Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Grim scenes at Sri Lankan camps 1

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B6RDtQx6HR0

Grim scenes at Sri Lankan camps : Nihal Jeyasinghe's Live Interview at Channel 4

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qn8_oov3TUk&feature=channel_page

Shocking claims have emerged of shortages of food and water, dead bodies left where they have fallen, women separated from their families, and even sexual abuse. This programme obtained the first independently filmed pictures from the internment camps set up by the Sri Lankan government to house Tamils who have fled the country's civil war.

Sri Lanka: Satellite Images, Witnesses Show Shelling Continues

Sri Lanka: Satellite Images, Witnesses Show Shelling Continues
UN Security Council Fails to Act While Civilians Suffer
May 12, 2009

Recent satellite photos and witness accounts show the brutal shelling of civilians in the conflict area goes on. Neither the Sri Lankan army nor the Tamil Tigers appear to have any reluctance in using civilians as cannon fodder.

Brad Adams, Asia director

(New York) - New satellite imagery and eyewitness accounts contradict Sri Lankan government claims that its armed forces are no longer using heavy weapons in the densely populated conflict area in northern Sri Lanka, Human Rights Watch said today.

Local sources have reported that more than 400 civilians have been killed and more than 1,000 wounded since May 9, 2009, as a result of artillery attacks on the thin coastal strip where fighting continues between government forces and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

"Recent satellite photos and witness accounts show the brutal shelling of civilians in the conflict area goes on," said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch. "Neither the Sri Lankan army nor the Tamil Tigers appear to have any reluctance in using civilians as cannon fodder."

The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) today issued a preliminary analysis of commercial high-resolution satellite imagery of the conflict zone that shows craters from the use of heavy weapons and the removal of thousands of likely structures used by internally displaced persons (IDPs) between May 6 and May 10. The AAAS found that it was "certainly unlikely that the IDPs would have moved en masse, and so completely without a compelling reason." Tens of thousands of civilians remain trapped in the conflict area.

Witnesses described to Human Rights Watch harrowing days spent in shallow bunkers sheltering from artillery attacks and being prevented by the LTTE from escaping to government-controlled areas.

"K. Kanaga," a 35-year-old woman whose name is withheld for security reasons, said that around 7 p.m. on May 9, she and 15 others were hiding in a bunker that they had built under a tractor when a shell struck the tractor. "If it hadn't been for the tractor, we would have all been dead," she said. About eight to 10 shells struck the immediate area, which was populated with tents and improvised bunkers. Kanaga's 45-year-old cousin was staying in a tent nearby; she never reached the bunker and was killed in the attack. "Many other people were injured as well, but I don't know how many," Kanaga said. "I could hear their screams."

"R. Raman," 29, said that he and his family had been hiding in their bunker in Mullaivaikal - a dug-out trench without any cover - for several days. "We were being attacked from all sides," he said. "My wife and I only left the bunker to get food and water for our three children."

Early in the morning on May 9, a shell struck one of the tents closeby, killing Raman's 15-year-old nephew and wounding his nephew's older brother and sister. Raman believes that the shell came from Sri Lankan army positions and may have been targeting LTTE forces that were deployed in the jungle about 100 meters away. Several shells struck the tented area inhabited by displaced civilians.

Raman said he and his family were afraid to try to escape to government-controlled areas. When they and several hundred others had tried to leave the area in early April, LTTE fighters opened fire on them. "I saw them shoot at least 15 people," he said. "They just opened fire on the first row of people. I don't know whether they lived or died, however. We fell to the ground as soon as the firing started. When it stopped, we ran back as quickly as we could. There were children among the people who got shot as well." According to Raman, about half of the people managed to escape that day. The other half were forced to return.

According to doctors who spoke to Human Rights Watch, at around 8 a.m. on May 12 the makeshift hospital at Mullivaikkal was again shelled, as many wounded civilians were waiting for treatment. Nearly 1,000 patients were in the hospital at the time of the attack, including many wounded during attacks on May 9-10. A shell reportedly exploded in front of the admission ward during visiting hours, when many relatives came to visit patients, and doctors usually arrived for work. Doctors reported that the attack killed 49 people (26 immediately, others later succumbing to injuries); another 31 injured remain in the hospital. Among those killed was the administrative officer of Mullaitivu Regional Director of Health Services, who was arranging admission of a patient. A doctor said that the shelling came from the direction of Iraddaivaikal, where government forces are deployed. Human Rights Watch and other independent monitors have not been permitted access to the conflict area by the government, so cannot confirm these casualty figures.

The Mullivaikkal hospital, which had been newly relocated away from the front line, has been repeatedly hit by shells believed to have been fired by Sri Lankan army forces. Photographs of the hospital following the shelling today can be viewed at (slideshow link).

