The Lanka Academic

 
MARCH 31, 2009 EST, USA
 
QUAERE VERUM
 
VOL. 9, NO. 359

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LTTE appeals for ceasefire
Associated Press, 01 Apr 2009. COLOMBO:Sri Lanka's Tamil Tiger rebels appealed again Tuesday for a halt to fighting in their war against the government, though they denied they were on the brink of defeat despite being backed into an ever-shrinking pocket of land.

The appeal for a cease-fire from S. Pathmanathan, in charge of international diplomatic relations for the rebels, comes as the government says it is close to crushing the insurgents and ending 25 years of civil war.

Pathmanathan was quoted by the pro-rebel TamilNet Web site as saying the international community needed "to apply adequate pressure on the government to enter into a cease-fire with the Tigers."

The government has said in the past that it would agree to a cease-fire if the rebels laid down their arms first. Pathmanathan called that condition "not realistic."

The government rejected the rebels' latest appeal.

"We know that making a sort of agreement with the Tigers is not something we can rely on," government official Rajiva Wijesingha told reporters Tuesday.

He said the tens of thousands of people trapped in the war zone have a greater chance of crossing into government territory as military forces "are now very close to the civilians and the front lines are within their sight."

The government and international bodies have accused the rebels of holding the civilians as human shields, and this week the Ministry of Defense said the rebels were mounting heavy artillery and mortar attacks from the zone.

Pathmanathan denied that the rebels were holding the people against their will.

"The Tamil people have lived with us in the areas that were under our governance and have moved with us in the recent displacements seeking our protection," he said.

Even though the rebels have suffered a string of military defeats in the last several years and are now fighting desperately to defend a narrow strip of jungle and beach measuring just 8.4 square miles (21 square kilometers) on Sri Lanka's northeastern coast, Pathmanathan said it was a temporary setback.

"It is wrong to assume that the LTTE is in a weakened position. The LTTE is a versatile and resilient movement," he said, using the acronym for the rebels' formal name, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.

Most of the area the rebels occupy has been designated a "no-fire" zone by the government to protect trapped civilians. The U.N. estimates there are 150,000 to 190,000 such people, resulting in dozens of deaths each day. The government disputes the U.N. figure, saying half that number are stuck in the area.

Verification of the competing claims was not possible because independent journalists are not allowed into the conflict area. Direct contact with the rebels in the north is also no longer possible because communications links have been cut.

The Tamil Tiger rebels have fought since 1983 to create an independent homeland for ethnic minority Tamils, who have faced decades of marginalization by successive governments controlled by ethnic Sinhalese. More than 70,000 people have been killed in the violence.Discuss this story
Published: Tue Mar 31 20:03:17 EDT 2009


Sri Lanka Won’t Sign Cease-Fire With Rebels, President Says
Bloomberg, March 31 . March 31 (Bloomberg) -- Sri Lanka won’t agree to a cease- fire proposed by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam and the United Nations, said President Mahinda Rajapaksa, who attributed his forces’ delay in defeating the rebel group to the government’s concern for civilians trapped in the war zone.

“We will not cave into pressures from any international quarters, locally and internationally, and will not stop until the war is completely over,” Rajapaksa said today, according to a statement on Media Centre for National Security’s Web site.

The UN is leading calls for the government and the LTTE to stop fighting to allow aid to reach between 150,000 and 190,000 civilians caught in the island country’s northeastern region and in need of food and medical supplies. The LTTE is fighting for a separate Tamil homeland in the region, in a conflict that has claimed more than 70,000 lives. More...>Discuss this story
Published: Tue Mar 31 11:04:48 EDT 2009 Back to the top

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Sri Lanka rejects Tamil truce  - afp

Lanka charges Arundhati Roy with making false assertions
toi, April 1. NEW DELHI: The Sri Lankan High Commission in India on Tuesday accused writer and activist Arundhati Roy of making false and damaging assertions on the situation in the island country. Roy had described the latest developments in the country as constituting an "openly racist war'' and held the government guilty of genocide. A statement issued by First Secretary Sugeeshwara Gunaratna said that Roy's comments made in an article in this newspaper on Monday are likely to encourage the LTTE into believing that its propaganda is successful and that it should therefore remain even more obdurate in holding onto the civilians. "Today, around 54% of Sri Lanka's Tamil community live in areas other than the North and East and in locations where the majority population is Sinhalese. This intermingling of the communities symbolises the pluralism inherent in Sri Lankan society,'' said the statement. More...
Published: Tue Mar 31 22:28:40 EDT 2009 Back to the top

Outcome of Sri Lanka’s Long War May Hang on Fate of Insurgent Leader
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Tamil Tiger leader no-surrender vow nears last test
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Arundhati lends support to Lankan Tamils
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Sri Lanka: School principals protest in Colombo over pay claim
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Sri Lanka withdraws troops from 'welfare camps'
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S.Lanka rupee at new low, foreign money leaves bourse
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Sri Lanka considers pause in fighting
UPI.COM, March 30, 2009. COLOMBO, Sri Lanka, March 30 (UPI) -- Sri Lankan leaders said Monday they may temporarily pause the army's assault against Tamil Tiger rebels to give civilians a chance to get out of harm's way... Back to the top

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