Thursday, April 2, 2009

Sri LankaN Tamils on LTTE terror - Sunday telegraph reports

The mass circulated Sunday Telegraph of the United Kingdom in a full page article said the people who escaped from the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) controlled area had told them that the remaining people do not like the LTTE's dictatorial mono ethnic hellhole anymore and they want the Sri Lankan army to rescue them.

Quoting such a man who escaped to Kilinochchi Sunday Telegraph's Nick Meo said, "What the man had to say about the Tigers would have been unthinkable for a subject of their dictatorial mini state a few weeks ago. 'The people do not like the Tigers any more,' he said angrily. "They are trapped by them and they are scared. They want the Sri Lankan army to rescue them."

Reporting from Kilinochchi the Sunday Telegraph staffer said, people are being used as human shields by LTTE terrorists who have promised to fight to the death.

The report further said, "The haunted eyes of the grandfather who had just escaped from the Tamil Tigers at their most furious, betrayed the horror he had left behind him 'I want to live not die, and that's why I have come here with my family', he said.

"The rebels of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) who for last 26 years have claimed to be fighting to protect Sri Lanka's Tamil ethnic minority , have forbidden the refugees to leave - on pain of death.

"But the civil war grinds slowly towards its end with the Tigers apparently facing final defeat , conditions within their enclave have become so grim that in the past week alone that an estimated 5000 men women and terrified children have risked their lives to flee. Many have been shot by rebel gunmen and some of those caught have been executed.

"The elderly man wearing a grimy T shirt and sarong and clutching a single bag that contained all that remained of his possessions , had managed to get out that morning. He described how he had gathered his family and friends as quietly as possible in the dead of night before slipping past guards. They had been wading across muddy lagoon towards Sri Lankan army lines when things went wrong.

'We left at 2 a.m. today in a group of 23 but the Tigers fired at us and only 12 of us arrived here.'he said as his bewildered grand daughter aged seven looked on. 'I do not know what has happened to the rest. We became separated in the confusion.'

The Daily Telegraph staffer is the first British reporter allowed inside Kilinochchi after it fell in January and he interviewed the people at the town, which was once the Terrorists' headquarters.

The Sunday Telegraph said that some time ago Tigers ran a third of the country but much of the money collected by the Tamils all over the world were creamed off by corrupt Tiger leaders.

The article quoted Brigadier Shavendra Silva who said the civilians in the LTTE grip were forcibly taken there and now the security forces cannot bomb the terrorists because of the human shield.

For this article the Sunday Telegraph also interviewed a 25 year old female teacher who had been forcibly recruited by the LTTE. She and the others had been indoctrinated into believing of army torture on capture. So she said, two of her younger comrades, without surrendering committed suicide by blowing themselves with the help of grenades. She surrendered and faced no torture.

An 18 year old school girl who was forced to fight but later managed to escape told the Sunday Telegraph that she cried for her other friends who could not escape as they were scared of the terrorist leaders . "They are only there because of fear of the Tamil commanders. They told us so many lies. The people will hate them after this." The original article on which this news item is based appeared on March 29 2009.

Sri Lankan War will be over within three weeks - GL

G.L. Peiris Minister of Export Development and International Trade said that today that the war will be over within three weeks. He also added that foreign nations have agreed to implement mega projects subsequently

Tsunami Rehabilitation Projects

On December 26 of 2004, the people of Sri Lanka fell victim to one of the deadliest natural disasters in modern history. The Asian Tsunami took the lives of approximately 35,000 people. The enormity of this tragedy generated an outpouring of aid from the international community. The members of LAcNet were proud to do their part in collecting Tsunami donations and distributing them to worthy causes. We collected $129,200 and have have disbursed $94,371 to seven worthy projects that range from building homes for Tsunami victims to funding the educations of Tsunami orphans (the Sudheera Daruwo project).

Prabhakaran's son wounded in Lankan army attack

The 24-year-old son of LTTE chief V Prabhakaran was wounded while fighting against the Sri Lankan army (SLA) in the north-eastern distript of Mullaitivu, the military said on Wednesday.

Charles Anthony, Prabhakaran's eldest son who is claimed to be the brain behind the rebels' air wing, sustained injuries while leading the battle in the remaining LTTE-controlled area, military spokesperson, Brigadier Udaya Nanayyakkara said. The military stumbled upon the information about Anthony's injuries through intercepted LTTE communication. Details of his injuries, however, were not available.

The military also learned about the death of LTTE's technical wing chief S Kirupakaram alias Madivalahan through intercepted LTTE communication.

Kirupakaram was said to be the mastermind and chief coordinator of the LTTE's satellite cum radio communication network. 
In another development, the LTTE has written to the UN for an ``immediate peasefire'' on the war with the Lankan armed forces.

``Our organisation welcomes the pall by the UN, US and UK Governments for an immediate ceasefire in Sri Lanka in order to allow humanitarian aid and relief to reach the affected people in the areas controlled by us. Our organisation wishes to reiterate our agreement to an immediate ceasefire,'' the LTTE said in the letter.

``While the world accepts our organisation to comply with International Humanitarian Law, the question arises as to whether a similar onus and responsibility rests on a supposedly democratically elected government of Sri Lanka to bring an immediate end to the shelling that is killing Tamil civilians in their thousands,'' the rebels wrote.

The statement added: ``the Sri Lankan government's constant apposition is that anything the aid agencies, or Tamil people or doctors say that is against the government propaganda view, is coerced by the LTTE .

Isn't it the same for those detained in the government run camps- will they say the truth while the wrath of the Sri Lankan government awaits them?