Sri Lanka war crimes rift with UN widens over protests

COLOMBO, July 9 (Reuters) – Sri Lankan demonstrators marched to Russia’s embassy on Friday to express gratitude for support against a U.N. war crimes panel, the subject of a fourth day of protests that have cracked open a rift with the world body.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Thursday recalled the head of U.N. Sri Lanka for consultations and blasted President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s government for failing to stop protesters from disrupting work at the world’ body’s office. [nN08108801]

Ban also ordered closed the regional office of the U.N. Development Programme, based in Colombo but which U.N. officials in Sri Lanka said had already been downsized in preparation for a planned move to Bangkok. The main country office remains open.

The protests led by Construction Minister Wimal Weerawansa, a popular nationalist ally of Rajapaksa, began on Tuesday with demonstrators clashing with police who tried to escort trapped U.N. staff out until the government ordered them to stand down.

While Weerawansa entered his second day of a “fast unto death” hunger strike until Ban dissolves the panel, around 300 demonstrators marched about a kilometre to the Russian embassy from the U.N. offices in central Colombo.

“We should thank Russia for standing by us,” demonstrator Anuruddha Perera told Reuters.

Members of the group flooded an embassy official with bouquets of flowers and handed over a letter. Others carried placards reading “Thank you Russia, we need your support again.”

Russia and China both have criticised the three-member panel as unnecessary. It is tasked with advising Ban whether war crimes were committed at the end of Sri Lanka’s 25-year conflict with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

‘INTERNATIONAL CONSPIRACIES’

Sri Lanka destroyed the LTTE in May 2009, but drew primarily Western criticism for the thousands of civilian deaths in the final months of the offensive. Both the government and LTTE were accused of putting civilians in harm’s way.

Rajapaksa in turn accuses the West of applying double standards to Sri Lanka’s fight to destroy a group on U.S. and EU terrorism lists. The government says Ban’s panel violates its sovereignty, because it has its own commission probing the war.

“We should all get together to defeat the international conspiracies and foreign interference with our nation and should protect our war heroes, the president and defence secretary who bravely defeated the LTTE,” marcher Madura Kularatne said.

Sri Lanka is concerned Ban’s panel is a precursor to a full-blown investigation, pressed for by rights groups and some LTTE supporters who live in Western countries as refugees. [nN22526612]

Ban is livid that some U.N. operations have been impacted. A U.N. spokesman on Thursday said Ban “finds it unacceptable that the Sri Lankan authorities have failed to prevent the disruption of the normal functioning of the United Nations offices in Colombo as a result of unruly protests”.

Essential staff were working in the offices on Friday, spokesman Mohan Samaranayake said in Colombo.

The government has given its tacit approval to the protests, which it says are lawful because they are peaceful. Politically, they also appeal to Rajapaksa’s power base, the Sinhalese people who make up 75 percent of the country’s 21 million population. Weerawansa, who gained power by mobilising street protests after splintering from Sri Lanka’s Marxist JVP party, has vowed to keep up the protest and his fast until Ban dissolves the panel. The secretary-general has refused to do so.

One of Weerawansa’s doctors, Wasantha Bandara, said the minister’s situation was deteriorating.

Hunger strikes to bring attention to a cause are a frequent tactic in Sri Lanka and south Asia, but rarely end with the strikers dying.

Ban says the panel is merely a resource to help Sri Lanka reconcile after thousands of Tamil civilians died in the war’s final months. Sri Lanka’s government says the casualty figures are hugely inflated. (Editing by Ron Popeski)

No international probe will be allowed: Rajapaksa

Colombo, May 28 — Sri Lanka will not allow outsiders to hold an enquiry into allegations of war crime during the final stages of the battle between government troops and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), President Mahinda Rajapaksa has said. “I don’t want my internal matters to be inquired by any other country or any other NGOs.

