Showing posts with label Kouchner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kouchner. Show all posts

Thursday, April 30, 2009

The LTTE is a terrorist organisation that is now using innocent civilians as human shields.

TO BE NOTED:

Times Online Logo 222 x 25

From
April 30, 2009

Victory without humanity can be no triumph

We have seen for ourselves why an international relief effort is now urgently needed in Sri Lanka

Recent demonstrations in London, Paris and elsewhere have brought the situation in Sri Lanka to wide public attention. But the island's civil war has been running for 28 years. The Tamil minority in the north has long argued that it is marginalised politically and economically.

In the early 1980s the LTTE (the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, or Tamil Tigers) started fighting for an independent Tamil state. By 1986 it had full control of the northern Jaffna peninsula. What began with violent protest soon led to civil war - to the majority the assertion of military power by a sovereign government against a murderous terrorist organisation, to the minority the abuse of violent power by the State. Repeated attempts to find a political solution ran aground.

The Government of Sri Lanka now believes that it is in the final stages of that campaign. Its military advance is undoubted. The LTTE leadership appears trapped in an ever-diminishing strip of land, now only a few square kilometres. But despite its size, at least 50,000 civilians remain there with the LTTE, the others having fled to “screening centres” and IDP (internally displaced people) camps. So civilian suffering and loss of life continues, and the chances of any kind of political settlement recede.

We visited Sri Lanka yesterday for a simple reason: time is running out for those trapped or displaced by the fighting. Our mission was simple too: to make, in person, the case for the humanitarian relief that the UN, the EU and the G8 have called for.

We saw the situation for ourselves in Vavunja, close to the fighting, where we visited displaced Tamils and saw the newly arrived French field hospital. We heard stories of individual human tragedy: civilians forced by the LTTE not to leave its stronghold, deaths and injuries from bombs and artillery, and families separated, desperately seeking news of their loved ones - fears from the recent past, fears for their present situation and fear of what might happen in the future.

The UN and EU have spoken loud and clear about the immediate needs. First, both sides must act to protect civilians inside the so-called no-fire zone (which has become the opposite). We have called for some time for the Government of Sri Lanka to set a ceasefire in place and for the LTTE to allow all civilians under its control to leave the conflict area safely and as quickly as possible, preferably under UN auspices.

The Government of Sri Lanka's announcement of a cessation of heavy military combat is a welcome step towards the protection of civilians. Similar announcements have been made in the past. This one must be implemented and kept to. The UN had an agreement with the Government to send a mission into the conflict zone to help to assess and address civilian needs. That agreement has not been implemented. It must be.

The second concern is over arrangements and conditions for the displaced persons fleeing the zone. Here the refusal to allow the UN, the aid agencies, and the media full and proper access is quite wrong. The Government wants to “screen” civilians escaping the fighting to ensure that LTTE fighters cannot get into the wider community to continue the struggle using terrorist means. But it is vital that this process is transparent - the Government must allow the UN and other international agencies proper access to all stages of the screening process.

Third, conditions for civilians who have fled the fighting are an important concern. Any country would struggle with 200,000 IDPs. When these include many who are injured and traumatised, as well as the old and children, this is doubly the case. In the past, the Sri Lankan Government has been unwilling to let international aid agencies get involved directly. But without a properly managed, resourced and co-ordinated humanitarian aid effort, their suffering will only intensify. That is why we fully supported the visit this week to Sri Lanka of Sir John Holmes, the UN Under-Secretary General for Humanitarian Affairs. Within the IDP camps, there must be better medical facilities and improved access to food and shelter. Britain and France have made commitments of money and medicine and shelter. So have others. But there needs to be proper access.

Finally, while our focus today is short term, we cannot ignore the long-term context. The Government of Sri Lanka is an elected one and is rightly held to the high standards expected of members of the UN - so all its obligations under international humanitarian law must be respected. To the LTTE we repeat the EU's longstanding position that violence will not serve the Tamil people and affirm that only the renunciation of violence will bring progress.

In the future, the communities of Sri Lanka will have to find ways to live together. That will not be achieved through military victory alone. The deep-seated sense of political alienation that has fuelled Tamil resentment towards successive governments in Sri Lanka must be addressed through a political process of integrity and decency. We are under no illusions about how entrenched positions are on either side. The Government of Sri Lanka believes it is days away from the victory that it has sought for three decades, but at the cost of too many civilian lives. The LTTE is a terrorist organisation that is now using innocent civilians as human shields. The gravity of the situation means that the international community has a duty to respond and to do all that we can to halt the suffering.

