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Thursday, 18 September 2008 |
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At least 25 terrorists were killed, 10 LTTE craft reported destroyed, including 3 large attack boats in the coastal waters at Valaipadu, off Nachchikudha, following an intense sea battle between Navy and LTTE, Thursday (Sep 18), since 11.30 a.m. According to naval sources, the battle, which erupted 5 nautical miles West of Nachchikudha, lasted over 3 hours forcing LTTE to retreat with heavy damages.As the battle progressed, naval Rapid Action Boat Squadron (RABS) and elite Special Boat Squadron (SBS) craft were reinforced into the confrontation zone. They launched simultaneous attacks at the approaching LTTE craft. The LTTE boats were led by a senior sea tiger cadre identified as Kadar, military said, citing intercepted LTTE communication. An LTTE boat has received damages and was observed towed after the initial interception, according to earlier reports. |
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Last Updated ( Thursday, 18 September 2008 )
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Thursday, 18 September 2008 |
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Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha, Secretary General of SCOPP and Secretary of the Ministry of Disaster Management and Human Rights met with the WHO officials of the Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse and discussed immediate mental health needs of Sri Lanka in relation to the conflict, and put forward some suggestions with regard to mental health and reconciliation He highlighted the fact that one of the key elements in advancing the peace process of Sri Lanka is confidence building between the parties through reconciliation and that dealing with the simpler mental health issues might assist with this. In this regard, Prof. Wijesinghe requested WHO assistance to initiate projects on reconciliation through the line Ministries, through assistance with therapy based on interactions.
Training for this purpose and providing space and opportunity for such interactions could serve an invaluable purpose. This was particularly true with regard to the reintegration of ex-combatants in the Eastern Province at present, and it would soon need to be extended to the Northern Province too. |
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Last Updated ( Thursday, 18 September 2008 )
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Wednesday, 17 September 2008 |
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by:Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha Over the last month, Amnesty International has issued a number of statements about Sri Lanka. Its latest is entitled ‘Blocking Aid Workers Endangers Trapped Civilians’, and is replete with quotes from a gentleman named Sam Zarifi, who has taken the place of the previously ubiquitous Yolanda Foster. Yolanda’s concern with Sri Lanka had not been confined to her Amnesty hat. Right through August, she had been one of the key players in trying to orchestrate a letter of complaint to the Secretary General of the United Nations with regard to Sri Lanka. That letter was finally sent it seems over the signatures of several Sri Lankan Non-Governmental Organizations. It was not however sent to Sri Lankan government officials and, at the time of Amnesty’s September 11th demarche, it had not even been shown to the Sri Lankan Permanent Representative to the United Nations in New York. It had however been sent to heads of various UN agencies in addition to the Secretary General, including Radhika Coomaraswamy, Special Representative of the Secretary General for Children and Armed Conflict, the most senior Sri Lankan now working in the UN system. She had been encouraged to pass this around, but refrained from doing so. |
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Last Updated ( Wednesday, 17 September 2008 )
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Wednesday, 17 September 2008 |
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A human skeleton, estimated to be at least 7000 years old, several other pre-historic stone tools including animal remains have been unearthed from the Godawaya archeological site in Ambalantota. The human skeleton was found in a burial chamber with its head pointing to the North, sources from the Department of Archeology said. A team of archeologists had conducted this excavation in sand and gravel deposits in Godawaya, supposed to be a historic and pre-historic site with archeological value. |
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Last Updated ( Wednesday, 17 September 2008 )
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Wednesday, 17 September 2008 |
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The LTTE launched its armed struggle over two decades ago vowing to protect civilians. But, today it has come to such a pass that it is shamelessly taking cover behind people. When Prabhakaran promised a final solution through war in his heroes` day speech of 2005, a few days after the induction of the present President Mahinda Rajapaksa, one may have thought he was equal to the task. Then, he threw down the gauntlet at Mavil Aru and dragged a wavering government into war. The rest is history.
