The Lanka Academic

 
JANUARY 29, 2005 EST, USA
 
A NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED BY LACNET
 
VOL. 5, NO. 298

TLA FEATURE CORNER
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Headline Summary
F R E E      C L A S S I F I E D S
T  O  P      H  E  A  D  L  I  N  E
Rebels' ties to charities cause concerns
Washington Times, January 29. Links between charities and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, designated as a foreign terrorist organization by the State Department, have raised concerns in Western governments that the Sri Lankan rebel group is using aid meant for victims of the tsunami to buy weapons and replenish its depleted ranks with child soldiers.

One of the prominent groups disbursing humanitarian aid in Sri Lanka, the Tamils Rehabilitation Organization (TRO), has become the subject of scrutiny by politicians in Canada and Australia, and State Department officials in Washington say the charity's ties to the Tamil Tigers are "problematic."

The matter is further complicated by the fact that the northeastern areas of Sri Lanka worst hit by the Dec. 26 tsunami are strongholds of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). The rebel group has accused the Sri Lankan government of blocking relief supplies to the Tamil-dominated regions, while human rights activists say the Tamil Tigers are intimidating nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) working there.

The LTTE has been fighting for a separate homeland in the northeast since the 1970s. The conflict has pitted the country's Hindu Tamil minority against the Buddhist Sinhalese majority. More...
Published: Sat Jan 29 13:15:11 EST 2005


French tsunami relief effort shows small force _ with its wine and painter _ can make difference
Associated Press, Sat January 29, 2005 15:54 EST . MICHAEL CASEY - Associated Press Writer - The French, who also are conducting relief operations in Sri Lanka - and the Maldives, object to comparisons with the Americans. ``The feeling we had in France was that, as usual, the Americans were rushing in force to Indonesia and boasting about it,'' said flotilla spokeswoman Cmdr. Anne Cullerre. ``For some people, it seemed outrageous.

``How can you really boast of doing something from this tragedy? People were saying, 'They are doing it again. They are showing off.'''

Vice Adm. Rolin Xavier, who heads the French military effort, dubbed Operation Beryx, said, ``We are not in the shadow of the Americans but we work alongside them.'' Critics of the U.S. military's work in Indonesia say Washington has seized on the disaster as a pretext for advancing its strategic interests in the archipelago and improving ties with the Indonesian military.

Those ties effectively were cut in 1999 after Indonesian troops and their proxy militias killed 1,500 East Timorese after the half-island territory voted for independence in a U.N.-sponsored independence referendum. During her recent Senate confirmation hearings, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said the tsunami provided a ``wonderful opportunity'' for the United States to reap ``great dividends'' in the region.

The dispatch of the USS Abraham Lincoln's strike force has been viewed in some quarters as an effort not only to help survivors, but also to burnish America's image among Islamic communities worldwide by delivering aid to the largest Muslim country in the world.

The French maintain they do not have strategic interests in the region.

The contrast with U.S. forces does not end there. The U.S. military bans alcohol aboard naval vessels and sailors generally wear casual clothes only in their quarters.

But French sailors aboard the Jeanne D'Arc pick from wine, beer and other alcoholic drinks, and their ready-made meals come with pate. On deck, they sunbathe in the muggy heat in shorts and sandals. However, what really sets the French apart is the paunchy, bearded civilian riding a sloop to the shore. He is artist Michel Bellion, appointed to paint the French military in action in his trademark bold strokes and bright colors.

``I'm here to show the drama,'' said Bellion, pulling out a sketch book as he accompanied a team of doctors vaccinating children. ``For me, it's hell. That is what I want to show. I'm not looking to make it beautiful. I'm trying to show the emotion.''
Published: Sat Jan 29 20:36:34 EST 2005 Back to the top


Send Money Home and Call Home Free!

Sri Lanka War Refugees Feel Forgotten
Associated Press, Sat January 29, 2005 02:02 EST . ARTHUR MAX - Associated Press Writer - JAFFNA, Sri Lanka (AP) While the world's heart and money go out to tsunami victims who lost their homes, another group of refugees looks on in despair.

