War Crime In Sri Lanka: Civilians Slaughtered By Army Shelling
*By Bill Van Auken *

11 May, 2009
*WSWS.org* <http://www.wsws.org/articles/2009/may2009/sril-m11.shtml>

In what constitutes a blatant war crime by the Sri Lankan government, the
army’s merciless bombardment of a so-called no-fire zone, a small strip of
land on the country’s northeast coast, killed and wounded thousands of Tamil
civilians over the weekend.

According to a government doctor at the Mullaivaikal field hospital in the
zone, which is the last territory still controlled by the separatist
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), the number of bodies brought to the
facility by 3 p.m. Sunday numbered 378, while 1,122 wounded had arrived
seeking medical treatment.

The account was backed up by the United Nations representative in Sri Lanka.
“It seems beyond dispute that hundreds of civilians were killed overnight
including more than 100 children,” said UN spokesman Gordon Weiss. “The UN
remains concerned about the use of heavy weapons inside this small pocket of
land.”

If the number of bodies brought to one hospital approached 400, the total
number of dead is far higher. The pro-LTTE web site tamilnet.com reported
that humanitarian workers in the zone had counted 1,200 bodies Sunday and
that as many as 2,000 civilians had been slaughtered by the Sri Lanka army
using cluster bombs, multi-barrel rocket launchers and heavy artillery. The
site carried photographs of mangled corpses laid out in rows on mats and in
the dirt. Many other bodies were reportedly buried by their families after
the attack.

In addition to the artillery barrage, Sri Lankan Air Force fighter jets
carried out two bombing raids against the zone on Sunday, tamilnet.comreported.

Dr. V. Shanmugarajah, the government physician, told the Associated Press
that the carnage unleashed by the Sri Lankan army bombardment was the worst
he had seen so far in the government offensive and had overwhelmed his
hospital.

“We are doing the first aid and some surgeries as quickly as we can,” said
the doctor. “We are doing what is possible. The situation is overwhelming;
nothing is within our control.” Many of the hospital’s staff members were
unable to come to work because their own houses had been shelled.

The first artillery rounds began falling on the area Saturday night, shortly
after a Red Cross ship evacuating wounded civilians had left the area. The
barrage continued throughout the night, forcing thousands to huddle for
protection in makeshift bunkers, Dr. Shanmugarajah recounted.

The Sri Lankan government of President Mahinda Rajapakse has dubbed its
military slaughter of Tamil civilians as a “humanitarian operation” and “the
world largest hostage rescue mission.”

Against all independent accounts and available evidence, the government has
claimed that the Tamil Tigers themselves have turned heavy weapons against
Tamil civilians in an attempt to discredit the government and win
international sympathy.

“This is what the LTTE is doing; they are firing indiscriminately at the
civilians and putting the blame on the army,” said military spokesman
Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara.

The Defense Ministry, however, acknowledged that the army carried out an
offensive on Saturday. “The troops attached to the Air Mobile Brigade
further advanced into the ‘No Fire Zone’ capturing LTTE positions in general
area of Karaiyamullivaikal yesterday,” the government’s web site reported
Sunday.

While the government claims that only 10,000 to 20,000 civilians are trapped
in the LTTE-held enclave of just a few square kilometers, aid workers and
foreign diplomats have put the number as high as 120,000. The UN’s official
estimate is more than 50,000. In addition to the deadly attacks of the Sri
Lankan army, they suffer from insufficient food, potable water and medicine.
Most are living in tents.

The Sri Lankan government has repeatedly claimed that it has halted the use
of heavy weapons in its campaign to eradicate the LTTE and seize the last
strip of land that it controls. This claim has repeatedly been exposed as a
lie, with both the United Nations and Washington accusing the army of
carrying out artillery bombardment and air strikes on the area.

The human rights group Human Rights Watch issued a report Saturday
documenting repeated shelling of hospitals by the Sri Lankan army.

The report cited “30 attacks on permanent and makeshift hospitals in the
combat area since December 2008.” It added, “One of the deadliest took place
on May 2, when artillery shells struck Mullaivaikal hospital in the
government-declared ‘no-fire zone,’ killing 68 persons and wounding 87.”

Pointing to the deliberate character of these attacks on medical facilities,
the report noted that doctors in the area reported GPS coordinates to the
Sri Lankan military each time they established a new field hospital so that
they would not be attacked. Instead, however, “Medical staff said that, on
several occasions, attacks occurred on the day after the coordinates had
been transmitted.” Staff members said that hospitals were targeted even
though they were clearly marked as medical facilities with large red
crosses.

The report pointed out that hospitals are specifically protected under the
Geneva Conventions. “Repeated Sri Lankan artillery attacks striking known
hospitals is evidence of war crimes,” said Brad Adams, Asia director at
Human Rights Watch.

Meanwhile, in an attempt to conceal its crimes, the Rajapakse government
expelled a British television reporting team from the country Sunday. The
summary deportation was in retaliation for a segment broadcast May 5 on
ITV’s Channel 4 News exposing horrific conditions for more than 100,000
Tamil civilians who have been placed in barbed wire encircled internment
camps in the northern town of Vavuniya.

Nick Paton Walsh of Channel 4 reported that the camps have seen “bodies left
for days; children crushed in the rush for food; the sexual abuse of women;
disappearances.” The televised segment included interviews with aid workers
denouncing the conditions.

The Sri Lankan government claimed that the report’s “obvious intention is to
discredit the Security Forces and prevent its onward march by hook or by
crook.”

The US government has called for an end to attacks on civilians, while
simultaneously condemning the LTTE for using the Tamil population as “human
shields.” Last month, the State Department advocated “power sharing
arrangements so that lasting peace and reconciliation can be achieved.”

Washington’s expressions of concern, like those of the European Union, are
utterly hypocritical. Both branded the LTTE as a “terrorist organization”
and have given encouragement and direct aid to Colombo to wage its military
offensive in the name of a “war on terrorism.”

The Rajapakse government, which resumed the war beginning in 2006, is
determined to pursue its military campaign until it wipes out the LTTE and
forces an unconditional surrender, no matter what the cost in terms of
civilian casualties.

The real political motives behind the war are those of the Sinhalese ruling
elite, which is determined to preserve its power and privileges through the
suppression not only of the Tamil minority, but of the Sri Lankan working
class as a whole.

The communal conflict erupted 26 years ago as the outcome of decades of
anti-Tamil discrimination and was specifically triggered by the anti-Tamil
pogroms of 1983.

The national separatist program of the LTTE, based on armed struggle and
winning the backing of one or another of the major powers for creating an
independent capitalist state, served to deepen this conflict.

Behind the push by the US and Europe for a political settlement between the
Sinhala and Tamil elites, is their fear that the government’s policy of war
until total victory will create political instability that will cut across
their own geo-strategic interests, not only in Sri Lanka, but also India,
with its large Tamil population.

They are hardly motivated by revulsion over the war crimes being carried out
by the Rajapakse government—they are carrying out their own in Afghanistan,
Iraq and elsewhere.

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