Tamil jailed in Canada for funding LTTE

Vancouver, May 15 (IANS) In the first conviction in Canada for funding of terrorists abroad, a court here jailed a Tamil for collecting money for the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Ealam (LTTE) which was routed by the Sri Lankan forces in May last year.

Prapaharan Thambithurai, 46, was jailed for six months after pleading guilty to the criminal offence after his arrest here in March 2008. The LTTE and many other terror outfits were banned in Canada in 2006. He faced up to 10 years, but the prosecution demanded him to be locked for two years. In the end, Judge Roberts Powers of the British Columbia supreme court here ordered him to be locked for just six months.

The Sri Lankan Tamil will complete his jail term in the Toronto area where he lives. He came to Canada as a refugee in 1988.

Thambithurai was arrested while seeking donations for the World Tamil Movement for relief work in Sri Lanka. But Canadian intelligence agencies found that the body was a front organization for the banned LTTE. Pleading guilty, he admitted that half of the money raised for humanitarian aid went to the LTTE. His lawyer said his client had no option because any humanitarian aid for Tamils had to pass through the rebel-held area.

His conviction comes at a time when the huge Sri Lankan Tamil diaspora here is set for observing a two-day mourning to mark the first anniversary of the end of the ethnic conflict in the island nation.

The 300,000-strong community is observing May 17-19 as ‘Days of Remembrance’ for the Tamils killed in what they described as ‘war crimes against humanity’ by Sri Lankan forces.

The largest diaspora outside the island nation, it was the most vocal supporter of the LLTE during the ethnic conflict. They virtually brought Toronto to a standstill last year as the LTTE faced imminent defeat.

Tamil community to observe ‘black days’ to mark war anniversary

Toronto, May 8 (IANS) With the first anniversary of the crushing of the LTTE approaching, Canadian Tamils will observe May 17-19 as ‘Days of Remembrance’ for the Tamils killed in what they described as ‘war crimes against humanity’ by Sri Lankan forces.

More than 300,000 Canadians Tamils will join their brethren in different parts of the world to remember Tamil civilians killed in the war, said the Canadian Tamil Congress in a statement here Friday.

‘As part of remembrance, the Tamils will wear black clothes to mourn the innocent civilians killed by the Sri Lankan army. The community will also wear red ribbons to symbolize the innocent blood spilled in the war crimes against our people in Sri Lanka,” Canadian Tamil Congress national spokesman David Poopallapillai said.

Tamils, who had brought Toronto to a virtual halt with their demonstrations last year in the later stages of the war, will once again hold rallies in the city on remembrance days.

‘The Tamil diaspora will hold prayers, pujas and candlelight vigils during the two days. There will also be masses in churches across Canada,” said Poopalapillai.

Since Tamils have become a powerful voting bloc in the Toronto area which sends the largest number of MPs to the Canadian parliament, the community is also inviting top leaders of major political parties.

‘As the first anniversary of the war approaches, Tamils around the world are united in their grief for those innocents who became victims of war crimes. We would appeal to the international community not to forget the war crimes committed by Sri Lanka, and bring the perpetrators to justice,” the Canadian Tamil spokesman said.

‘When the General (former army chief Sarath Fonseka) who conducted the war has confirmed that war crimes were committed, what proof do you need to prosecute the guilty?” Poopalapillai asked.

The number of Tamils civilians killed in the later stages of the war differ, but the Times of London has put the figure at 20,000 even as UN representative Gordon Weiss stationed in Sri Lanka at the time of the conflict says at least 40,000 civilians perished in the later offensive.

‘But the figure is even higher. Nobody knows exactly how many thousand Tamils perished. We have yet to ascertain exact figures,” said the Canadian Tamil Congress which vowed to continue struggle for their right to self-determination.

Canada is home to the largest Sri Lankan Tamils outside the island nation, with most of the 300,000-strong community settled in the Toronto area.

Sri Lanka aid ship permitted to offload at Chennai

Chennai, July 4 (ANI): A ship carrying aid for victims of war ravaged Sri Lanka, which had anchored off Chennai for more than a fortnight, has been permitted to berth at Chennai Port.

