present there are only 973 ex-cadres to be reintegrated to society, and measures have been taken to reintegrate them soon.

The Government allocated Rs 200 million for the rehabilitation programme for ex-LTTE cadres, said Rehabilitation and Prison Reforms Minister Chandrasiri Gajadeera.


Sri Lanka News | Ministry of Defence - Sri Lanka
 

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