Monday, 4 May 2009

on the crisis in Sri Lanka

Sri Lanka is very much in the news these days. This blog does not want to repeat what's been said. Quick googling should allow anyone to find more about the crisis in Sri Lanka. The gist is that Sri Lankan armed forces are gaining more ground against the LTTE.

Recently literally hundreds of thousands of people have fleed LTTE-controlled areas and are now in IDP camps in various places in the North. Estimates of how many still trapped between the fighting in the No Fire Zone is contested. Estimates range from 20,000 (SL Govt estimate) to more than 50,000 (UN Agencies).

According to our sources, most Aid-agencies have access to the camps. These include international aid agencies such as Care, Oxfam, UNHCR, UNICEF, Worldvision and local NGOs like Sarvodaya have access to the camps. There are also citizen-led initiatives. More information on how to help is available on sites such as savevanni.org

For more on the background, Reuters has a very useful Q+A on the situation. A must-read for anyone who wants the gist.

The debates on whether the entire military offensive is worth it is raging in the Sri Lankan blogosphere. Much notable writing keeps getting published all-over mainstream media on Sri Lanka. Keep Tabs on these things.

and if you can, help.

Saturday, 18 April 2009

Conflict Watch, Sri Lanka

The Sri Lankan armed forces continues to record impressive military victories. With the latest victory in Anandapuram (See David's Blacker's excellent analysis here) , LTTE is trapped along an estimated 100,000 civilians are trapped in a small area of land in the NorthEast of Sri Lanka.

There are increasing calls from the international community for the LTTE to lay down their arms, but the Tigers continue to hold civilians as human shields. There government has decided to pause the hostilities in view of the recent Sinhala/Tamil New Year in Sri Lanka, and some, most notably India has requested the government to extend the temporary halt on hostilities. The latter's interest in the Sri Lanka is amplified due to the elections in that country, and the need to appease the very large ethnic Tamils in India, who according to recent polls put the Sri Lankan issue among the top most election considerations.

A few important reports have also come out during the past few weeks. Most notably from UTHR (Jaffna), and International Crisis Group. Gruesome reality of civilians caught between the crossfire is being caught on camera and distributed by various sources. Human Rights Watch has an audio slide-show with some horrific images.

International media too take note of the situation, if only sparingly. The economist had a related piece recently and so did the New York Times and the Times in the UK.

With a few exceptions, most people in Sri Lanka seems to be adjusting to the reality of a post-LTTE Sri Lanka. Intellectuals are having their say, there seems to be a general consensus that there should be some form of devolution to address the larger dissatisfaction of the Tamil community in Sri Lanka. Whether or not this form of devolution will sufficiently address the root causes of the conflict remains to be seen.

The Sri Lankan blogs and websites continue to be good sources for updated information. Apart from the usual suspects, Federal Idea is a good source for anyone interested in conflict-related video content. The channel features content from Young Asia Television, which in itself is a good source for quality video content.

Wednesday, 15 April 2009

On the question of a ceasefire et al

See post by Rohini Hensman here on Kafila. My response to Rohini, and Nirmala Rajasingham's response to my comment, mine and Niran Anketell's response to Nirmala are compiled on my blog here.

Also see this post on Lines and this post by Ahilan Kadirgamar where in a response I seek to debate a position that people like Ahilan Kadirgamar, Nirmala Rajasingham take that the option of an armed struggle to the Tamil people's problem was pre-mature ill/poorly-conceived. I make reference to this and respond in my response to Nirmala on Rohini Hensman's article on Kafila. I will post something more detailed on this on my blog in the near future.

Thursday, 2 April 2009

April, in Sri Lanka

Dear Diary,

It's April already. In Sri Lanka this means a lot of holidays. After celebrating the official new year on the first of January like the rest of the boring earthlings, we Sri Lankans celebrate one more New Year in April. This time around, the "New Year Holidays" will be accompanied by a weekend and a few more holidays one for "Good Friday" and another for something else. One tend to loose track of these things. Anyway, all this is another excuse to go somewhere cool and get drunk in this island of hours, it's said that Sri Lanka has one of the highest consumption of alcohol and the highest number of holidays, most Sri Lankans enjoy both, except for the poor souls trapped in the North.

Ah yes, that little affair... Mainstream media in the west, seem to have all but forgotten the issue. According to media reports, the Sri Lankan Army have the LTTE encircled along with the civillian population in a very close area. Calls for a ceasefire from some quarters have been rejected by the president, who's determined to "finish it off". The government have however agreed for periodic "pauses" in the fighting so as to let the civilians flee into government controlled areas, and live the next few years of their life in detention camps welfare camps set up by the government.

As said before to you diary, the Sri Lankan media continue to harp the official government line and the only space for dissent continues to be on the web. During the past month, new sites have come up dissenting the official story sold by the warring parties.