Authorities granted permission to ‘MV Captain Ali’, also known as ‘Vananga Mann’ vessel, after the ship’s agent submitted documents on Thursday.

“We have received yesterday the documents from the agent, Imperial Shipping, requesting us to bring the ship inside for discharge of cargo. We had earlier requested them to get clearance from Navy, from Coast Guard, from mmigration, customs, and police. And they brought all the clearance yesterday evening,” said Subhash Kumar, acting chairman, Chennai Port Trust.

MV Captain Ali set sail in April with 884 tones of relief material in the form of medicines, dry rations and clothing, collected by the Tamil diaspora in Europe. It was denied entry at the Colombo port.

Later it sailed towards Chennai, but was kept waiting for clearance.

It is believed that the ship’s cargo would be transferred into containers and sent to Colombo in the next few days, which would then be distributed through the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). (ANI)

Brit, Canadian Tamils vow to sustain Ealam struggle

London/Ottawa, May 22 (ANI): Large Tamil communities in Britain and Canada have vowed to continue the struggle for Tamil self-determination rights in Sri Lanka following the death of LTTE chief Vellupillai Prabhakaran.

Holding portraits of Prabhakaran, who was killed by Sri Lankan army soldiers earlier this week, the Tamil diaspora in these two countries are mobilizing to play a part in what leaders describe as a new phase in their struggle for an independent homeland.

According to The Telegraph, following the military defeat of the Tamil Tigers, the talk now is of employing democratic means to address Tamil concerns.

The paper says this goal could be tested, however, by a growing number of young expatriate Tamils who have become radicalized by the oppression of Tamils in Sri Lanka.

Like others around the world, British Tamils say their priority is the welfare of tens of thousands of refugees.

British Tamils have always donated generously to Tamil charities, but not without controversy.

Suren Surendiran, a spokesman for the British Tamils Forum, an umbrella organization, says that in the longer term, the events of recent weeks have radicalized the younger generation of Tamils abroad.

“The first phase of the fight for freedom, from 1948 to 1983, was about political negotiations,” he said.

“Then, the armed struggle from 1983 until last week ensured that the oppression and discrimination of Tamil people was highlighted on an international stage, Surendiran said, adding that in the third phase, Tamil diaspora will pursue their goal through political and democratic channels, the ultimate goal being a Tamil homeland in some form.
Young second-generation Tamils have been the driving force behind a largely peaceful occupation of Parliament Square, in front of the House of Commons, although protesters have clashed with police when hundreds of demonstrators attempted to block traffic during peaks in the recent fighting in Sri Lanka.

Across the Atlantic in Canada, home to the world’s largest Sri Lankan Tamil diaspora, community leaders are holding up Quebec as a path for resolving Sri Lanka’s ethnic problem.

“This model of autonomy could work for us,” says Ramani Balendra, an ethnic Tamil from Sri Lanka who is a member of the Tamil Action Committee that has been organizing protests in recent weeks.

Sympathy for the Sri Lankan Tamil struggle has in fact been highest among Quebec’s nationalist intellectuals, according to Narendra Balasubramanian, an associate professor of political science at McGill University who has been studying the conflict.

“The Quebec nationalists feel an affinity with Sri Lankan Tamil nationalism,” he says.

Foreign Minister Lawrence Cannon earlier this week said Canada was prepared to assist Sri Lankan efforts to “find political reconciliation and a lasting peace.”

Professor Balasubramanian, however, says Canada’s role will be limited to humanitarian assistance, and perhaps monitoring. (ANI)

South African Tamils demand action against Colombo

Johannesburg, May 21 (IANS) The Tamil diaspora in South Africa has sought strong international action against the Sri Lankan government for ‘atrocities’ against the country’s minority Tamil community.

Mickey Chetty, president of the South African Tamil Federation (SATF), Wednesday called on the UN Human Rights Commission to take note of the human rights violations and crimes perpetrated by the government troops during the conflict with the Tamil Tigers in northern Sri Lanka.