We will look after that,” Rajapaksa told in an interview to Al-Jazeera television channel. When asked if any civilians were killed during the final phase of the war, Rajapaksa said no non-combatant was killed, adding the civilians trusted the Sri Lankan Army and came to the government controlled areas.

“It’s a war, you’re right. By the way the people came to this side, to the government-controlled areas, you can see.

If Sri Lankan army acted in a different way, against the civilians, they would never have trusted us. They wouldn’t have walked into our camps.

300000 people. So that shows our army, they trusted our army,” he said.

When questioned by the journalist if he would take action against those who have committed war crimes even if they connected to him the President said: “If it is a crime, whether it is my relation, or my army commander or anybody. It is immaterial.

It’s a crime, crime is a crime, so we have to punish them.” But he added: “we can’t punish a person for defeating terrorism.

So if the international community wants to punish Sri Lanka for defeating terrorism, I’m not for that.” “Be fair with us .

be fair with us .

don’t treat Sri Lanka like this because we defeated terrorism,” Rajapakse said.

LTTE poses threat to Indian VVIPs

Colombo, May 26 — The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) might be militarily decimated in Sri Lanka but big neighbour India is not taking any chance. It recently extended the ban against LTTE as an “unlawful association” capable even now of jeopardising “VVIP security” and compromising India’s “territorial integrity.” The notification’s mention of LTTE’s goal of creating a “Tamil homeland” is interesting. “And, Whereas, the LTTE’s objective for a separate homeland (Tamil Eelam) for all Tamils threatens the sovereignty and territorial integrity of India, and amounts to cession and secession of a part of the territory of India from the Union,” the gazette notification said. So, it means that the LTTE’s larger goal – at least according to the Indian government which once trained and nurtured the LTTE – was to carve out a separate country for Tamils comprising members of the community from across the shallow waters of the Palk Strait. Intriguingly, it added that while the LTTE remnants look upon the Sri Lankan government as “enemies” they look upon the Indian government as “traitors” – or those who were once trusted but have betrayed that trust.

A political scientist in Colombo said India’s “very specific” fears were not surprising and the extension of the ban was expected.

India extends ban on LTTE for two more years

New Delhi, May14 (ANI): The Union Government on Friday extended its ban on the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) for another two years.

The Union Home Ministry has issued a notification in this regard.

The LTTE was banned under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA).

The LTTE, also known as Tamil Tigers, is a terrorists group that has waged a violent campaign against the Sri Lankan government since the latter part of 1970s in order to create a separate Tamil state in the northern and eastern part of the island nation.

The group-led by V Prabhakaran had been proscribed as a terrorist organization by several countries including the United States.

The LTTE was involved in the assassination of former Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi in May 1991 and the group has been banned by India since 1992.

India was the first country ban the LTTE followed by USA, United Kingdom, 27 European Union Countries, Canada and it is learnt that Australia as well as Malaysia are seriously contempt plating on banning this terrorists’ outfit in their soil. (ANI)

Sri Lanka trying to deflect probe into war crimes: rights group

New York, May 8 (IANS) Sri Lanka’s suggestion that a newly announced commission will provide accountability for laws-of-war violations during the armed conflict with the Tamil Tigers is another attempt to deflect an independent international probe, Human Rights Watch said Saturday.

Human Rights Watch urged UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to take steps to ensure accountability through an independent international investigation into the alleged laws-of-war violations.

The announcement of a commission on ‘lessons learnt and reconciliation’ came after a months-long campaign by Colombo to prevent Ban from setting up a panel of experts to advise him on accountability in Sri Lanka.

In May 2009, after the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) was crushed, President Mahinda Rajapaksa signed a joint communique with Ban promising that ‘the government will take measures to address allegations related to violations of international humanitarian and human-rights law’. But no substantive steps have been taken.

‘Every time the international community raises the issue of accountability, Sri Lanka establishes a commission that takes a long time to achieve nothing,’ said Brad Adams, the Asia director at Human Rights Watch.

