http://www.wsws.org/articles/2009/may2009/slml-m04.shtml
Despite the government’s
denials, the Sri Lankan army offensive against the separatist Liberation Tigers
of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) is continuing with criminal indifference to the toll on
the estimated 50,000 civilians trapped in the fighting.
The military continued to
shell the government-proclaimed no-fire zone—the small pocket of territory
still held by the LTTE—on Friday and Saturday, hitting a makeshift hospital at
Mullivaikkal. Thurairajah Varatharajah, a government doctor working at the
hospital, told Al Jazeera by telephone on Saturday that more than 60 people had
been killed and another 87 injured.
“Yesterday there [were]
shell attacks on the hospital ... and today, morning there [were] two attacks,
mainly in front of the hospital and other places as well. Today, shells fell
[on two occasions on] the hospital area, totalling 60 to 70 persons dead. 87
persons got [injured],” Varatharajah said.
In a separate interview
with the Independent, the doctor explained that the hospital was located
about one kilometre from the frontlines and he was in no doubt that the
shelling came from government troops. A BBC article based on contact with two
government doctors put the death toll higher at 91 and published photos of the
damage.
Government and military
officials flatly denied the claims. Military spokesman Brigadier Udaya
Nanayakkara dismissed all reports as the “exaggerated stories” of LTTE
supporters. “There is no shelling taking place; we have never shelled this
place and it happened in an area where the LTTE [are in control].”
The denial cannot be
believed. Last month, under mounting international pressure, the Sri Lankan
government announced that it would halt the use of all heavy weapons in its
operations to seize the no-fire zone. It proclaimed the no-fire zone on February
12 and had previously denied bombarding it with artillery or from the air.
Last Friday, however, an
internal UN report was leaked to the media containing satellite photographs
showing bomb or artillery craters in the no-fire zone. “Within the northern and
southern sections of the civilian safe zone, there are new indications of
building destruction and damage resulting from shelling and possible air
strikes,” it stated. The photographs were taken between February 15 and April
19.
Foreign secretary Palitha
Kohona initially admitted that the military had shelled the area, but claimed
that civilians had not been harmed. “As long as the retaliation [to the LTTE]
is proportionate, it is perfectly legitimate and what we did exactly was locate
these guns and retaliate against those guns,” he said.
Even this admission was
quickly reversed. A defence ministry statement issued after Kohona’s comments
declared: “Conclusions drawn from the interpretations of these images have no
scientific validity.” Government defence spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella claimed
the images could have been a LTTE “ploy”. However, Einer Bjorge, head of the
Unosat mapping unit, insisted that the images were “fairly clear”.
The Sri Lankan military is
continuing its offensive to seize the no-fire zone. Brigadier Nanayakkara told
the media on Sunday that the army had captured another earthen defensive
structure, 500 metres long, that was blocking the A-35 road to Mullaithivu.
Four military brigades were engaging in the fighting.
Nanayakkara claimed that
many LTTE fighters were killed in the battle but gave no figures for the army’s
casualties. Since last October, the government has refused to release details
of military casualties for unstated “security reasons”. In reality, the
government and the military are concerned that public anger will erupt over the
mounting death toll of soldiers recruited from among impoverished rural youth.
International Committee of
the Red Cross (ICRC) deputy head of operations for South Asia, Monica
Zanarelli, appealed last week for greater care for the trapped Tamil civilians
in the no-fire zone. “Given the catastrophic situation of thousands of
displaced, sick and wounded people still in the conflict area, the parties must
do more to protect them and must allow more food and medicine into the area,”
she said.
The military has not
allowed adequate supplies of food, water and medicine into the no-fire zone.
Many civilians who managed to flee have been injured, emaciated and dehydrated.
They have been herded into military-controlled camps and treated as prisoners
of war. No one has been allowed to leave and visitors have been barred.
Zanarelli insisted: “It is
the responsibility of the authorities to ensure that all displaced people are
safe and have access to food, medical care, clean water and sanitation.... The
ICRC has asked the authorities to clarify the time frame for lifting
restrictions on movement imposed on the displaced population and to indicate
when the resettlement process will begin.”
Gordon Weiss, UN spokesman
for Sri Lanka, told the media: “The population that emerged in the last 10 days
was emaciated, worn down, bearing large numbers of war injured. Medical
facilities in the area are still struggling to cope with the sheer number of
people who have emerged.”
The number of civilians
detained since January has risen to 188,022. Most are living in 32 camps in the
town of Vavuniya, while others are in the Jaffna peninsula and in the eastern
town of Trincomalee. Hospitals are overwhelmed with the injured and sick; many
have yet to get treatment.
Camps are surrounded with
razor wire and guarded by the military. Last week the government appointed
former Jaffna military commander and chief-of-staff, Major General G.A.
Chandrasiri to supervise the detention centres.
The defence ministry last
Thursday further tightened access to the camps, declaring that “external
persons” entering the camps were “causing difficulty” for the security forces.
All groups and individuals are now banned from Vavuniya without prior defence
ministry permission.
The announcement is another
attempt by the government and the military to stifle any independent reporting
of the appalling conditions facing Tamil refugees and the crimes of the Sri
Lankan military. An official media blackout already applies to the northern war
zone.
The Sri Lankan government
is under pressure from the major powers to halt the fighting in the north. Last
week British Foreign Secretary David Miliband and French Foreign Minister
Bernard Kouchner visited Sri Lanka as envoys of the European Union to demand a
temporary ceasefire. The government rejected the appeal and refused to allow
the envoys to visit the front lines.
The LTTE made another
desperate plea yesterday to Miliband and Kouchner to pressure the Sri Lankan government
for a truce. Both foreign ministers have repeatedly declared their hostility to
the LTTE and recently backed a UN Security Council statement calling for the
LTTE to surrender unconditionally. The LTTE’s futile appeal is a continuation
of its bankrupt perspective of a separate capitalist state—a program that
always depended on the backing of one or more of the major powers.
Explaining the purpose of
last week’s visit, Miliband told the BBC last week: “This is a civil war that
does have regional and wider ramifications and, obviously, a massive civilian
emergency as well.” The reference to “regional ramifications” underscores the
fact that the main concern of Britain and France, as well as the US, is not the
plight of civilians, but the destabilising impact of the war, particularly in
Tamil Nadu in southern India, and its implications for their strategic and
economic interests.
The US in particular is
concerned about growing influence of China, which has backed the Colombo
government’s war and has provided aid and investment to Sri Lanka. The US
considers China to be a potential strategic rival in Asia and internationally.
Responding to the visit of
Miliband and Kouchner, President Rajapakse last Thursday declared: “The
government is not ready to enter into any kind of cease-fire with the
terrorists. It is my duty to protect the people of this country. I don’t need
lectures from Western representatives... We have seen how Afghanistan is
bombed. It must be made clear that before accusing others, you must have the
strength to know what you do yourself.”
Far from opposing the
US-led occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq, successive Colombo governments,
including that of Rajapakse, have supported these neo-colonial operations.
Rajapakse is demanding unconditional imperialist backing for his own “war on
terrorism” and all the crimes being carried out by the Sri Lankan military.
Rajapakse’s warmongering
contains a sharp warning for the working class. Facing a deepening economic
crisis compounded by massive war expenditures and global recession, the
government will not tolerate any opposition from working people seeking to
defend their living and social conditions.
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