PICTORIAL

FEATURE~

Fonseka factor and the creeping politicization of military in Sri Lanka

by D.B.S. Jeyaraj

Last year when speculation was rife about former Army commander Sarath Fonseka announcing his candidacy for the Presidential elections this columnist was among those who warned of adverse consequences befalling the Country as a result of this unprecedented move. [dbsj]

FEATURES~

Prabhakaran, Veluppillai and the father-son relationship

 

by D.B.S. Jeyaraj

Veluppillai Prabhakaran’s father Thiruvengadam Veluppillai breathed his last on Wednesday January 6th night. The 86 year old retired government servant’s birthday was on January 10th. [dbsj]

Rajapakse Vs Fonseka: Not a one horse race, but a contest

by Rajan Philips

This election was supposed to be a one horse race for Mahinda Rajapakse. Now it is a contest. Nobody can yet say that Mahinda Rajapakse is going to lose; nor can anyone now say that Sarath Fonseka is not going to win. [TC]

Tradition bound Udappu

by Dushiyanthini Kanagasabapathipillai

“Udappu” is situated between the Dutch Canal in the East, Indian Ocean in the West, Poonaipitty village in the North and Pinkatti village in the South. According to some reports, that there was a flood in this area earlier, and it was called “Udaippu” afterwards. Another report says that people were looking for pure water and sea side, while searching for such place they found “Udaippankarai”. Later, the name derived from “Udaippu” to “Udaippankarai” to “Udappu”, which is currently being called. [HA]

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‘Camp system is all too clearly the latest stage of genocide’

Sri Lanka - camps, media…genocide?

By Martin Shaw

What kind of violence has the Sri Lankan state been committing against its Tamil civilian population as the island‘s civil war ended; on what scale and with what intentions? Martin Shaw explores the difficult terrain where war, atrocity and genocide meet.

The civil war in Sri Lanka is receding from the international headlines, as crises in Iran and celebrity deaths occupy the media's limited space and attention-span. A very large number of its Tamil victims are still, more than six weeks after the fighting ended, confined in government forces in a complex of forty camps in the north east of the country. An estimated 280,000 civilians - originally displaced from their homes by the fighting between the Sri Lankan military and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Ealam (TamilTigers / LTTE), and in some cases fleeing from the brutal regime in the LTTE's former "liberated" zone - are being held, generally against their will.

Jewish children behind Barbed wires 1945

[Jewish children behind Barbed wires 1945-pic: Aquaview]

President Mahinda Rajapaksa, in his "victory speech", told Sri Lanka's parliament that "our heroic forces have sacrificed their lives to protect Tamil civilians", and he took "personal responsibility" for protecting Tamils. Yet his government is now scandalously confining this huge population - who have already suffered not only from the LTTE but from Sri Lankan bombardments which caused probably tens of thousands of deaths and injuries - in squalid conditions. The government has officially backtracked, under international pressure, on plans to hold the displaced, while screening them for potential "terrorists", for up to three years; it now says that 80% will be resettled by the end of 2009.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) comments: "The government's history of restricting the rights of displaced persons through rigid pass systems and strict restrictions on leaving the camps heightens concerns that they will be confined in camps much longer, possibly for years."

In the shadows

The eruption in Iran has in a twisted way done the Sri Lankan government a service. In any case, Colombo has been ruthless in restricting international journalists and rights organisations: in May 2009 even the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) was barred from Menik Farm, the largest camp, and Channel 4's Nick Paton Walsh was deported. Sinhala nationalism remains oppressively dominant within the majority population, and critics of the government face an atmosphere of intimidation and even terror: Sri Lankan journalists have frequently been murdered, assaulted and detained.

Although human-rights organisations and western governments have continued to protest at the situation, the Sri Lankan government has found friends in the United Nations's new Human Rights Council; it was able to pass a resolution there on 27 May 2009 praising its own commitment to human rights (endorsed by such notable bastions of freedom as China, Cuba, Russia, Pakistan and Egypt). The vigorous campaigns by members of the Tamil diasporas have ensured that the situation has not been entirely forgotten, but the interned Tamilsdon't have the mobile-phone access that (in the early post-election stages at least) so embarrassed the Iranian regime. There are some pictures of the camps on the internet, but no iconic images of Tamil suffering have entered the commercial, established media in the manner of Iran's Neda Sultan - or indeed of Fikret Alic, the emaciated prisoner pictured behind barbed-wire in the Trnopolje camp in Bosnia in summer 1992.

Adire predicament

It is often said that pictures tell their own story. However what is important is the media narrative and the momentum behind the issue: in both the Iranian and Bosnian cases the crises were much more strongly established in the dominant media (and the exposure of the experiences of Neda Sultan and Fikret Alic) fed this. In the case of Sri Lanka, sadly, the level and intensity of coverage - despite the impressive Tamil campaigns - has not matched these.