The Defence Ministry order that all the INGOs as well as the UN agencies withdraw from the LTTE-held areas has compounded Prabhakaran`s fears. Time was when the LTTE rode roughshod over INGOs, which had to keep their local staff indoors for months on end to prevent them being forcibly conscripted. But, today the situation has changed. The LTTE is prostrating itself before INGOs pleading with them not to leave Kilinochchi. It is organising protests against the pullout of the UN. Civilians have also been banned from leaving the LTTE-held areas. |
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Last Updated ( Wednesday, 17 September 2008 )
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Statements
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Wednesday, 17 September 2008 |
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Statement of Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha, Secretary to the Ministry of Disaster Management and Human Rights, responding on behalf of Sri Lanka in the General Debate on ‘Human Rights situations that require the Council’s attention’.
Sri Lanka is deeply touched by the concern expressed by countries of the European Union for the human rights situation in some countries in Asia and Africa. We hope that, with advances in globalization, such concern will soon be universal. As others here have pointed out, the moral stature this Council should command requires consistency. Though we know this is not easy, we hope all of us will strive to achieve it in time. |
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Wednesday, 17 September 2008 |
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By: Marian Menaka Fernando
In his seminal work, Orientalism, Edward Said posits that Western discourse about the East galvanizes the divide between the two geo-political entities rather than objectively describing or analyzing it. As a consequence elements of the East that are discussed in Orientalist texts invariably situate the West on intellectually and morally superior ground in relation to the East, thereby providing justification for the domination of the East by Western powers. Although the West now claims to have progressed beyond such Orientalist myopia, this paper argues otherwise, citing the case of western non-governmental organizations (NGOs) operating in Sri Lanka. |
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Tuesday, 16 September 2008 |
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Professor G.L. Peiris, Minister of Export Development and International Trade, arrived in Geneva last week to attend the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) Conference on the World Trade Organisation (WTO) held in Geneva 11-12 September 2008 and the Geneva Trade and Development Forum in Crans Montana from 17-20 September 2008.
The IPU Conference on the WTO constituted a high-level forum attended by Parliamentarians from many countries, to discuss various issues relating to the WTO and the multilateral trading system, including the Doha Round of negotiations, trade and climate change, international trade and the global food crisis, and developments in Information Communication Technology (ICT) and trade. |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 16 September 2008 )
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Tuesday, 16 September 2008 |
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by: C. Bryson Hull
COLOMBO (Reuters) - The United Nations' last team inside Sri Lanka's war zone safely reached army-held territory on Tuesday after the government told aid workers to leave the north in what the president called a temporary safety measure.A convoy of 10 aid workers reached the Omanthai checkpoint, 265 km (165 miles) north of the capital Colombo, after driving along a road that has been hit by intensified fighting between the army and Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) rebels."They are safe," U.N. spokesman Gordon Weiss said in Colombo.President Mahinda Rajapaksa's government ordered all aid agencies out of the northern war zone on September 9 as the military intensified an offensive towards the LTTE's headquarters town of Kilinochchi, where the U.N. team was based. |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 16 September 2008 )
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Tuesday, 16 September 2008 |
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by: Prof Rajiva Wijesinha
Secretary - Ministry of Disaster Management and Human Rights It took no great foresight to anticipate that, when the Sri Lankan forces began operations to liberate the North of Sri Lanka from the LTTE, as they had done the East in late 2006 and 2007, their opponents would launch an avalanche of complaints. Over the last month they have claimed that there is a humanitarian crisis, with thousands of displaced persons suffering without food or shelter or medicine. The fact that all the evidence they cited, from officials on the ground, Sri Lankan or UN, referred only to future problems, whilst saying that the existing situation was under control, was ignored, with headlines often totally contradicting the substance of the report. It was of course obvious that future problems could be minimized if the LTTE just let people go to the safety of government controlled areas, as had happened in the East in 2006 and 2007. But it was known that there was little possibility of this, since clearly it benefited the LTTE to make the people suffer and then claim that the Sri Lankan government was responsible. And more frighteningly, there was another reason for the LTTE holding on to the people, namely the possibility of using them as human shields. |
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 16 September 2008 )
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