People ask what does it have to do with us? As members of the UN Security Council we do not shy away from the responsibility of sovereign governments and the international community to protect civilians. Hillary Clinton, the US Secretary of State, has joined us in describing the failure to protect civilians in Sri Lanka as truly shocking. Yesterday we took our plea direct to the Sri Lankan Government. In its moment of triumph it must show the humanity and self-interest to find a way to win the peace.

Bernard Kouchner is France's Minister of Foreign Affairs; David Miliband is Foreign Secretary"

The UN says nearly 6,500 civilians have been killed since January in the most recent wave of fighting

TO BE NOTED: From the Guardian:

"
Miliband in row with Sri Lankan defence minister

• Exchange followed foreign secretary's criticism of army tactics
• Military kills 25 Tigers as rebels vow never to surrender

Kouchner and Miliband in Sri Lanka

France's foreign minister Bernard Kouchner (second left) and British foreign secretary David Miliband (centre) visiting the Menikfam Vanni refugee camp in northern Sri Lanka yesterday Photograph: David Gray/Reuters

The foreign secretary, David Miliband, was involved in a heated exchange with a Sri Lankan minister over the safety of civilians in the area held by the Tamil Tigers, according to a newspaper report from the country reproduced on its defence ministry's website.

The story in the Island claims Miliband interrupted the Sri Lankan defence secretary, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, yesterday as he was describing how the army had rescued 200,000 civilians from the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), to say Britain had credible information that civilians were being harmed by the army's firing.

Rajapaksa responded by warning Britain against being "duped" by the Tiger's "disinformation campaign", adding: "Even BBC is dishing out LTTE propaganda material without verification."

When Miliband, who was in the country with his French counterpart, Bernard Kouchner, to push for a humanitarian truce in the war with the Tamil rebels, said his claim was based on credible information from sources in the LTTE-held no-fire zone, Rajapaksa was "apparently annoyed", according to the report.

"The defence secretary said anyone who knew the LTTE would not believe that any reliable information would emanate from that area under its jackboot," it said.

The report added: "The defence secretary said it was up to the British delegation to decide whether it should believe what a terrorist group said or what a responsible officer of a legitimate government told them."

The Foreign Office said it did recognise the account of the meeting.

"What is certainly true is that the foreign secretary set out clearly the importance of a ceasefire/humanitarian assistance with all key members of the government of Sri Lanka that he met," a spokeswoman said.

The Sri Lankan government has refused growing diplomatic pressure to stop its offensive against the rebel group's last stronghold in the north-east to safeguard the estimated 50,000 civilians trapped in the area. On Sunday, the LTTE called for a ceasefire but the proposal was rejected by the government.

Today the LTTE vowed it would never surrender to the advancing Sri Lankan forces, as the military released video footage of attacks on the depleted rebel group's navy.

The footage shows the Sri Lankan navy's elite special boat squadron blowing up what it says were Sea Tiger boats. The attacks – using heavy weapons, which the government said it was no longer using following criticism from the international community – destroyed six boats, including four "suicide craft", and killed 25 rebels, according to the military.

However, the Tamil Tigers remained defiant. In an email sent to the Associated Press from the war zone, the rebel political chief, Balasingam Nadesan, said the group would not surrender and urged the international community to step up pressure for a ceasefire.

"If any country really cares about these people, I ask that country to go beyond its 'diplomatic boundaries' for the sake of saving human lives and make Sri Lanka stop this genocidal war," he wrote.

"Surrendering and laying down our arms are out of the question. Our freedom struggle will continue until [our] legitimate aspirations are met."

Nadesan denied accusations by the government and international rights groups that the rebels were holding civilians as human shields to slow the military offensive. He dismissed reports that the rebels' top leaders had fled the country, saying they "are still in our homeland and leading the freedom struggle".

The Tamil Tigers have been fighting since 1983 for a state for minority Tamils in the north and east of Sri Lanka after decades of marginalisation by governments dominated by the Sinhalese majority.

The UN says nearly 6,500 civilians have been killed since January in the most recent wave of fighting."