Moreover, what was important in Bosnia was that Trnopolje was described as a "concentration"camp - so the image facilitated the connection between the atrocious treatment of Bosnian Muslim prisoners and the murderous history of concentration camps in Europe under Nazism. The Bosnian-Serbian government that was responsible for Trnopolje naturally disputed this appellation, describing it merely as a holding centre for "refugees"; today the lowest-common-denominator descriptor seems to be a "detention" camp.
The Sri Lankan government also prefers its camps to be seen as "refugee" camps. However once people are detained, camps are clearly more than that; and where there is a sustained policy of concentrating detainees then the term "concentration camp" applies. In war, these camps - invented at the beginning of the 20th century to describe the enclosures in which the Spanish detained Cubans and the British detained Boerfarmers and their families during the South African wars - are usually designed to corral a civilian population seen as potentially sympathetic to a guerrilla enemy (as Tamils evidently are still seen despite the LTTE's defeat).

Totalitarian regimes, including Stalinist Russia and Nazi Germany, have also used camps to concentrate other civilian groups -actual and potential political opponents, trade unionists, and ethnic "enemies" such as Jews. The complication in using the "concentration camp" category is that such regimes went on to develop their camps into something more - in the Soviet case, labour camps, in the Nazi case, extermination camps. Clearly, not all concentration camps are "death" camps in the Nazi sense; but all concentration camps tend to produce death, as well as widespread physical and mental harm. Since their premise is enmity towards the interned civilians, the history of concentration-camps has been marked, from the Boerwar onwards, by callous disregard for their welfare, and often worse.

As Human Rights Watch remarked of the Sri Lankan situation on 11 June 2009:

"Virtually all camps are overcrowded, some holding twice the number recommended by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. Food distribution is chaotic, there are shortages of water, and sanitation facilities are inadequate. Camp residents do not have access to proper medical services and communicable diseases have broken out in the camps."

What is more, "the military camp administration has imposed numerous restrictions on humanitarian organizations working in the camps, such as limiting the number of vehicles and staff members that can enter the camps, which has delayed the provision of much-needed aid. The military does not allow organizations into the camps to conduct protection activities, and a ban on talking to the camp residents leaves them further isolated.'"

If reports of violence and disappearances are added to this, the situation of the interned Tamils appears dire.

Tamil children behind Barbed wires 2009

[Tamil children behind Barbed wires 2009pic: aquaview]

A "rolling" genocide?

The western fixation with the Nazi holocaust means that there is an obvious political temptation to link all anti-civilian violence with the Nazi model.The pro-Tamil United States-based academic Francis Boyle,in his posts, sees a sixty-year "rolling" genocide in which Sinhalese governments of Ceylon (the country's name at independence in 1948) and Sri Lanka have sought "to annihilate the Tamils and to steal their lands and natural resources. This is what Hitler and the Nazis called lebensraum - "living space" for the Sinhala at the expense of the Tamils." In this perspective, the camp system is all too clearly the latest stage of genocide - although other Tamil advocates date genocide back to the anti-Tamil pogroms in 1983 in response to which the LTTE campaign began.

The idea of "rolling" genocide, first developed (I think) by Madeleine Albright to distinguish the Sudanese campaign in Darfur from the "volcanic" genocide in Rwanda, suggests discontinuity in a history of genocide - albeit, in the Darfur case, within two or three years rather than six decades. However in many cases, there may be genocidal "moments" (as the genocide historian, Dirk Moses, has suggested of colonialism) in stories of oppression - decades or even centuries long - which do not, taken as a whole, constitute processes of genocide (see A Dirk Moses ed., Empire,Colony, Genocide: Conquest, Occupation, and Subaltern Resistance in World History [Berghahn,2008]).

There may be sporadic genocidal massacres, rapes and expulsions, or even sustained campaigns, at particular points in these histories. Something like this seems to be true in the Sri Lankan case: no one doubts the long history of Sinhalese nationalist oppression against the Tamil community since independence, which includes moments like 1983 which can be plausibly seen as genocidal outbursts. But the history as a whole is not simply one of genocide.

Indeed the dedication of the LTTE to armed struggle against the Sri Lankan state helped turn a history of oppression and resistance into one of brutal insurgency and counterinsurgency (see The trouble with guns: Sri Lanka, South Africa, Ireland", 10 June 2009). We know however that counterinsurgency is one of the most common contexts of genocidal violence. It remains to be seen - since most of the survivors are locked away from the world's media and the Sri Lankan government is blocking all attempts at independent investigation of the recent violence - how far the Sri Lankan army went in the direction of deliberate atrocity as opposed to brutal disregard for civilians. Here, indiscriminate allegations of a long-running Sri Lankan genocide paradoxically blunt the real questions: what kind of violence did the Sri Lankan state commit against its Tamil civilian population, on what scale and with what intentions?