Muthuthampy Joganathan has been in temporary shelters for 15 years since he was evicted by the Sri Lankan army from his house near Sri Lanka's northern coast, an area then engulfed in civil war.

Though a peace effort collapsed in 2003, the guns have remained silent. But that doesn't help Joganathan much. A fisherman accustomed to the sea air, he lives in a one-room hut down a narrow, muddy lane, separated from his neighbor by a thin wall of woven palm leaves.

More than 200 similar huts pack the compound near the city of Jaffna, a welfare center for some of the 85,000 war refugees still living in camps and now joined by an influx of tsunami victims. Few men have regular jobs. Food is bought with government ration cards, cooked over open fires. Latrines on the edges of the camp serve all.

So it has been, year after year.

The Sri Lankan government has promised people whose homes were shattered by the tsunami they will either be helped to rebuild or will be relocated to new communities built for them.

Even in the conflict zones of the north and east, where the Tamil Tigers have been fighting for independence from the Sinhalese-dominated government since 1983, the rebels and the government are talking about how to help those who lost everything in the crushing flood.

As pledges of billions of dollars flow in for the tsunami victims, the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees believes people displaced by the civil war also should receive more aid, and that attempts to resolve their problem could be ``re-energized'' by the newfound international enthusiasm.

``The northern people affected by the tsunami say they want to go home immediately. Well, so do we,'' said Joganathan, a rugged looking man in his 40s, sitting in his small dirt courtyard.

But that depends on whether the rebels and the government can make peace. Right now, there's little indication that post-tsunami good will is going to revive negotiations.

By the time the rebels and the government signed a cease-fire three years ago, 65,000 people had been killed and 731,000 dislodged by fighting or military requisitions. Since then, about half have either returned home, been relocated or have built new lives where they had found shelter, says the UNHCR.

What's left, Neill Wright, the UNHCR coordinator, said in an interview, is the ``hard core'' whose cases are unlikely to be resolved ``until some political decisions are taken, until some progress is made in the peace process.''

Jaffna, the biggest prize of the war, bears many scars. After three years of truce, a few new buildings are rising beside the bombed-out shells of others. On the heavily contested road into town, shells blasted the tops off tall coconut trees, leaving a small forest of spindly trunks.

Joganathan's camp receives help from the UNHCR and USAID, the American aid agency which last year donated tin sheets for roofs and other home improvements. France built a community hall. Children now have a small playground of old tires and crude jungle gyms. Older kids wielding hoes are clearing a field with a volleyball net.

A. Kannmani shares a house with 54 other people, 35 of them children, just a few miles from Joganathan's camp. She lived in a school for three years after she was bundled into a Sri Lankan army truck and driven away from her home in 1990. Then her group sheltered in a church for another three years.

Nine years ago, the Tamil Tigers moved them into a house owned by a Tamil living abroad. The Tigers, who during 19 years of war earned a reputation for ruthlessness, simply told the owner he was donating his home to the cause, neighbors said.

The house once must have been considered grand: a large living room and four other rooms under a red-tiled roof. Now, washing lines are strung across every room and outdoors. A string bed is the only piece of furniture.

Both Kannmani and Joganathan came from Palali, a region important to the Sri Lankan military and bitterly disputed during the 15 months of ill-fated peace negotiations.

When the military evicted them, ``we left without anything,'' said Kannmani, a wiry, unmarried woman with a streaks of ash and vermillion on her forehead, a Hindu practice to ward off evil.

``Before, we had a cow, a goat, chickens, paddy fields. Now, nothing,'' she said. ``We want to go back. We want to have our old life.''
Published: Sat Jan 29 06:15:24 EST 2005 Back to the top


Fishermen resist Sri Lanka's plan to put them inland
sfgate.com, Saturday, January 29, 2005. Hikaduwa, Sri Lanka -- Four weeks after a tsunami ravaged large parts of South Asia's coastal regions, people are discovering that the reconstruction process may change their communities even more profoundly than the ocean did... Back to the top

Using children for selfish ends: Editorial(Gulf News)
gulfnews.com, 28/1/2005, 07:31 (UAE) . LTTE will not win hearts if it recruits child soldiers from tsunami affected areas... Back to the top