‘Ban should put an end to this game of smoke and mirrors and begin a process that would ensure justice for all the victims of Sri Lanka’s war,’ Adams said.

The government has yet to publish the findings from a committee established in November 2009 to examine allegations of laws-of-war violations despite an April 2010 deadline.

When the committee was announced, Human Rights Watch warned that it was just a smokescreen to avoid accountability.

According to conservative UN estimates, 7,000 civilians were killed and more than 13,000 injured from January to May 2009. Other estimates suggest that as many as 20,000 were killed.

Government officials, including the president, have repeatedly insisted that no violations by government forces took place.

On Thursday, the Sri Lankan government announced it will establish a commission to report on the lessons learned from the conflict and reconciliation efforts.

According to the government statement, the committee will consist of seven Sri Lankans, located in Sri Lanka and abroad, but will have no international involvement.

Tamils soften stance over power sharing

The Sri Lankan political party closest to the defeated Tamil Tiger rebels has dropped its demand for a separate state.

The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) was generally seen as a proxy for the Tamil Tiger separatists.

But 10 months after the rebels’ defeat, the TNA is changing its outlook, saying it wants to share power within a federal structure.

It has called for two Tamil-majority provinces to be merged back into one, with significant devolution of powers on issues like land and taxes.

Local media reports the TNA has dropped its demands for a separate state, but Dr Pakiasothy Saravanamuttu, executive director of the country’s Centre for Policy Alternatives, says that is a misunderstanding of the group.

He told the Connect Asia program the Sri Lankan media wrongly assumed the TNA always endorsed the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and its stance.

Such endorsement “was really never the case” and other Tamil voices, in a previous coalition, were “very much a victim of circumstances when the LTTE used its terror and its force” for control.

In fact, the TNA had previously endorsed a federal state with power sharing, he said.

Dr Saravanamuttu said political realities for both the government and opposition were now driven by the LTTE’s defeat and the need for the country to move on to a post-conflict footing.

The TNA has threatened a campaign of civil disobedience if the government fails to heed its calls for a political settlement involving greater autonomy.

Dr Saravanamuttu said a deal could be very effective if the TNA wins a majority of seats in the north and east in parliamentary elections next month.

If president Mahinda Rajapaksa “is at all serious about moving to a post-conflict situation, I think both sides are going to have to sit down and talk to each other” with a compromise to follow, he said.

But Dr Sam Pari of the Australian Tamil Congress says the majority of Tamils still believe in a separate state.

The last time they had been permitted to vote openly on the issue, a referendum in 1976, there was an “overwhelming” Tamil vote for independence in the north and east of the island, she said.

Sri Lankan Tamil party to adopt Gandhi-style campaign for equal rights

Colombo, Mar 15(ANI): Sri Lanka’s main Tamil party, the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), has vowed to launch a Gandhi-style civil disobedience campaign to press for equal rights for the community.

In a manifesto for parliamentary elections on April 8, the TNA also pledged to lobby the international community to help the islands’ Tamil ethnic minority following the defeat of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) last year.

The TNA used to be the political wing of the LTTE, but has been forced to alter its ideology since the end of the 26-year civil war.

“If the Sri Lankan state continues its present style of governance without due regard to the rights of the Tamil-speaking peoples, the TNA will launch a peaceful, non-violent campaign of civil disobedience on the Gandhian model,” The Times quoted the party, as saying.

“Power sharing arrangements must be established… based on a federal structure in a manner also acceptable to the Tamil-speaking Muslim people,” it said. (ANI)

Karunanidhi asks for more relief for Tamilians in Sri Lanka

Chennai, Aug 29(ANI): Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M Karunanidhi on Saturday asked the Central Government to ensure more help for Sri Lankan Tamils.