The continuing concentration of over 250,000 people in the camps both blocks the search for answers to these questions, and itself constitutes a most serious crime. If the doors are not opened quickly, this will raise questions of whether the government seriously intends a restoration of Tamil society in the conquered zone. This would indeed pose a question of genocide, in the sense of the deliberate destruction of a population group in its home territory.

Martin Shaw is a historical sociologist of war and global politics, and professor of international relations and politics at the University of Sussex. His books include War and Genocide (Polity, 2003), The New Western Way of War (Polity, 2005), and What is Genocide?(Polity, 2007). His website http://www.martinshaw.org/


17 Comments

All who read this read article by Kath Noble as well

Posted by: Tharaka | July 1, 2009 10:59 AM

I have 2 questions? (And my replies) Why he used picture of Jewish Children behind barb wire ? To shock the reader and to allow reader to assume that's what's happening in Sri Lankan camps.

2. In the second photo Channel Four crafty journalists and Times avoide showing the Helicopter that this people came to see (where the barb wire is).

Even though camp life is not ideal and we want thews people to let go to hei villages as early as possible - it is HUGE LIE to say these camps any where near to Jewish Concentration camps. First please don't insult Jewish people who suffered and died in gas chambers.

May be Professor Martin and I should visits these camps to see for ourselves. A Charity I am linked Sarana Community foundation recently visited camps and - Children were playing cricket, they go to classes (Education) and adults allowed to cook. Visitors are allowed (As our charity did ).

IN Tsunami lot of British Charities made quick bucks (After Princess Diana's death their coffers dried out) and spent 10% of the money they have received (bar few). Lot of kind hearted British people donated their money and they were misused by the NGOs and Charities.

Not allowing them whole sale again - is the correct decision right now. Let them come only when they produce proper plans and how they are going to execute them, except having lavish dinners in Colombo restaurant. As for Professor Shaw - Nice try.

Posted by: Ajith Dharmakeerthi | July 1, 2009 05:57 PM

I agree whole heartedly with Ajith. It is sad to acknowledge that people like this exist. No wonder the world is the way it is.

Posted by: nandi | July 1, 2009 07:14 PM

sarana charity- hmmmm SRI LANKAN TERROR GOVT. DENEID ACCESS TO ALL NGO & INGO AND REPORTERS THEN FORMING LIKE THIS NO-NAME NON EXISTING SO CALLED COMMUUNITY CHARITIES TO EYE WASH GLOBAL COMMUNITY.WELL EXECUTED DRAM.NO BODY LIKE THEM TO BE DECEIVED.IF YOUR HANDS ARE BLOOD FREE, DONt you allow un & ICRC freely to help 300,000 partially dead people-SIMPLE LOGIC. TIME WILL BRING ANSWER TO ALL OF OUR QUSETIONS.

Posted by: ketha | July 1, 2009 10:39 PM

The above article is written by who has no clue about what was happening Sri Lanka.

Posted by: Thirndhu | July 2, 2009 01:43 AM

Ajith is correct

Posted by: Saliya CA | July 2, 2009 02:54 AM

Please note that there was no genocide in Sri Lanka. The government of Sri Lanka is trying to help the displaced civilians (by LTTE). In doing so there are ways and means of doing it. Now the war is over you may be short of funds, and focus your attention somewhere else. Leave Sri Lanka for the Sri Lankans, they will sought out their problems. You dont have to poke your finger in it.

Posted by: Sarathg | July 2, 2009 03:44 AM

Ajith Dharmakeerthi,

1) The first picture gives the readers an analaogous reference, by which they may compare the two situations, since the Jewish concentration camp situation are now well known and familiar. It is a matter of effective communication.

2) Perhaps the Jewish children also crowded together near the barbed wire to see the camaeraman or a tank or something.
However the point is that they are both forcibly being imprisoned behind barbed wire cut off from the outside world.

There were also music concerts and games permitted in some of the NAZI concentration camps. And the NAZIs even told the Jews that they were going to be rehabilitated elsewhere.

Posted by: N2 | July 2, 2009 03:51 AM

who are always talking about genocide in sri lmnka . have your guys ever visted sri lanka.

