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: Sri
Lanka
Thousands of Tamils flee from government-controlled areas
in Sri Lanka
By S. Jayanth
19 January 2006
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As the danger of open civil war in Sri Lanka intensifies, thousands
of Tamils in the North and East of the island have fled their
homes to areas controlled by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
(LTTE). Several dozen people have also left for the southern Indian
state of Tamil Nadu.
The exodus comes after two months of steadily escalating violence.
At least 150 military personnel, LTTE members and civilians have
died since the election of President Mahinda Rajapakse. The armed
forces have stepped up the harassment and intimidation of Tamils
through increased patrols, checkpoints and arbitrary cordon and
search operations.
According to WSWS correspondents in Jaffna, about 3,000 families
had left the Jaffna peninsula by the end of last week for the
LTTE-controlled Vanni. Over the past weeks, hundreds of families
have travelled through Muhamalai, south of Jaffna townthe
entry point to the Vanni.
More families have shifted from the villages of Ariyalai, Velanai,
Punguduthivu, Kayts, Thambatti, Kodikamam, Varani, Karainagar
and Velvettithurai. They could be seen on the road with their
belongings packed into trucks, minibuses and auto rickshaws. According
to the LTTE-sponsored Kilinochchi Development, Relief and Rehabilitation
Organisation (KDRRO), families entering the district have been
sent to community centres or are staying with their relatives.
Some families have left coastal areas because of restrictions
imposed on fishing by the Sri Lankan military. But most are maaveerar
(great hero) familiesthe LTTE term for families whose sons
or daughters have been killed in fighting. They fear they will
be the targets of the military or associated paramilitary groups
as the violence escalates.
Last Sunday night unidentified gunmen killed three womena
mother and her two daughtersat Manipai, 10 kilometres from
Jaffna. The father and son were injured and are under treatment
in the Jaffna hospital. One of the women killed, 30-year-old Bojan
Renuka, had acted in an LTTE propaganda filmAmma
(Mother). The pro-LTTE Tamilnet blamed thugs from the Eelam
Peoples Democratic Party (EPDP), which works closely with the
military.
A mother leaving for the Vanni told the WSWS that her maaveerar
family had fled to the Vanni in 1995 and lived at Visvamadu in
the Kilinochchi district. She has two sons and two daughters.
Her elder son had been a LTTE member. In 1998, because of the
difficult conditions in the Vanni, including air attacks, she
left for Tamil Nadu in southern India.
In 2004, her family returned to Sri Lanka with the help of
the UN refugees commission and settled near Manipai. The Sri Lankan
government gave her just 25,000 rupees ($US250) to assist in resettlement.
She was able to get help from a non-government organisation and
ran a teashop to earn a living.
In the present situation, we cant stay here. My
son and daughters have gone already. We are going to stay with
our relations there [in the Vanni]. We are not going there hoping
for good facilities but because of the security problem. If we
delay any further, the road could be closed. We are leaving our
shop. Our childrens education has been affected by all these
displacements, she explained.
Another resident, Sivalingam, had already sent his wife and
children to the Vanni. My daughter-in-laws family
is a heros family so we are not safe here. If the war starts,
we wont be able to shift. Here we have our home and possessions.
But I decided to leave after watching the situation, he
said.
Tamils from the eastern Trincomalee district have also started
to flee to safer areas. As of January 11 about 500
families from Mallikaithivu, Kachchanoor and Iruthayapuram had
taken refuge in two schools in Thanganagaran LTTE-controlled
area. About 750 families or 2,371 people from Menkamam, Kumarapuram
and Kilivetti had taken shelter in nearby schools or in the homes
of relatives after cordon-and-search operations by government
forces.
According to the Centre for Security Studies (CSS) website,
48 people have fled over the past week to Rameshwaram in Tamil
Naduthe closest point in India to Mannar in northern Sri
Lanka. The latest refugees have been sent to the Mandappam area
in Tamil Nadu, where refugees who fled Sri Lanka in the 1980s
and 1990s are still living in squalid camps.
Mannar bishop Joseph Rayeppu said a number of families had
recently sought shelter in local churches fearing reprisals after
an attack on a bus killed nine sailors last week. Fishermen and
refugees had previously been savagely attacked by naval personnel
after a mine explosion at Pesalai in Mannar killed 13 sailors.
A statement by the Jaffna University Teachers Human Rights
Organisation, a group hostile to the LTTE, explained: At
1.30 p.m. on 23rd December a Navy bus transporting naval personnel
was attacked by exploding a landmine from the housing scheme in
Pesalai, Mannar Island. More than a dozen naval personnel were
killed. Following the incident, naval personnel went on a rampage.
All residents were ordered out about 2.00 p.m. and lined
up on the road in the scorching sun and were attacked with gun
butts, not sparing the women and children. Men were made to stand
with their head in a hole in the ground and were humiliated and
kicked from behind. It was only after the intervention of the
parish priest that they were allowed to go to the church about
9.00 p.m. The remains of a mother and her four-year-old son have
been recovered from a house that was burnt by the Navy. Another
parent and child are among those missing.
Attacks on civilians reportedly continued into the following
day. Naval personnel robbed a large quantity of gold from the
residents. There was no attempt on the part of the government
to intervene promptly and reassure the civilians, let alone acknowledge
what happened. Among those admitted to hospital is a 5-year-old
boy with a broken skull. A naval man had rammed his gun barrel
into the back of the boys head and penetrated it.
The account has not been denied by the security forces or the
government. It is just one of a series of incidents that make
a mockery of comments by cabinet spokesman Nimal Siripala de Silva
who told a press conference last Thursday: [T]he President
has told the armed forces not to provoke the LTTE and abide truly
by the Ceasefire Agreement. But they are entitled to act accordingly
if for example the LTTE throws a grenade or sets off landmines.
Both sidesthe political establishment in Colombo and
the LTTEare rooted in communal politics, which led to breakdown
of talks sponsored by the major powers for a power-sharing arrangement.
Unable to address the deepening social crisis facing working people,
the government and the LTTE are once again whipping up communal
hatred and fears and engaging in what amounts to an undeclared
war.
An LTTE-front organisationMakkal Padai (Peoples
Army)issued an appeal on December 29 to Tamil youth to flee
to LTTE-controlled areas. We tried to quench the situation
in Jaffna, its statement declared. But the Sinhala
forces are not ending the attacks, the killing of the innocent
and sexual intimidation of women... We all should unite and fight
for the liberation of Tamils. The LTTE-sponsored Tamil National
Awakening Organisation has issued a similar statement.
At a press conference in Colombo yesterday, Janatha Vimukthi
Peramuna (JVP) parliamentary leader Wimal Weerawansa made a similar
appeal for war. Asked about recent LTTE attacks on the military,
Weerawansa declared that the government must educate those
who are still unable to see the true colours of the LTTE to take
the decision to defeat the LTTE without displaying cowardice any
further in the face of their atrocities.
The Sinhala chauvinist JVP signed a formal electoral deal with
Rajapakse prior to last Novembers presidential election
to take a more aggressive stance toward the LTTE. Weerawansa was
one of Rajapakses campaign spokesmen and frequently appeared
alongside him in the course of the campaign. It is no accident
that less than two months after Rajapakses victory, the
island is once again plunging headlong to war.
See Also:
Sri Lankan authorities mount increasing
attacks on media freedom
[18 January 2006]
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