Human Rights Watch has repeatedly raised grave concerns about violations of international law by both parties to the conflict. The LTTE has violated the laws of war by using civilians as "human shields," by preventing civilians from fleeing the combat zone - including by use of lethal force - and by deliberately deploying their forces close to densely populated areas. The Sri Lankan armed forces have indiscriminately shelled densely populated areas, including hospitals, in violation of the laws of war.

Human Rights Watch reiterated its call to Sri Lanka's key donors - including the United States, the European Union, India, Japan, and China - to demand that the Sri Lankan government end its use of heavy weapons in densely populated areas, particularly near hospitals. Both the government and the LTTE should permit safe humanitarian corridors to allow civilians to flee the combat zone.

Human Rights Watch reiterated its call for the humanitarian situation in Sri Lanka to be urgently taken up by a formal meeting of the United Nations Security Council in New York and by a special session of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.


http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2009/05/12/sri-lanka-satellite-images-witnesses-show-shelling-continues

Army’s war crimes continue in northern Sri Lanka

Army’s war crimes continue in northern Sri Lanka

By Wije Dias
13 May 2009

The Sri Lankan army was responsible for a further atrocity yesterday as it intensified its offensive against the remnants of the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). At least 49 people were killed and more than 50 injured when a shell struck the only remaining hospital in the so-called no-fire zone on the north east coast of the island.

The UN estimates that between 50,000 and 100,000 civilians are trapped inside the remaining pocket of LTTE-held territory, without adequate supplies of food and medicine. The hospital is a makeshift facility set up at the Mullaivaikal East primary school and staffed by government doctors, administrators and volunteers.

Dr V. Shanmugarajah said he was in the operating theatre at the time the shell struck, adding that it appeared to have come from the direction of Puthukkiyiruppu, an area held by the army. In a video recording released via the “War without Witness” group, he explained that the hospital had no safe bunker and that patients and their helpers had been sleeping outside, under tarpaulin sheets.

“The artillery hit directly on the hospital and caused this damage. When the shell hit, all the people were running to save their lives... it was chaos... it is difficult for me to ask other staff to stay and work,” Shanmugarajah said.

Dr Thurairaja Varatharajah, a senior government official, told the media: “One side of the hospital was destroyed in today’s shelling.” He said many of the injured had head and stomach wounds, and he expected the death toll to rise. Among the dead were a government-appointed administrator and two volunteer staff.

An unnamed hospital worker said the casualties had included patients, bystanders and staff in the hospital admission ward near a temporary shelter. “Now also heavy shelling is going on in this area and heavy fighting is going on. Today the situation is worse because all of the patients ran away from the hospital after this incident,” he said.

The strike on the hospital followed heavy army barrages on the no-fire zone last week that killed at least 430 people and injured more than 1,000 in what UN spokesman Gordon Weiss described as a “bloodbath”. The latest war crime yesterday makes clear that the Sri Lankan government and the military are intent on continuing their offensive regardless of the cost in civilian lives.

Military spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara flatly denied the latest evidence of the army’s atrocities, saying: “We are not using heavy artillery or any heavy weapons.” Similarly the Colombo government has dismissed the weekend’s massacre as LTTE propaganda and blamed the LTTE for using civilians as “human shields”.

While human rights organisations have provided some evidence of the LTTE preventing civilians from leaving its territory, the Sri Lankan government bears full responsible for the atrocities being carried out by the army. The military’s statement that it is not using heavy weapons is no more credible than its previous lies.

Yesterday was not the first time that army shelling has hit a hospital. A Human Rights Watch (HRW) report released last Friday listed 30 attacks on hospitals within LTTE-held territory since December as “evidence of war crimes”. “While doctors and nurses struggle to save lives in overcrowded and underequipped facilities, Sri Lankan army attacks have hit one hospital after another,” HRW Asia director Brad Adams said in a press release.

As the Sri Lanka army has advanced, HRW explained, “Hospital staff have increasingly been compelled to leave permanent hospitals to set up makeshift hospitals in LTTE-controlled areas. Several independent sources informed Human Rights Watch that each time a hospital was established in a new location, the doctors transmitted GPS coordinates of the facility to the Sri Lankan government to ensure that the facility would be protected from military attack. Medical staff said that, on several occasions, attacks occurred on the day after the coordinates had been transmitted.”

An aid worker told HRW about an attack on Valayanmadam hospital in the no-fire zone on April 2: “I was in the hospital. Right after 12.30 p.m., I noticed a Sri Lanka military drone conducting reconnaissance above the hospital. The people in the hospital suspected that an attack was imminent, so they lay down on the ground. Shortly thereafter, we heard a loud explosion in the air, followed by several smaller explosions on the ground... One of the doctors, who was lying just next to me, was killed by a shrapnel piece that hit him in the head. Four or five people were killed and more than 30 were wounded in the attack.”