“The relief and rehabilitation steps being provided to Sri Lankan Tamils are not enough, many of the Tamilians in Sri Lanka are facing hardships and struggling with rain and therefore we demand more attention of the government towards this issue,” Karunanidhi told reporters in Chennai.

Sri Lankan Tamils have historical and cultural links with about 60 million Tamils in Tamil Nadu.

In the recent past, the Government of India has requested the Sril Lankan Government to ensure early rehabilitation of the Tamil Sri Lankans after Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) chief V Prabhakaran’s killing by Sri Lankan Army.

The Sri Lankan Government declared victory over LTTE in May, ending one of Asia’s longest conflicts.

Sri Lanka has pledged to resettle the bulk of the displaced within six months, a tall order given the thousands of landmines that have to be cleared across former Tiger territory. (ANI)

Pakistan asks Sri Lankan Army to train its armed forces in counterinsurgency operations

Colombo, Aug.21 (ANI): Pakistan has asked the Sri Lankan Army to provide training to its armed forces.

Following the Sri Lankan Army’s tremendous success against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), the Pakistan Government wants it to train their security personnel in counter-insurgency operations, Commander of the Sri Lankan Army, Lieutenant General Jagath Jayasuriya said.

Jayasuriya said several other countries have also sought information regarding the strategy adopted by the armed forces which helped them to weed out the LTTE, the Dawn reports.

Former Sri Lanka Naval Chief Admiral Wasantha Karannagoda, who is currently the National Security Adviser, had recently said that the strategies and tactics adopted by the Sri Lankan navy to tackle the LTTE’s naval arm could be very useful for other countries as well.

“Future conflicts would not be like facing battleships and destroyers but small and fast boats of non-state rogue navies which could be indulging in insurgencies, piracies and trafficking of various kinds,” Admiral Karannagoda had said.

It may be noted that Islamabad had provided help to Colombo during the war against LTTE by providing arms and ammunitions when other countries had refused. (ANI)

Ruling UPFA wins Jaffna, but loses Vavuniya in Lanka post-war polls

Colombo, Aug.9 (ANI): President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s ruling United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA) has won Jaffna but lost Vavuniya in the first polls after the civil war against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) concluded in May this year.

According to the BBC, the turnout for the polls has been low and ballots are still being counted in the southern province of Uva.

The local elections came a day after the defence ministry said it had arrested the new head of the Tamil Tigers, Selvarasa Pathmanathan.

According to preliminary results, the UPFA secured 13 of the 23 seats available in Jaffna on Saturday. he Tamil National Alliance, a fractious but broadly pro-LTTE parliamentary grouping, came second with eight seats.

In Vavuniya, where turnout was 52 percent, the UPFA was pushed into third place, winning only two seats. The TNA came first with five of the 11 seats on the council, followed by a moderate Tamil grouping.

It was generally believed that the government would do well, having a broad coalition led in the north by a powerful and stridently anti-Tiger Tamil party, and having promised a “northern spring” of major development projects that would gradually return the region to normality.

As a result of its victory in the war, the government is expected to have done well in the Sinhalese-dominated southern province of Uva. (ANI)

Prabhakaran was tortured before being killed, says report

New Delhi: Tamil Tigers leader Velupillai Prabhakaran was tortured by the Sri Lankan military before being killed, a leading human rights body said in a report released on Wednesday.

The University Teachers for Human Rights (UTHR) quoted high-level military sources as saying that Prabhakaran was tortured in the presence of “a Tamil government politician and a general”.

The torture, it said, took place probably at the headquarters of the army’s 53 Division, which battled the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) before crushing it last month.

“Several army sources have said that Prabhakaran’s (younger) 12-year-old son Balachandran was killed after capture. Our (sources) said that he was killed in front of his father,” said UTHR, which has always been critical of excesses both by the military and the LTTE.

“These sources added that this information is correct unless officers at the highest level are fibbing to one another.

“Our sources in addition to several others have said that all the LTTE persons remaining in the NFZ (No Fire Zone) were massacred,” it added in a 48-page report, an advance copy of which was made available to IANS.

