The Lanka Academic

 
FEBRUARY 7, 2007 EST, USA
 
QUAERE VERUM
 
VOL. 7, NO. 307

TLA FORUM

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IN MEMORIAM

We have lost a great mathe- matician, engineer, scientist, an old timer of SLNet/LAcNet and a former LAcNet director. Pubudu Dayawansa (Daya) was instrumental in carrying out many LAcNet projects. He was responsible in setting up "Colombo Calling" a website that was designed to carry weekly articles from Sri Lankan Academic community and Human Rights activists. [ More...]
TLA FEATURE CORNER
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
Over 150 killed in a month s violence in Sri Lanka
reliefweb.int, Feb 7, 2007 . COLOMBO, Feb 7, 2007 (Xinhua via COMTEX) -- Over 150 people were killed in violence over the last one month's period in Sri Lanka's restive north and east zones, Prime Minister Ratnasiri Wickramanayake told parliament on Wednesday

Speaking in the monthly parliamentary debate to extend the state of emergency by a further month, Wickramanayake said that some 53 troops and 101 civilians were killed in the escalation of violence.

Some 200 civilians and 181 troops were injured in the clashes, the prime minister added. More... Discuss this story
Published: Wed Feb 7 17:36:04 EST 2007


Sri Lankan police arrest 2 journalists, graphic designer who allegedly helped rebels
Associated Press, Wed February 7, 2007 05:45 EST . BHARATHA MALLAWARACHI - Associated Press Writer - COLOMBO, Sri Lanka - (AP) Sri Lankan police have arrested two journalists and a graphic designer for helping ethnic Tamil rebels in their campaign for an independent homeland, the government said Wednesday.

``Three people including those two journalists were arrested and they have confessed that they carried out attacks'' after receiving training from the rebels, government spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella said.

The journalists, Lalith Seneviratne and Sisira Priyantha, and graphic designer Nihal Senasinghe were arrested on Monday, he said. They worked at Akuna, a bimonthly newspaper, and belong to the country's majority Sinhalese ethnic group.

The men's disappearance on Monday had caused concerns among media groups, which feared for their safety.

Rambukwella said that according to their alleged confessions, ``it's very clear that these three people are directly linked (to the rebels) and have been planning to create a massive calamity in and around Colombo,'' the national capital.

Reporters were shown a video in which Seneviratne said they had been trained by Tamil Tiger rebels in the use of weapons and explosives, and had received automatic rifles, explosives and ammunition.

Military spokesman Brig. Prasad Samarasinghe said the suspects had admitted carrying out several recent bomb blasts in the outskirts of Colombo in which no one was injured. An investigation was under way to determine whether they were linked to two bus bombs last month that killed 21 people, he said.

It was the second recent case in which ethnic Sinhalese have been accused of helping the Tamil rebels. Last month, the Defense Ministry said three Sri Lankan military officers were in custody and would face a court-martial for helping the insurgents.

The Tamil Tigers have been fighting since 1983 to create a separate homeland. A 2002 cease-fire temporarily halted the fighting, but an upsurge in violence last year killed about 3,600 people.

The government says it is willing to give limited autonomy to areas where Tamils live, but the rebels want sweeping autonomy, which the government says will infringe on the island nation's sovereignty. Discuss this story
Published: Wed Feb 7 06:40:57 EST 2007 Back to the top

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Sri Lanka asked to free detained journalists  - Yahoo

Nations pledge not to use child soldiers, but critics complain promise lacks legal weight
Associated Press, Tue February 6, 2007 18:00 EST . JENNY BARCHFIELD - Associated Press Writer - Sierra Leone, Liberia, Congo, Sri Lanka - , Colombia, Sudan and Somalia just some of the nations where children have been recruited as fighters were among nearly 60 countries that approved the so-called Paris Commitments, although it was not formally signed. All 27 nations of the European Union also endorsed the text.

The U.S. government did not participate in the conference. The State Department said the administration objected to some of the wording of the documents, but added that the U.S. remained committed to its treaty obligations to prevent the use of children in combat.

At least 250,000 boys and girls are believed to still be fighting in about a dozen conflicts worldwide, according to the United Nations. They are used as soldiers, messengers, spies and porters and sometimes forced to provide sexual services.

The document requires its backers to ``spare no effort'' to end the use of soldiers younger than 18 and stipulates that countries must demobilize underage fighters, even during wartime. It also says that anyone who recruits children may not receive amnesty under peace agreements.

Ivory Coast's foreign minister, Youssouf Bakayoko, called the pledge a ``breakthrough.''

``Countries will now have to do their all to make sure this text is respected,'' he told The Associated Press.

Ivory Coast was one of seven countries monitored under a 2005 U.N. Security Council resolution aimed at preventing child recruitment. The West African nation has been split between the government-controlled south and rebel-held north since a failed coup in 2002 sparked a civil war.

French Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy insisted the document is more than just ``good words'' and ``will have a great political value.''

Others were less optimistic.

Former child soldier Ishamel Beah, who made an emotional appeal Monday for strong action to keep children from returning to battle, told AP he fears the text will prove just more ``empty promises.''

``It's more concrete than past documents and that's good, but I'm worried it won't be properly applied,'' said Beah, who at 13 joined an armed faction after his mother, father and two brothers were killed in Sierra Leone's civil war in the 1990s.