The army’s attacks on hospitals and other civilian targets are not accidents but part of a strategy of terrorising the population inside the remaining LTTE territory. The aim is to stampede civilians into leaving the area so that it can be turned into a free fire zone. Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara candidly told the press that “if not for the civilians, it would take about 72 hours” to defeat the LTTE.

Since mid-February, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has evacuated nearly 14,000 injured and their carers from the war zone by sea, but its ability to do so has become increasingly precarious. Yesterday the ICRC head in Colombo, Paul Castella, made another urgent appeal for proper access to the no-fire zone, after an ICRC-chartered ferry was compelled to stay offshore for the entire day, then had to turn back as constant fighting made landing too dangerous.

The ferry is a means not only for evacuating the sick and injured, but providing desperately needed food and medical supplies. It last reached the area on May 9, but had been unable to approach the shore on May 8 due to heavy fighting. “The plight of the people remaining in the combat area is desperate,” Castella said. “We need unimpeded access to them in order to save lives.”

World Food Program spokeswoman Emilia Casella expressed concern this week that insufficient food was reaching the no-fire zone. “The humanitarian situation for those trapped inside the conflict zone obviously is desperate and reports are indicating that many of the fleeing IDPs [internally displaced persons] have not had a proper meal in days,” she said. “What we are seeing among newly-arrived IDPs [is] children under five, pregnant and lactating women and elderly [who] are reportedly significantly under-nourished due to the long distances that they are travelling and the lack of adequate food while in the conflict zone.”

Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse has rejected all calls for a ceasefire and responded to any criticisms of the military’s actions with unconcealed contempt. Foreign Secretary Palitha Kohona lashed out at UN spokesman Gordon Weiss’s description of last weekend’s shelling as a “bloodbath”, declaring: “It is not the role of the UN to issue such statements embarrassing the respective governments and in this Mr Gordon released to the media what he got without considering the damage to the Sri Lankan government.”

The Rajapakse government, however, is secure in the knowledge that no action will be taken through the UN. China, Russia, Japan and Vietnam tacitly supported the Sri Lankan government and its war crimes by blocking any formal discussion of the situation in the UN Security Council on Monday. The US, France and Britain have been issuing hypocritical expressions of concern about the humanitarian crisis, but all these powers quietly backed Rajapakse’s decision to plunge the country back to war in mid-2006. Their calls for a ceasefire are not issued out of concern for the trapped civilians, but to shape the outcome of the war in their own economic and strategic interests.

All these powers bear their share of political responsibility for the Sri Lankan government’s communal war and the war crimes being carried out.


http://www.wsws.org/articles/2009/may2009/sril-m13.shtml

UPDATE: Fresh Heavy Fighting In Northern Sri Lanka

UPDATE: Fresh Heavy Fighting In Northern Sri Lanka

http://www.nasdaq.com/aspx/stock-market-news-story.aspx?storyid=200905130354dowjonesdjonline000396&title=update-fresh-heavy-fighting-in-northern-sri-lanka

(Adds military quote, details of fighting)

COLOMBO (AFP)--Sri Lanka's Tamil Tigers on Wednesday launched a wave of suicide attacks against advancing government soldiers, the military said, as heavy fighting raged despite renewed international calls for a truce.

The clashes came as both sides in the brutal conflict faced renewed charges of war crimes, with the U.N. describing the situation as "absolutely awful" and a rights group saying civilians were being used as "cannon fodder."

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and her U.K. counterpart David Miliband also repeated so far futile demands that the fighting stop and thousands of trapped civilians be allowed to escape.

But the island's military, which says it has the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, or LTTE, surrounded in just four square kilometers of northeastern coastal jungle, signaled both sides were determined to battle to the end.

Military spokesman Brig. Udaya Nanayakkara said LTTE fighters mounted a ferocious counterattack, with at least 10 guerrillas dying in a wave of suicide boat strikes along the coast.

"We have successfully repulsed their counterattacks and search operations are now under way," Nanayakkara said. Several government soldiers were reported wounded, but no further details were given.

There was no immediate comment from the rebels, and the army's claims can't be independently verified as independent journalists, diplomats and most aid agencies are barred from going near the conflict zone.

The Colombo government estimates up to 20,000 civilians are being held in the pocket where the LTTE are holed up, although the U.N. has said as many as 50,000 might be trapped - huddled in shallow bunkers and with scant food, water or medical facilities.

On Tuesday, the rebels accused the army of killing at least 47 civilians in an artillery and mortar barrage that struck a hospital, a charge fiercely denied by the island's military.