Sri Lanka announced on May 18 that Prabhakaran, founder leader of the LTTE, was killed in a lonely coastal stretch in the northeastern district of Mullaitivu where the Tigers had massed their forces before going down.

His body was put on display, placed on a stretcher, the back of the head blown off.

Sri Lankan minister Vinayagamurthy Muralitharan alias Karuna, a former confidant of Prabhakaran, had said that the LTTE chief was shot dead with 18 of his guards.

Prabhakaran’s death marked the end of the LTTE’s dragging conflict that claimed 90,000 lives since 1983.

UTHR said: “Information seeping into the public domain from within the army points to capture or surrender, but the official responses dismissing this are a rehash of stories that public no longer finds credible. It is left to an impartial enquiry to answer this and related questions.”

UTHR pointed out that the government was evasive about the fate of Prabhakaran’s wife Mathivathani.

It quotes a brigadier as saying: “We had to look for Prabhakaran’s body because the world was interested in seeing it. But the body of his wife is not of any importance to us.”

The UTHR report said: “That would be the fate of the unknown hundreds of civilians and militants killed in those last days (of fighting).”

According to the report, among the LTTE leaders who surrendered to the army included Baby Subramaniam, a member of the group since 1976 and one of Prabhakaran’s oldest associates.

Others reportedly now in government custody included former eastern province political leader Karikalan, former spokesman Yogaratnam Yogi, former head of the LTTE international secretariat Lawrence Thilakar, political advisor V. Balakumar, Jaffna leader Ilamparithi and Trincomalee political leader Elilan.

Source: IANS

Army claims DNA match in ID’ing body believed to be rebel leader’s

Army claims DNA match in ID'ing body believed to be rebel leader'sColombo – DNA tests carried out on the bodies believed to be of Tamil rebel leader Velupillai Prabhakaran and his son have matched, a military spokesman said Thursday.

Army medical experts carried out the tests on the bodies of the two men killed last week in north-eastern Sri Lanka, Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara said.

They died as the government wrapped up its military offensive against the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and announced it had defeated the guerillas after a more than 25-year conflict.

The tests were carried out amid claims of the rebel leader’s death and counterclaims of his continuing existence.

However, the LTTE’s international affairs spokesman, Selvarasa Pathmanathan, confirmed Prabhakaran’s death after his body was found by the army on May 18.

It was not clear whether the army would invite an independent group to carry out further DNA tests.

The bodies believed to be of Prabhkaran and his son Charles Anthony have been cremated, but the government said samples had been retained for testing.

In a related development, Prabhkaran’s parents were located in a refugee camp Thursday in northern Sri Lanka. They had escaped along with civilians during the final days of fighting between the government and LTTE, which had been struggling for an independent homeland for minority Tamils. (dpa)

Prabhakaran’s parents in government custody

Colombo, May 28 (IANS) The parents of the now dead Tamil Tigers chief Velupillai Prabhakaran are in the “protective custody” of the Sri Lankan government, a media report said Thursday.

Thiruvenkatam Velupillai (76) and his wife Parvathi (71) surrendered to the army several days ago, The Island newspaper quoted a government official as saying.

They were reportedly among the civilians holed up in the no fire zone along the coast in Mullaitivu district before the army launched its final assault against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

Prabhakaran and other LTTE leaders were killed May 18.

“Velupillai and Parvathi were among the early batch of Sri Lankan Tamils to go to India. They settled in Tiruchi,” the report said.

They returned to the LTTE zone in northern Sri Lanka in 2003, a year after the Tigers and Colombo signed a Norway-brokered ceasefire agreement. Prabhakaran had fled their home in Jaffna way back in 1972.

Prabhakaran’s death and the decimation of the LTTE ended a dragging Tamil separatist conflict that left some 90,000 people dead in Sri Lanka.