One interesting site is JustDissent, which brings alternative view points about the conflict which does not find space in the mainstream media. Another site is warwithoutwitness and contains gruesome pictures and videos of what is (supposedly) happening in Vanni. Viewer discretion of the latter is highly advised.

Quite apart from all this dissenting, we are also seeing beginnings of citizens-led collectives to bring aid/medicine to the people affected. Trusts such as ActLanka have set up a website which enables people to get involved in the relief effort. First, they are focusing on the Vauvniya Hospital. One way people can help the situation is by donating their time and their money to causes such as this.

Monday, 16 March 2009

Unforgetting the Forgotten Conflict

There's a humanitarian crisis of devestating proportion currently unfloding in Sri Lanka.

After nearly three decades of conflict, the Sri Lankan Army have the upperhand in the military conflict. The LTTE, the seperatist (by all accounts a ruthless terrorist) group (supposedly) fighting for an independent Tamil homeland in the Northeast of Sri Lanka is now reduced to a mere 35 square kilmoters, down from controlling almost 1/3 of the country several months ago.

As the fighting became heavier, stories of heavy civillian casualties are seeping through the iron gate Sri Lankan government has put down in information. According to best estimates more than 2,000 people have died in the last couple of months alone, many more thousands wounded. The number loss of combatants, including Sri Lankan soldiers are unknown.

There seems to be a deliberate desire by the government to keep the costs of this conflict unknown to the Sri Lankan public.

There is deep censorship in the media, through a campaign of fear and intimidation. Journalists are abducted, killed, publicly proclaimed as terrorists, which has resulted in number of senior journalists fleeing the country. The ones who stay practice self-censorship, a sign that that the campaign of fear has worked.

Only pro-government journalists (from the state media) are allowed in the conflict zones, and there's an open and a systematic clamp-down on journalists who dissents the government line, which according to government officials amounts to treason.

Ironically, in Sri Lanka only foreign journalists and media networks has the luxury of a degree of openness. Foreign journalists too are not permitted to enter the conflict zones, except for guided tours by the government, which presents a rosy picture of the situation. The only two independent actors with access to the ground -- United Nations and ICRC -- are not allowed to speak on record because of the politics involved.

With no independent journalists on the ground, one can rely only on government comminques as well as reporting from pro-LTTE websites and pro-LTTE organizations such as the TRO for information, none of which can be relied upon for accuracy. The internet is perhaps the only place where some local voices find a space to disseminate information, even then in a climate of fear.

What follows are links to reports and websites that provides for a better understanding of the conflict unfolding in Sri Lanka.

Two recent feature reports, one by Australia's SBS and Al-Jazera's Dining with Terrorists program provided a good synopsis of the situation in the country. For much more detailed accounts see the two reports by the International Crisis Group and Human Rights Watch.

For updating content, Groundviews and Transcurrents are two good sites for following elite opinion on the conflict. Sri Lankan blogoshere at Kottu.org is somehwat activist in nature, and occasionally feature analysis of politics related to the conflict. Our own site, InMutiny is dedicated to bringing perspectives of the conflict generally not seen by Sri Lankan audiences.

-- The Mutiny Crew

Tuesday, 10 March 2009

Any Tamils? He asked in Sinhalese..

David Blacker, a Sri Lankan writer and blogger, relates an encounter he had with the Sri Lankan security personnel recently. From his blog,
I’d just finished a 19-hour film shoot and was pretty exhausted by the time we wrapped. It was past 3am as we piled into the van that was taking us back to the agency — one of my writers, this client servicing bugger, and myself. It hadn’t been the most stressfree shoot, and tired as I was, my body was tense and I was turning over the next day’s takes in my head — takes that were scheduled to begin at 9am.

The van’s abrupt deceleration snapped me out of my thoughts, and I groaned inwardly as I saw the armed soldier waving us down. Army VCP. I was sitting by the rear door and slid it open before the van had stopped. A soldier peers into the dark interior of the vehicle.

“Any Tamils?” he asks in Sinhalese.

This is the first time I’ve heard this asked at a checkpoint, and the client servicing bugger — Tamil — hands over his ID. The troop looks it over, asks him where he’s from — Ratnapura — and hands the ID back. They’re more interested in my ID, which looks like it’s been through the digestive tract of an elephant thanks to my having gone swimming with it in my pocket, years ago. With a stern instruction to get a new ID, we’re waved off.

A couple of minutes later, the van slows down again — police VCP. Out we get again.

“Any Tamils here?” we’re asked again, in a much more nasty tone. Something tells me trouble’s on the way.
Read the rest of the story here.

Tuesday, 24 February 2009

Dining with Terrorists (Sri Lanka)

The recent Al Jazeera Dining with Terrorists program on Sri Lanka is one of the more accurate portrayals of the conflict and the current situation in Sri Lanka. The program is now available on youtube and posted below.

Part 1:



Part 2: