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No 'Humanitarian Pause'
Time to Break Relations with Sri Lanka
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(Afghanistan
and Myanmar in the
map are not members
of SAARC)
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Humanitarian
Disaster in Making

BY
BOBBY RAMAKANT 
Activists
expressed their deep anguish and concern on unabated mass killings in
Sri Lanka
which is, as they underlined, "no short of a humanitarian disaster
in northern
Sri Lanka
".
"We also protest the covert provision of economic and military aid
to Sri Lanka by Indian government which has, certainly, deeply
aggravated the situation in Sri Lanka" said Dr Sandeep Pandey,
Ramon Magsaysay Awardee (2002) and Convener of National Alliance of
People's Movements (NAPM).
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The Sri Lankan government’s indiscriminate military actions have
exacted an appalling toll on the civilian Tamil population. Unless
India
does its part to negotiate an immediate ceasefire, civilian casualties
will continue to escalate, tarnishing
India
’s claim to be a morally responsible regional ‘spiritual’ power.
"Indeed,
we have watched with growing dismay the Indian government’s effective
complicity with the Sri Lankan government’s ongoing efforts to
brutalize the Tamil minority. There is considerable evidence that, while
publicly calling for a "political solution", the Indian
government has covertly supplied military equipment and training to
Sri Lanka
through the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) and other Indian
intelligence outfits. Decades ago, sending in the Indian Peace Keeping
Force (IPKF) to
Sri Lanka
had exacerbated the situation and questions
India
’s claim of being a harbinger of ‘peace’ in the region" said
Gurudayal Singh Sheetal, Leader of Prakritik Manav Kendrit Andolan,
Punjab
.
In July 2007,
Sri Lanka
’s army chief, Lieutenant General Sarath Fonseka, had told journalists
that
India
was training 800 officers annually, free of charge, describing
India
’s support as “huge”. "Furthermore, there are credible
reports indicating that India’s support for the Sri Lankan President
Mahinda Rajapaksha government is based on base economic calculations:
that Tamil areas destroyed by Sri Lanka’s ferocious military offensive
will offer lucrative investment opportunities for Indian companies under
the guise of helping Tamils living there" said the press statement
issued today by People's Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL), Uttar Pradesh
state chapter.
If these reports are true,
India
’s economic and political gain will have been purchased in blood and
lives. The humanitarian situation in northern
Sri Lanka
is now catastrophic. According to Human Rights Watch and Sri Lankan
rights groups, since January 2009 alone, at least 1,000, and perhaps as
many as 2,000, Tamil civilians have been killed as a result of the Sri
Lankan military's continuing artillery attacks and aerial bombing
offensive. The military has openly targeted urban areas, including
schools, hospitals, and buildings that house civilians.
The Sri Lankan government, believing it is on the verge of final victory
over the LTTE, has resisted all calls for a ceasefire. President
Rajapaksha has made it clear during the recent visit of UN Special Envoy
Vijay Nambiar (on 17 April 2009) that he is not ready to abandon his
line of "war to the finish".
The government is keeping those who have managed to flee the onslaught
in detention camps that it has cynically and misleadingly termed
“welfare villages”. Arguing that the population of internally
displaced people includes “terrorists” in its ranks, the Sri Lankan
government has announced plans to hold up to some 250,000 civilians –
even very young children – in the camps for a period of three years.
It has requested funds from the UN and other aid agencies to build
schools, banks and hospitals inside these camps. There is credible fear
that, while detaining this population, the Sri Lankan government will
settle majority Sinhalese in northern
Sri Lanka
.
The recent appeal issued by the Indian External Affairs Ministry “to
the Sri Lankan Government and to all concerned to work out appropriate
and credible procedures for the evacuation of internally displaced
persons (IDPs) to safety, which would include the international agencies
being able to oversee the movement of the IDPs” is a step in the right
direction. But it is not enough.
"We demand an immediate durable and unconditional ceasefire to
enable peace negotiations" said SR Darapuri, Vice President of
People's
Union
for Civil Liberties (PUCL), Uttar Pradesh state chapter. "We demand
formation of credible teams of international human rights activists,
medical personnel and social workers to be present in the process of
helping the civil population in the ‘Vanni’ to get access to food,
water and medical supplies and to safeguard their human rights, sanity
and dignity in the transition. Special care needs to be taken to
protect, women, children and youth" added Darapuri.
"We demand de-mining and restoration of villages so that peoples
right to return to their homes can be safeguarded and implemented. We
demand a political process in which all communities will be able to
participate with confidence and equal rights, irrespective of ethnicity,
language, caste, creed and gender" further added SR Darapuri.
"The Tamil people's right to self-determination must be respected
and implemented. Disappearances and other violence must end and freedom
of the press must be guaranteed. The working classes must be able to
form organisations and struggle for people's rights to Life and
Livelihood. We demand that India should challenge the Sri Lankan
government’s proposal for compulsory confinement of these refugees in
detention camps for as long as three years" said Darapuri, while
reading the charter of demands activists are making on the governments
of India and Sri Lanka.
There is no evidence in history where violence has been a solution to
the problems of community, said Dr Ramesh Dixit, Professor of Political
Science,
Lucknow
University
. "Dialogue, not war, can lead to solutions" said Dr Dixit.
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The
author is a World Health Organization (WHO)'s WNTD Awardee 2008,
coordinates
the Stop-TB eForum Resource Team of HDN, and writes extensively on
health and development. Email: bobbyramakant@yahoo.com)
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