‘We detest the vicious atrocities, slaughter and human rights violations perpetrated by the Sri Lankan government who, collectively, must be brought to justice by the World Human Rights Commission,’ Chetty said.

The Sri Lankan government announced earlier this week that it had won the battle against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), who had been fighting for a separate state for the Tamil people, claiming oppression by the minority Sinhalese.

The military claimed that all the top leadership of LTTE, including its chief Velupillai Prabhakaran, have been killed in the fighting. The pictures of battered LTTE supremo and his son Charls Anthony have also been shown on national televison to substantiate the claims.

Chetty also appealed to all affiliate members of the SATF across South Africa to host memorial services for the thousands of Tamil people killed in the bloody fighting which has brought an end to two decades of civil war in Sri Lanka.

‘The Federation and its affiliates also express their heartfelt and deepest sympathy to all the bereaved families, friends and associates around the world who have lost their loved ones in the brutal massacre and treacherous killings of our Tamil people in Sri Lanka,’ Chetty said.

Chetty said the SATF had over many years lobbied with the South African government and other authorities, ‘but sadly our efforts were considered ‘a storm in a tea cup’ when compared against the other evil and wicked forces in world intervention’.

The South African Tamil community makes up about two-thirds of the 1.4 million South Africans of Indian origin, the majority descended from the first indentured labourers who arrived here to work on sugar cane farms from 1860.

US asks LTTE to free civilians in ‘no fire zone’

Washington, April 9 (IANS) Expressing concern about the plight of civilians trapped in the ‘no fire zone’ in northern Sri Lanka, the US has asked the Tamil Tigers to release them and also urged Colombo to engage Tamils for a political solution.

The call was made by Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs Richard Boucher and US ambassador to Sri Lanka Robert Blake during a discussion with several US-based organisations representing members of the Tamil diaspora.

Discussing the humanitarian situation in Sri Lanka, the two officials emphasised the urgent need for Colombo to engage Tamils, including diaspora communities around the world, to find a political end to the conflict, the State Department said Wednesday.

They also emphasised US concern about the plight of the civilians trapped in the ‘no fire zone’ and called on the the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) to release the civilians.

Boucher and Blake reiterated that both the Tamil Tigers and the government of Sri Lanka should stop firing into and from the no fire zone.

They outlined the steps the US has taken to support the civilians in the no fire zone.

Boucher and Blake said they would like to continue the dialogue with the diaspora community. The discussion took place at the State Department with Blake speaking via digital video from Colombo.

Their statements came as the Sri Lankan military advanced to capture the last of the land area still held by the LTTE. The fighting has left a large number of people dead, injured and homeless.

US asks Tamil tigers to release civilians in ‘no fire zone’

Washington, April 9 (IANS) Expressing concern about the plight of the civilians trapped in the ‘no fire zone’ in northern Sri Lanka, the US has asked the rebel Tamils to release them and urged Colombo to engage Tamils for a political solution.

The call was made by Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs Richard Boucher and US Ambassador to Sri Lanka Robert Blake during a discussion with several US-based organizations representing members of the Tamil diaspora.

Discussing the humanitarian situation in Sri Lanka, the two officials emphasised the urgent need for the Government of Sri Lanka to engage Tamils, including diaspora communities around the world, to find a political end of the conflict, the State Department said Wednesday.

They also emphasised US concern about the plight of the civilians trapped in the ‘no fire zone’ in northern Sri Lanka and called on the the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) to release the civilians.

Boucher and Blake reiterated that both the Tamil Tigers and the Government of Sri Lanka should stop firing into and from the no-fire zone and outlined the steps the US has taken to support the civilians in the no fire zone.

The two officials welcomed the opportunity to listen to the concerns and perspectives of the American Tamil diaspora community and to share the steps the US is taking to address the humanitarian crisis,

Boucher and Blake said that they would like to continue the dialogue with the diaspora community and urged participants to continue to share feedback. The discussion took place at the State Department with Blake speaking via a digital video conference at the US Embassy in Colombo.