Tsunami Warning Centers to Be Created
Associated Press , Sat January 29, 2005 07:33 EST . JOSEPH COLEMAN : PHUKET, Thailand (AP) - Delegates at a conference in Thailand decided Saturday to create several regional tsunami warning centers around southern Asia that would protect the area from killer waves, a U... Back to the top

U.S. troops to be out of Sri Lanka in 2 weeks
Associated Press, Sat January 29, 2005 08:56 EST . COLOMBO, Jan. 29 (Kyodo) The U.S. military relief operation in tsunami-hit Sri Lanka will end in two weeks, a senior U... Back to the top

Tamil Tigers deliver peace blow
BBC, Friday, 28 January, 2005, 15:34 GMT . Sri Lanka's Tamil Tiger rebels have ruled out talks on tsunami reconstruction being used to revive the country's peace process... Back to the top

N.C. family learns lesson of faith, humanity through tsunami
Associated Press, Sat January 29, 2005 13:48 EST . JOHN DESANTIS - - WILMINGTON, N.C. (AP) The kitchen of Joyce Fernando's Echo Farms home is a world away and then some from Sri Lanka - 's western coast, where the registered nurse, her psychiatrist husband and two sons found themselves amid a moving wall of people on Dec... Back to the top

1/29/05-Longview Disaster Relief Team Home From Sri Lanka
Yahoo, January 29, 2005, 23:15 EDT. The east Texas disaster relief team is back home after a two week mission to tsunami ravaged Sri Lanka... Back to the top

Sri Lankan mother appeals to president to get back disputed child
Associated Press, Fri January 28, 2005 19:29 EST. KRISHAN FRANCIS - KALMUNAI, Sri Lanka (AP) - Jenita Jeyarajah says the hospital visits to the infant boy she claims is her son are like visiting a prisoner in jail - she can't feed him, cuddle him, even lift him... Back to the top

LTTE massacre site is haven for Tamil victims
BBC, 28 January, 2005 - 18:43 GMT. A place where one of the most devastating atrocities was committed during the history of the ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka, had become a symbol of peace and coexistence after the tsunami... Back to the top

‘Tsunami’ panic in the coastline
BBC, 28 January, 2005 - 17:37 GMT. Sri Lankan authorities are creating panic among the depressed people after tsunami, a specialist on mass communication said... Back to the top

Religious problems muddy quake relief
iafrica.com, Sat, 29 Jan 2005 . Religious intolerance could derail crucial relief efforts in tsunami-hit Asian nations, US groups warned on Friday amid isolated reports of proselytising in Sri Lanka, Indonesia and India... Back to the top

Pope sends envoy to tsunami-hit Indonesia and Sri Lanka
Associated Press, Sat January 29, 2005 12:59 EST . VATICAN CITY (AP) Pope John Paul II has sent an envoy to Indonesia and Sri Lanka to help coordinate tsunami relief efforts by Catholic agencies, the Vatican said Saturday... Back to the top

Sri Lanka Tsunami Survivors Saved by Colonial Past
planetark.com, Sat January 27, 2005. GALLE, Sri Lanka - For generations, souvenir-seller M. Samsudeel's family have owed their livelihood to the imposing 17th century Dutch fort in Sri Lanka's southern town of Galle... Back to the top

Sri Lanka issues certificates to over 5000 tsunami victims
xinhuanet.com, Saturday,Jan.29,2005 . COLOMBO, Jan. 29 (Xinhuanet) -- A Sri Lankan official said Saturday that the government has issued death certificates to over 5,000 people who had succumbed to the killer tsunami last month. Registrar General LK Ratnasiri said that the certificates wouldbe important for the next of kin of the deceased to lay claims to their properties, belongings and insurance claims etc... Back to the top

US applauds India s post-tsunami assistance to Sri Lanka
deepikaglobal.com, Saturday, January 29, 2005 . Colombo, Jan 29 (UNI) The US government is impressed by the post-tsunami rescue and relief operation in Sri Lanka undertaken by India and its military, a top US embassy official said today... Back to the top