Posted by: Mohideen | July 2, 2009 04:46 AM

This is another very biased article sorely lacking in objectivity. You quote, apparently with approval, Francis Boyle’s assertion that “Sinhalese governments have sought to annihilate the Tamils and to steal their natural resources”. What is this “annihilation” this misguided academic is talking about, and, pray, tell us what Tamil lands and natural resources has the government sought to steal? Like many writers on the subject, Boyle insists on talking of “Sinhalese governments” mischievously introducing a racist slant to his writing. Has he ever visited Sri Lanka? He clearly does not seem to know what he is talking about. The Internally Displaced Persons now in camps are the hapless Tamils that the LTTE shepherded from village to village to provide a human shield for the terrorists. The Sri Lankan government did not displace them from their homes and villages. The odious comparisons with Darfur and Bosnia are wholly unwarranted. I do wish that western journalists show more objectivity in their writing and dare I say it, a little more honesty.

Posted by: cassandra | July 2, 2009 05:02 AM

LOL! How do we even begin to take this writer seriously? Comparing a IDP camp that is to hold people till the war torn areas are restored to NAZI Concentration Camps where people were Systematically sent to perform forced Labor and to be Exterminated ...?

Posted by: Devinda Fernando | July 2, 2009 10:16 AM

THE FENCES OF THE NAZI CONCENTRATION CAMP IN NURENBURG AND AUSCHAVITZ WAS NOT ELECTRIFIED BUT THE SRI LANKAN CONCENTRATION CAMPS IN WHICH OVER 250,000 INNOCENT TAMILS ARE DETAINED WITH WORLD CDNDEMNATION, IS FULLY ELECTRIFIED. THE JEWS WERE GASSED TO DEATH WITHOUT ANY SUFFERING BUT THE IDP'S IN THE SRI LANKAN GOVT. CONCENTARATION CAMPS ARE FACING A SLOW DEATH WITH THE FULL BLESSINGS BY THE UNITED NATIONS. MAY ALL OF THEM ATTAIN NIBANA.

Posted by: T. Douglas | July 2, 2009 08:11 PM

"...This is what Hitler and the Nazis called lebensraum - living space" for the Sinhala at the expense of the Tamils..."

Wasnt it the Eelamists who were claiming 35% of the landmass for their 12% minority? That sounds more like lebensraum to me. They have always felt they had a greater right to Sri Lankan land than the Sinhalese. To claim all the jungle land and thinly populated areas of Sri Lanka as the "exclusively Tamil homeland" disregarding all the archaelogical and historical evidence to the contrary is more akin to Hitler's lebensraum. Instead, the author sees the Sinhalese wish to share all of the land among all of the people as Nazi style lebensraum. So I wonder who is the Nazi here.

Posted by: dingiri | July 3, 2009 12:38 PM

An attempt by an "erudite" Englander to equate Sri Lanka with Germany. I recommend to him the article by Mr Ram of the Hindu, written with first hand knowledge, and an understanding of the eastern values.

http://www.hindu.com/2009/07/04/stories/2009070457542000.htm

Posted by: Ram2009 | July 4, 2009 03:18 AM

Even I as a Sinhalese must say that the Tamil people are held against their will. There are so many allegations regarding rape and torture how can we Sinhala people still deny everything? The majority of our people are keep saying that everything is fine within the camps. It is the Tamil people who are living in these camps, not us. So, it is easy to say that everything is fine for them, which is definetely not the case.

Why is our government denying access to the outside world to get to these camps? Something needs to be hidden, no? It is so important for the government to hide this things. If the truth would come out the world would be shocked by this tragedy. Everyone knows it whether Tamils or Sinhalese. If we want to really change something in our country we must first acknowledge and see what is being done with the Tamil people. If this would happen to Sinhalese no one would say that everything is fine in the camps. Would we accept at all that Sinhala people must live in camps? Never! But we accept that Tamils are living there. Why? Because we really care about them? We do not care about anything. We even do not care about our people otherwise there would not be any sex tourism in the south. But that is another sad story about us.

Let us tell lies and still hope that everything will be fine. But it will not. Do not wonder when the next Prabhkaran is born. The last one emerged because of us. The next one will emerged because of us again. We have not learnt from the past. That is the truth!

Posted by: Sasika | July 4, 2009 04:51 AM

Ram2009,

This headline by N.Ram article is sickening...

he calls the camps "uplifting?????"

Posted by: Dexter | July 4, 2009 11:02 PM

cassandra,
what is really repulsive and odious is your complete lack of any sense of human compassion

dingiri,
Whatever the proportions are, that is what the Tamil area is. Nothing to do with taking Sinhala land. The British joined the approx 35% Tamil region to the rest for purposes of administrative convenience. If the Sinhala-Buddhists were not so maniacal in demanding the whole island as belonging to them, then the Tamils would not have bothered to assert the truth and remind the Sinhala-Buddhists of the historic Tamil areas.

Ram2009,
Both you and N.Ram should uplift yourselves on a pointed stick!

Posted by: N2 | July 6, 2009 03:31 AM

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