Sri Lanka praises UN Human Rights Council resolution

Colombo – Sri Lanka’s state-run media Thursday praised a United Nations Human Rights Council resolution adopted in Geneva as an endorsement of the government’s policy of “routing terrorism” in order to rebuild the nation.

The UN Human Rights Council Wednesday praised the government for its commitment to human rights and offered support to Sri Lanka’s humanitarian efforts in resettling an estimated 300,000 civilian refugees back in their homes.

The resolution, tabled by Sri Lanka itself and other nations, including Brazil, China, Cuba and Egypt, also allows the government to let aid agencies’ have access to camps for the internally displaced “as may be appropriate.”

“It was a strong endorsement of President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s government’s efforts at routing terrorism and the successful handling of the world’s biggest hostage crisis,” Minister Mahinda Samarasinghe, who led the Lankan delegation to Geneva, was quoted as saying by the state-run Daily News Thursday.

During the war against Tamil rebels, which formally ended on May 19, the government and state media referred to the hundreds of thousands of Tamil civilians in rebel territory as “hostages.”

“This is a clear message that the international community is behind Sri Lanka in its endeavour to rebuild the nation to provide our citizens with equal opportunities,” Samarasinghe said.

Twenty-nine countries, including China, Russia, India, Pakistan, Malaysia and Indonesia voted in favour of the motion while 12 countries voted against and six abstained.

A bloc of Western nations, whose counter-proposal was defeated, wanted full access for aid groups like the International Committee of the Red Cross and UN agencies.

They also wanted an investigation into alleged human rights violations during the fighting which erupted during the last three years in which the rebels of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) were crushed.

During the fighting, the government had been accused of denying aid agencies access and using heavy weaponry against areas with a dense civilian population.

The LTTE were said to have prevented civilians from escaping the crossfire and that they were used as human shields.

According to UN figures, more than 8,000 civilians were killed during the final clashes between government troops and rebels. (dpa)

Sri Lanka hails countries that supported UN resolution

Colombo – Sri Lanka, reacting to the UN Human Rights Council adopting a resolution in Geneva commending the government for its commitment to human rights, hailed countries supporting the motion.

Human Rights Minister Mahinda Samarasinghe, speaking on state-run television, said the resolution adopted Wednesday with a comprehensive majority was a strength to the country.

Twenty nine countries – including China, Russia, India, Pakistan, Malaysia and Indonesia – voted in favour of the motion while 12 countries voted against and six abstained, Samarasinghe said.

The resolution, tabled by Sri Lanka and nations including China, Cuba and Egypt, allows the government to let aid agencies have access to camps for the internally displaced “as may be appropriate.”

A bloc of Western nations, whose counter-proposal was defeated, wanted full access for aid groups like the International Committee of the Red Cross and UN agencies.

They also wanted an investigation into alleged human rights violations during the fighting which erupted during the last three years in which the rebels of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) were crushed.

According to UN figures more than 7,000 civilians were killed, but there has been no independent evidence to confirm who was responsible for the killings during the clashes between government troops and rebels.

Some 300,000 people have been displaced by the fighting and are living in camps, and the UN agencies, international and local NGOs and the ICRC has been demanding unimpeded access to these camps, but the government has allowed in only a selected number of aid workers.(dpa)

Sri Lanka hails countries that supported UN resolution

Colombo – Sri Lanka, reacting to the UN Human Rights Council adopting a resolution in Geneva commending the government for its commitment to human rights, hailed countries supporting the motion.

Human Rights Minister Mahinda Samarasinghe, speaking on state-run television, said the resolution adopted Wednesday with a comprehensive majority was a strength to the country.

Twenty nine countries – including China, Russia, India, Pakistan, Malaysia and Indonesia – voted in favour of the motion while 12 countries voted against and six abstained, Samarasinghe said.

The resolution, tabled by Sri Lanka and nations including China, Cuba and Egypt, allows the government to let aid agencies have access to camps for the internally displaced “as may be appropriate.”