SriLankan Airlines flying high
chennaionline.com, Sat January 29, 2005. SriLankan Airlines, South Asia's leading airline, announced that its traffic on Indian flights has jumped by 30 per cent during the first nine months of the FY 2004-05 over the same period the previous year... Back to the top

Tamil Tiger rebels drop demand for direct aid; focus on joint body with Sri Lankan government
Associated Press , Fri January 28, 2005 07:11 EST . COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) _ The Tamil Tiger rebels on Friday backed away from a demand to be able to directly receive international funds for tsunami victims, and said they were putting their independence struggle on hold to deal with the disaster... Back to the top

Tamil Tiger rebels deny recruiting tsunami affected children
Associated Press , Friday 28th Jan 2005 09:38GMT. COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) - Tamil Tiger rebels Friday denied claims by the United Nations that they have recruited 40 children to strengthen their ranks since the tsunami hit Sri Lanka last month... Back to the top

Salisbury Doctor Returns From Tsunami-Strickened Sri Lanka
wboc.com, january 28, 2005, 12:35 EDT. SALISBURY- More than a month after the tsunami struck Southeast Asia, people are still struggling to come to grips with their world... Back to the top

Finding Sri Lanka, and then discovering it
csmonitor.com, January 28, 2005. Before the tsunami, Sri Lanka was not easy to enter - at least not for a foreign correspondent... Back to the top

French duo rebuild lives in stricken Sri Lanka
Yahoo, january 28, 2005, 12:35 EDT. KATUKOHILA, Sri Lanka, Jan 28 (AFP) - In the month since the tsunami struck Sri Lanka, Frenchmen Pierre Layac and Jacques Quentin have bought six fishing boats for use by devastated locals, have been operating a pre-school, are building another and are sponsoring a relief medical team... Back to the top

Sri Lanka to make public details of donations
reliefweb.int, Friday 28th Jan 2005 09:30GMT. Sri Lanka on Thursday decided to make public details of the funds it has received from various donors and their accountability, according to a press release from the President's Office... Back to the top

Sri Lanka minister triggers panic with talk of another tsunami
Yahoo, Friday January 28, 05:47 AM . COLOMBO (AFX) - Thousands of people living on tsunami-battered coasts of Sri Lanka fled inland today after Science and Technology Tissa Vitharana's a comments triggered fears that more massive waves were about to hit the island... Back to the top

Sri Lanka survivor to sue state
BBC, Friday 28th Jan 2005 09:35GMT. A tsunami survivor is suing the Sri Lankan government, police and railways, for failing to protect him and his family from the disaster... Back to the top

Universities offer help to students affected by tsunami
Associated Press, Thu January 27, 2005 13:27 EST . - - The University of Louisiana System has offered tuition waivers to the roughly 885 students at its eight schools from affected areas of Indonesia, India, Sri Lanka - and Thailand... Back to the top

Lanka woos tourists with open arms
com, Friday 28th Jan 2005 12:35GMT. Sri Lankan tourism is getting back to normalcy with focus mainly on non-beach destinations in the post-tsunami period... Back to the top

In tsunami-hit Sri Lanka , helping pets means emotional support for victims as well as preventing the spread of disease
Associated Press, Fri January 28, 2005 02:10 EST . TINI TRAN - Associated Press Writer - GALLE, Sri Lanka AP) The villagers come running when they see Dr... Back to the top

Sri Lanka rebuilding step by step
BBC, Friday 28th Jan 2005 09:53GMT. If you want a symbol of how this country is trying to get back on its feet there's no better place to look than the railway line that once ran along the south coast of Sri Lanka... Back to the top

Report from Sri Lanka: Tsunami cleanup effort continues
timescommunity.com, Friday 28th Jan 2005 09:30GMT. Tuesday afternoon, after the huge rally with the kids, we went down to the shore... Back to the top

US peace corps director touring Sri Lanka
Yahoo, Friday, 28 January 2005. Gaddi H. Vasquez, the Director of the United States Peace Corps is touring Sri Lanka... Back to the top

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