On Monday, the now 26-year-old Beah told delegates from 58 countries and about 100 international agencies and non-governmental groups that once he started fighting, ``taking a gun and shooting someone was as easy as drinking a glass of water.''

He pleaded for rehabilitation programs to help former child soldiers recover from the trauma of the battlefield. Beah himself went through such a program in Sierra Leone's capital. He now lives in New York and has written a book about his experiences.

Participants at the conference also drafted another text a guideline that gives governments, aid groups and educators concrete recommendations on how best to prevent the recruitment of children and reintegrate former child soldiers into society.

The 31-page document urges caregivers to try to rekindle former fighters' family bonds and offer a wide range of educational and vocational training, from literacy classes to apprenticeships.

Goll-Kotchi, the Liberian deputy minister, said the guidelines are a good step but she is skeptical about the recommendations and holds little hope for rehabilitating many former fighters.

She said Liberia, which is recovering from a 1989-2003 civil war, is grappling with how to return former child soldiers to civilian life. Reinsertion programs like those recommended in the guidelines often create more problems than they solve, she said.

``In communities where the former child soldiers are going through rehabilitation there's a lot of resentment, because people think it's unfair these kids are being rewarded for killing and destroying property while their children get nothing,'' Goll-Kotchi said.

An estimated 95,000 former child soldiers have taken part in recent demobilization programs in countries from Asia to Latin America, including Afghanistan, Haiti, Somalia, Sri Lanka - and Congo.

The recommendations also focus on strategies to help girls, who account for nearly 40 percent of recruits in certain armed groups and are particularly vulnerable to sexual abuse, conference organizers said.

Such girls are frequently rejected by their families and have an especially hard time returning to society. They also have regularly been overlooked in prior rehabilitation programs the world over, organizers said.

As a way of combatting such treatment, the guidelines recommend hiring female staffers throughout the rehabilitation process and making reproductive health care facilities available at rehab sites.

Last week, the International Criminal Court took up the issue of child soldiers by ordering Congolese warlord Thomas Lubanga be tried on charges of recruiting children and sending them to kill and be killed in a bloody tribal conflict. The court, set up in 2002, has expanded its definition of war crimes to include the drafting of children under age 15 into armed conflict. Discuss this story
Published: Wed Feb 7 06:41:38 EST 2007 Back to the top

Related News Stories
·
Nations endorse agreement to keep children from fighting wars  - Associated Press

Sri Lankan air force bombs Tamil Tiger positions in northeast
Associated Press, Tue February 6, 2007 07:56 EST . BHARATHA MALLAWARACHI - Associated Press Writer - COLOMBO, Sri Lanka - (AP) Sri Lankan air force helicopters bombed two Tamil Tiger rebel positions near a strategic port and air base in northeastern Trincomalee District Tuesday while in capital Colombo, a bomb on display accidentally exploded, wounding 17 people, military said... Back to the top

Making Globalization Work
The Hindu, 7 Feb 2007 - 18:45 EDT. Listen to the Lecture! Instructions: The audio is available in mp3 format... Back to the top

Ranil lashes out at Rajapaksa regime
hindu, February 07, 2007. COLOMBO: In a hard-hitting speech, Leader of the Opposition Ranil Wickremesinghe on Tuesday told Parliament that after the recent induction of defectors from his party into the Government the United National Party (UNP) finds it "impossible" to work with the Mahinda Rajapaksa Government... Back to the top

UNHCR distributes aid to more than 2000 host families in Jaffna ...
alertnet.org, 7 February 2007 - 09:30 EDT. NHCR has been concerned about the plight of internally displaced people – IDPs – in the peninsula since August, when thousands of people fled their homes to escape renewed fighting between government forces and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE)... Back to the top

Sri Lanka parliament disrupted over opposition defections
Yahoo, February 07, 2007. Sri Lanka's parliamentary proceedings were disrupted Tuesday for over 30 minutes when opposition legislators demanded explanation from the speaker on the seating arrangements of ministers... Back to the top

US lawmakers ask Bush to appoint peace envoy for Sri Lanka
Yahoo, Tue Feb 6. A group 38 US lawmakers have asked President George W. Bush to appoint a special envoy to help bring about peace in conflict-ridden Sri Lanka... Back to the top

Sri Lanka geared up to come up trumps against India
hindu.com, 7 February 2007 - 09:30 EDT. olkata, Feb. 7 (PTI): Leaving behind the bitter memories of the 1-6 drubbing it received against India 15 months ago, Sri Lanka are now all geared up to come up trumps against the hosts in the four-match ODI series beginning here tomorrow. "Lot of things have changed since then... Back to the top

SriLankan Airlines continues to play dominant role in travel to ...
albawaba.com, 7 February 2007 - 09:30 EDT. SriLankan Airlines continues to serve an important function in carrying the vast majority of travellers and cargo to and from Sri Lanka, at a time when many airlines are reducing their levels of activity to Colombo... Back to the top

Bomb explosion in capital Colombo wounds at least 14 civilians, military says
Associated Press, Tue February 6, 2007 05:43 EST . COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) _ At least fourteen people were hurt at an exhibition when a bomb on display exploded, a doctor and the Sri Lankan military said... Back to the top

Sri Lankan migrant workers rescued after being ``stranded'' in Iraq
Associated Press, Tue February 6, 2007 08:55 EST . FRANK JORDANS - Associated Press Writer - The men then managed to make contact with a local U... Back to the top

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