A bloc of Western nations, whose counter-proposal was defeated, wanted full access for aid groups like the International Committee of the Red Cross and UN agencies.

They also wanted an investigation into alleged human rights violations during the fighting which erupted during the last three years in which the rebels of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) were crushed.

According to UN figures more than 7,000 civilians were killed, but there has been no independent evidence to confirm who was responsible for the killings during the clashes between government troops and rebels.

Some 300,000 people have been displaced by the fighting and are living in camps, and the UN agencies, international and local NGOs and the ICRC has been demanding unimpeded access to these camps, but the government has allowed in only a selected number of aid workers. (dpa)

Sri Lanka army chief vows never to allow Tamil rebels to rise again

Sri Lanka army chief vows never to allow Tamil rebels to rise againColombo – Sri Lanka’s army chief General Sarath Fonseka, who led the military to victory over Tamil guerrillas in the northern part of the country, vowed Tuesday not to allow the rebels to rise again, while the defence minister rejected their offer to enter into a democratic process.

Army Commander General Sarath Fonseka told state-run ITN television that while the “main players” in the campaign for a separate Tamil state were killed, “their concept remains [but] they will never be allowed to rise again.”

The army chief referred to Selvarasa Pathmanathan, who appears to have taken over the leadership of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), saying “he will never be able to succeed the terrorist leader (Velupillai Prabhakaran) who was killed. He is not among the people and cannot lead a terrorist movement in hiding.”

Pathmanathan has issued a statement confirming the death of Prabhakaran, but has not disclosed which country he was operating from.

Pathmanathan, who is wanted by Interpol, said the Tigers would use “non-violent” methods to fight for the rights of Sri Lanka’s Tamil minority.

While Fonseka stressed the “army’s job is not over” and was cracking down on rebel operatives in various other parts of the country, Defence Minister Gotabhaya Rajapaska reiterated his government’s harsh stance, rejecting the rebel offer to enter a democratic process.

In an interview with the BBC, Rajapaksa said the LTTE could not be trusted to give up terrorism.

Meanwhile, the UN Human Rights Council was due to meet later Tuesday in Geneva. One proposal by Switzerland and supported by European countries calls for aid agencies to be given unimpeded access to camps holding civilians displaced by the fighting.

Sri Lanka has proposed a resolution which seeks UN humanitarian assistance.

Sri Lanka’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations in Geneva, Dayan Jayatilleka, said the government in the process of lobbying friendly countries to defeat the first resolution.

He said the special session on the humanitarian situation in Sri Lanka was called by “Western colonizers” who refused to consult with the Asian bloc and said that there was strong support from Asian, African and Middle Eastern countries for Sri Lanka.

Sri Lanka said it has allowed access to certain UN agencies and aid groups, but was not willing to allow unlimited access to the camps where some 300,000 refugees being held.

The government officially declared that the war over last week and is now in the process planning the resettlement of the displaced in their home villages in the northern part of the country.

Amnesty International said Sri Lankan and foreign independent observers should be allowed to monitor the situation and “provide safeguard against human rights violations, including torture or other ill-treatment, arbitrary detention and enforced disappearances.”

It also called for a commission to investigate human rights abuses by both sides during the war.

“The commission should investigate allegations of violations of international human rights and humanitarian law by all warring parties in the course of the conflict and make recommendations on the best way to ensure full accountability,” the rights group said in a statement issued last week.(dpa)

LTTE admits finally that Leader Prabhakaran is dead Now

LTTE admits finally that Leader Prabhakaran is dead NowNew Delhi/Colombo, May 24 (IANS) The Tamil Tigers admitted Sunday “with heavy hearts” the death of their leader Velupillai Prabhakaran, almost a week after Sri Lanka announced he had been killed.

