Sri Lanka shows rebel chief's body
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- JanforGore
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http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20090519/wl_asia_afp/srilankaunrest_20090...
Sri Lankan television broadcast images Tuesday of what it said was the body of Tamil Tiger leader Velupillai Prabhakaran, as the island's president hailed his army's victory over the rebels.The images were shown after the Tigers claimed the guerrilla leader was still alive and well, and said they would continue fighting for a separate Tamil homeland despite President Mahinda Rajapakse's call to unite the nation.
The video showed the upper section of a corpse which was dressed in camouflage fatigues. The back of the head, which was resting on a bloodstained newspaper, appeared to be missing.
The face was intact, with the eyes wide open, and bore a clear resemblance to the stocky, moustachioed rebel leader.
"We are a government that defeated terrorism at a time when others told us that it was not possible," Rajapakse said in a nationally televised address to parliament.
"The writ of the state now runs across every inch of our territory."
Under international pressure to reach out to the Tamil minority, Rajapakse vowed that a political solution to the island's deep rooted ethnic divisions would be found.
"All should live with equal rights. They should live without any fear or doubt," he said. "Let us all be united."
His speech had been shadowed by a Tiger statement insisting that Prabhakaran was not dead and that his fight -- which he began in 1972 -- would go on.
"Our beloved leader is alive and safe. He will continue to lead the quest for dignity and freedom for the Tamil people," the rebels' international relations chief Selvarasa Pathmanathan said on the pro-rebel Tamilnet website.
Prabhakaran went on to accuse the government and military of "crimes against humanity," saying senior LTTE leaders had been shot dead after being invited to negotiate a surrender.
But the army chief, General Sarath Fonseka, stated categorically that Prabhakaran's body had been identified -- a day after defence officials reported he was gunned down trying to flee government troops.
"Reports from the battlefield confirmed this morning that they have identified the body of Prabhakaran, this ruthless terrorist leader," Fonseka said.
The conflicting accounts of the Tiger leader's fate came after a dramatic day Monday that effectively ended one of Asia's oldest and most brutal ethnic conflicts that has claimed 70,000 lives.
The army said its commandos overran the last sliver of Tiger-held territory, killing their remaining 300 fighters and decimating the rebel leadership.
But the Sri Lankan government's moment of triumph came at the cost of many innocent lives, according to the United Nations.
The UN and human rights groups have partly blamed indiscriminate shelling by the military for causing heavy civilian casualties, while accusing the rebels of using tens of thousands of people as a "human shield".
The European Union on Monday called for an independent inquiry into alleged human rights violations, while the Red Cross complained it was unable to reach the wounded in the northeastern conflict zone even after victory was declared.
UN relief agencies also said that access to some government-run camps housing tens of thousands of displaced civilians had been restricted in recent days and demanded that the camps be "demilitarised."
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FreedomForAll
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So with the "defeat" of the LTTE, begs the question, why is UN aid being blocked from helping the Tamil civilians?? It is very telling about the genocide that is happening against this minority group.
- 9 months ago
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FreedomForAll
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FreedomForAll
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While rejecting Colombo's claim of the killing of LTTE leader V. Pirapaharan and assuring his safety and well-being, LTTE's International Relations Head S. Pathmanathan Tuesday accused Colombo of treachery in the killing of the political wing leaders B. Nadesan and S. Puleedevan. Mr. Pathmanathan said it is a crime against humanity that needs to be investigated.
We appeal to the International Community to act now to ensure the safety and basic needs of the displaced people who are suffering in the prison camps of the Sri Lankan military. The onus is now on the International Community to see that further war crimes and crimes against humanity are not committed on Tamils by the Sri Lankan state and to force the Sri Lankan state to yield in to the political aspirations of the Tamil people.
- 9 months ago
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FreedomForAll
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JanforGore
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"UN relief agencies also said that access to some government-run camps housing tens of thousands of displaced civilians had been restricted in recent days and demanded that the camps be "demilitarised."
Why is this necessary? Why is there not now full disclosure and access to these people? What is really going on in these camps? It will not bode well for the Sri Lankan government to continue the secrecy, media suppression, and lack of access to those in these camps that was present during this conflict if they wish to remain credible. War crimes have been committed by both sides in this, and there should be a full investigation into that as well.
- 9 months ago
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JanforGore
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JanforGore
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Sri Lanka: ICRC Makes Urgent Appeal For Wounded To Be Given Medical Care.
May 18, 2009.Geneva (ICRC) – For nine consecutive days the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has been pursuing efforts, so far without success, to reach the area of north-eastern Sri Lanka hard hit by fighting in recent weeks.
The ICRC has therefore been unable to obtain first-hand information about the needs of civilians and wounded people in the area. Although thousands of civilians have fled the conflict zone in the past days and weeks, the ICRC remains concerned about the wounded needing urgent medical care.
“Under international humanitarian law, the lives of all those who are not or are no longer fighting must be spared. Wounded and sick people must be collected and cared for immediately, and detainees must be treated humanely,” said the ICRC’s director of operations, Pierre Krähenbühl, from the ICRC’s headquarters in Geneva today. “This is all the more urgent since no humanitarian aid has reached those who need it for over a week.”
The ICRC has proposed to the authorities that it help evacuate any remaining civilians from the area where fighting has been taking place, care for the sick and wounded, and provide emergency assistance for the displaced. The ICRC will seize any opportunity that presents itself to enter the area and assess the situation.
- 9 months ago
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JanforGore
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JanforGore
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These are the people we must concentrate on now. The little boys and girls with no arms or legs. Those wounded by both sides in this war who will now never have the same life again. No amount of propaganda by any side can change what they did.
- 9 months ago
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JanforGore
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JanforGore
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Whether the leader of this group is dead or not doesn't change the fact of the humanitarian crisis that now looms because of the destruction wrought by both sides. I would think that instead of the government gloating, they would then be actually working to take care of the people who were caught in the crossfire of their shelling as well as the actions of the LTTE. Those who now sit in 'relocation camps' behind barbed wire without access to the outside world. But we won't see that mentioned in any of their media reports.
"the Red Cross complained it was unable to reach the wounded in the northeastern conflict zone even after victory was declared."
LET THEM IN.
- 9 months ago
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JanforGore