That followed an alleged massive army bombardment of the area over the weekend, which the rebels claimed had left up to 2,000 dead.

Human Rights Watch blamed both sides for the ongoing carnage.

"Recent satellite photos and witness accounts show the brutal shelling of civilians in the conflict area goes on," said Brad Adams, Asia director at the U.S.-based rights watchdog.

The group also described witness accounts of how the Tamil Tigers - who have been fighting for a separate state since the 1970s and once controlled a third of the island - murdered anyone who tried to cross into government territory.

"Neither the Sri Lankan army nor the Tamil Tigers appear to have any reluctance in using civilians as cannon fodder," Adams said.

U.N. humanitarian co-ordinator John Holmes said intransigence by both the Sri Lankan government and the rebels had created an "absolutely awful situation."

"The LTTE are clearly still holding onto that population against their will, using them as human shields," he said in Geneva.

"The government has said they aren't using heavy weapons. But the evidence suggests that they are continuing to do so, at least to some extent."

The U.N.'s human rights chief Navi Pillay has already said both sides might be guilty of war crimes.

On the diplomatic front, the U.K and U.S. issued a joint appeal for a truce - the latest in a series of so far futile international calls for the bloodshed to stop.

"Secretary Clinton and Foreign Secretary Miliband call on all sides to end hostilities immediately and allow for the safe evacuation of the tens of thousands of civilians," a statement said after the two met in Washington.

The European Union has called for the issue to taken up by the U.N. Security Council, but some powerful members, notably China and Russia, are opposed.

ICRC worker killed in Sri Lanka

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) says that one of its employees has been killed in a shell attack in Sri Lanka's war zone.

The victim - a Sri Lankan working as a water technician - was killed along with his mother.

He was working in the small pocket of territory still controlled by Tamil rebels where fighting is taking place.

The dead man - who was married with a child - is the third ICRC employee to be killed in the zone in recent weeks.

The ICRC has more than 20 employees there.

Correspondents say that it is not clear who carried out the attack.

On Tuesday the ICRC said that heavy clashes had prevented its ship from landing and evacuating sick and wounded people from the war zone and made a plea for better access.

There are also unconfirmed reports that a hospital in the fighting zone has been hit by shelling, with more than a dozen deaths.

A doctor in the area told the AFP news agency that three shells hit the make-shift hospital.

Ethnic Tamils at a makeshift hospital in Mullivaikal. Photo: 11 May 2009
The LTTE [Tamil Tigers] are clearly still holding onto that population against their will, using them as human shields
Top UN aid official John Holmes

In another development, the military said it had repulsed a wave of rebel suicide boat strikes against army positions along the north-eastern coast.

There has been no comment on this from the rebels.

Reports from the war zone cannot by verified as no independent journalists are allowed.

The escalation in fighting comes amid increasing international calls for a temporary ceasefire to allow thousands of trapped civilians to leave the conflict zone.

The US and UK have urged both the government and the Tamil Tigers to stop fighting "immediately" and allow an evacuation.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and her UK counterpart David Miliband expressed alarm at the large number of reported civilian casualties.

And the top UN aid official said the situation in the conflict zone was "awful".

The Sri Lankan government has consistently denied allegations that the army has caused civilian casualties or used heavy weapons in civilian areas.

The UN estimates that about 50,000 civilians are trapped by the conflict, in a three-sq-km strip of land.

SLA shells hospital again, several killed including doctor, ICRC worker

SLA shells hospital again, several killed including doctor, ICRC worker

[TamilNet, Wednesday, 13 May 2009, 10:07 GMT]
Sri Lanka Army (SLA) fired artillery shells hit the makeshift hospital in Mu'l'li-vaaykkaal East, killing at least 38 patients who were waiting for treatment at the hospital, a medical staff told TamilNet. "There are many more killed inside the hospital premises, but I can only confirm that 38 casualties that I have witnessed near the main theatre upto 2:53 p.m.," the medical staff told TamilNet. Many shells have hit the makeshift hospital premises across the road. Meanwhile, a patient who reached an administrative office put the casualty figures at 100 and said he had witnessed that an ICRC worker was killed. Meanwhile, LTTE's Director of Peace Secretarait S. Puleedevan when contacted by TamilNet said 39 female patients at a counselling aid center for mentally ill women were massacred by targeted SLA shelling in the morning. More than 40 patients were feared wounded, he said.

Most of the medical staff and patients are staying inside the bunkers, unable to save lives, the medical staff at the hospital told TamilNet.

The roads are congested with vehicles and it is not possible for journalistic sources to witness and verify all the details on time.

The hospital has been hit for the third time in one week.

Updates will follow.