“We announce today, with inexpressible sadness and heavy hearts, that our incomparable leader and supreme commander … attained martyrdom fighting the military oppression,” the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) said.

S. Pathmanathan, the LTTE’s head of international relations, said that Prabhakaran, 54, “was the heart and soul and the symbol of hope, pride and determination for the whole nation of people of Tamil Eelam.”

Al Jazeera quoted the statement as saying that the LTTE was forced to take on the military of a country that enjoyed the backing of the international community.

“Our leader confronted this threat without any hesitation. He would not waver in his desire to be with his people and fight for his people till the end.

“His final request was for the struggle to continue until we achieve the freedom for his people. His legend and the historical status as the Greatest Tamil Leader ever are indestructible,” Pathmanathan said.

Until now the LTTE maintained that Prabhakaran, who set up the Tamil Tigers in 1976 with a view to carve out a Tamil state out of the north and east of Sri Lanka, had not been killed as claimed by the military May 18.

On May 19, Pathmanathan had himself said: “I wish to inform the global Tamil community … that our beloved leader is alive and safe. He will continue to lead the quest for dignity and freedom for the Tamil people.”

Again, the pro-LTTE website Tamil Net had quoted a previously unheard of member of the LTTE intelligence wing as saying that “our beloved leader is alive” and that he would contact the people “at a suitable time in future”.

Other pro-LTTE Internet media too have taken a similar line vis-à-vis Prabhakaran although many conceded that some other top leaders of the group were dead.

According to Sri Lanka, Prabhakaran was killed following heavy fighting with the military, which trapped him close to a lagoon in Mullaitivu district in the island’s north.

He was reportedly with 18 of his bodyguards when he was killed, with a single bullet blowing off the upper portion of his head.

According to Sri Lankan officials, Prabhakaran has been cremated and his ashes have been thrown in the sea.

Born into a middle class family in Jaffna in November 1954, Prabhakaran was the youngest of two boys and two girls. He plunged into militancy in the 1970s and built the LTTE as one of the most ruthless insurgent groups.

Close to 10,000 Tamil rebels surrender, reports Sri Lankan paper

Close to 10,000 Tamil rebels surrender, reports Sri Lankan paper Colombo – As many as 10,000 Tamil rebels have surrendered to the Sri Lankan government in the northern part of the country. Most of them are due to undergo rehabilitation, a state run newspaper reported Sunday.

The government has already started rehabilitation programmes for more than 7,200 members of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) who surrendered before the fighting was officially declared over last Tuesday, the Sunday Observer in Colombo reported.

Rebels who have yet to be sent to rehabilitation centres have been isolated from the thousands of refugees in camps.

Earlier, Sri Lankan Human Rights Minister Mahinda Samarasinghe said that the government will be drafting laws which would provide an amnesty for some members, though court proceedings will be necessary for those facing serious charges.

The number of rebels who surrendered provided some clue to the size of the Tiger’s military operations.

Fighting in the final phase of the military operations against the rebels, which lasted 34 months, was fierce, with both sides suffering heavy casualties.

Sri Lankan Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa last week admitted that 6,261 security force personnel, policemen and women and paramilitary group members were killed in the final phase, while nearly 30,000 others were injured.

He did not give estimated rebel casualties, but military spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara said that an estimated 22,000 rebels were also killed during the period.

On Saturday, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon visited refugee camps in northern Sri Lanka during a one-day visit in which he also met with President Mahinda Rajapaksa.

Ban said United Nations and international non-governmental organizations need unimpeded access to refugee camps, where some 300,000 persons are being accommodated after fleeing Tamil-rebel-held areas in the northern part of the country.

Ban also called for an early political settlement to Sri Lanka’s ethnic conflict and warned that history could repeat itself.

The government should take steps to build confidence among the minorities and address issue of minorities, he said.

Tamil rebels had been fighting for an independent homeland for minority Tamils in the northern and eastern parts of the country for the last 26 years. (dpa)