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International News Updates |
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16 May 2009 WSWS -- In another cold-blooded war
crime, the Sri Lankan military shelled the only
remaining hospital in the “no-fire zone” on the
north-eastern coast on Wednesday, killing dozens of
people. A government doctor told Agence France Presse
that three shells hit the makeshift hospital. The
attack was the second on the hospital in two days.
Dr V. Shanmugarajah told the Associated Press by
telephone it was the third time that the hospital had
come under fire this month. One shell landed in an
administration office of the hospital, while another
hit a ward filled with patients.
Dr Thurairaja Varatharajah said the latest attack
had killed at least 50 people, including patients,
relatives and a health aide, and wounded another 60.
He said shelling had continued throughout the day. On
Tuesday, at least 49 people were killed by army
shelling of the same facility.
“We are unable to treat the people properly because
a lot of the aides have fled the hospital. We have to
go into bunkers when there is shelling and try to
treat them as much as we can when there is a lull,”
Varatharajah said.
A third unnamed health official told the Associated
Press on Thursday that though the number of wounded
was increasing, the hospital had virtually been
abandoned because it was too dangerous to work there.
About 400 badly wounded patients remained inside, in
desperate need of medical attention, along with 100
bodies waiting to be buried.
Tamilnet, which supports the separatist
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), put the
number of casualties from Wednesday’s shelling at 100
dead, including children, patients and a doctor. A
medical staff member told the web site: “Looking at
the hospital and hearing the civilians cry, you feel
only disaster.”
Responsibility for this disaster rests squarely
with the Sri Lankan government and military high
command, which have rejected all appeals for an end to
fighting and pursued the offensive with criminal
indifference to the toll of civilian life.
President Mahinda Rajapakse and his brother,
Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapakse, told the Indian
media on Monday that the LTTE would be crushed within
the next 48 hours. The remaining patch of LTTE-held
territory is no more than a few square kilometres in
size and, according to UN estimates, contains around
50,000 civilians.
The government had proclaimed the entire area as a
no-fire zone in February, but redemarcated the area as
the army renewed its offensive this week against the
remaining LTTE fighters—estimated at between 200 and
500. The army has shelled the makeshift hospital in
the Mullaivaikal East primary school despite the fact
that it is within the government’s revised no-fire
zone.
Conditions inside the zone are horrific. The
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)
reported yesterday that its supply vessels have been
unable to land limited aid since May 9. “As fighting
goes on unabated, civilians are forced to seek
protection in hand-dug bunkers, making it even more
difficult to fetch scarce drinking water and food,” a
statement explained. ICRC director of operations
Pierre Krähenbühl said: “Our staff are witnessing an
unimaginable humanitarian catastrophe.”
The Sri Lankan government and military have
responded to growing evidence of their war crimes with
a series of lies. Their spokesmen continue to insist
that the army is not using heavy weapons in their
assault, that the troops are engaged in a “rescue
operation” and that the LTTE is to blame for using the
civilians as “human shields”. The military boasted
that 1,500 civilians had been able to flee the no-fire
zone on Thursday.
There is certainly mounting evidence that the
remaining LTTE fighters have forcibly tried to prevent
civilians from fleeing. The LTTE’s use of Tamil
civilians as pawns in their futile efforts to pressure
the major powers for a ceasefire flows from its
separatist program and perspective, which always
represented the interests of the Tamil bourgeoisie,
not the Tamil masses.
However, the LTTE’s actions in no way justify the
army’s deliberate attacks on civilian targets, which
is a war crime under international law. The shelling
of the remaining hospital is part of a strategy that
the military has employed repeatedly over the past
three years of fighting. Artillery shelling and aerial
bombardment are used to terrorise the civilian
population and create a stampede, opening the way for
an all-out offensive on LTTE forces.
The US-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) released
another report on Tuesday based on new satellite
imagery and eyewitness accounts that again expose
government claims not to be using heavy weapons in the
no-fire zone. Local HRW sources reported that more
than 400 civilians have been killed and over 1,000
wounded since May 9.
HRW Asia director Brad Adams said: “Recent
satellite photos and witness accounts show the brutal
shelling of civilians in the conflict area goes on.
Neither the Sri Lankan army nor the Tamil Tigers
appear to have any reluctance in using civilians as
cannon fodder.”
One victim, 35, told HRW she spent days in shallow
bunkers to escape from government artillery and was
prevented by the LTTE from escaping. She narrowly
escaped death on May 9, when a shell struck near a
bunker in which she and 15 others were sheltering. The
tractor that had just been used to excavate the bunker
was destroyed. “If it hadn't been for the tractor, we
would have all been dead,” she said.
Another civilian said he was with his family in a
dug-out-trench without any cover for several days.
They were attacked from all sides and “only left the
bunker to get food and water for our three children”.
On May 9, a shell killed his 15-year-old nephew and
wounded his nephew’s older brother and sister. He
thought the army was attacking the LTTE fighters in
the nearby jungles.
The same man accused the LTTE of atrocities. As
several hundred tried to flee the no-fire zone in
early April, he said, “They [the LTTE] just opened
fire on the first row of people. I don't know whether
they lived or died, however. We fell to the ground as
soon as the firing started. When it stopped, we ran
back as quickly as we could. There were children among
the people who got shot as well.”
After weeks of atrocities in northern Sri Lanka,
the UN Security Council met in formal session on
Wednesday for the first time to consider the
situation. The outcome was a non-binding resolution
that effectively backed the Sri Lankan government and
its criminal war. It “strongly condemned” the LTTE for
its “acts of terrorism over many years” and urged it
to “lay down its arms and allow the tens of the
thousands of civilians to leave”.
Despite the evidence of the Sri Lankan military’s
war crimes, the resolution did not censure, let alone
condemn, the Colombo government. While expressing
“grave concern” for trapped civilians and urging the
Sri Lankan army to ensure their safety, the Security
Council did not call on the government to halt the
fighting, only to end its use of heavy weapons. It
also justified the communal war by acknowledging “the
legitimate right of the government of Sri Lanka to
combat terrorism”.
The conflict in Sri Lanka is no more a “war on
terrorism” than the US-led occupations of Afghanistan
and Iraq. The civil war that has lasted for more than
a quarter of a century and cost at least 70,000 lives
is a direct product of decades of anti-Tamil
discrimination by successive Colombo governments. The
Rajapakse regime is determined to crush the LTTE to
consolidate the political and economic domination of
the island’s Sinhalese elites, at the expense of
working people of all ethnic backgrounds.
The UN debate had nothing to do with concern on the
part of the major powers for the plight of Tamil
civilians. The US, Britain and France promoted the UN
resolution as a means of pressuring the Colombo
government to implement a “political solution” to end
the war in a way that suits their strategic and
economic interests in Sri Lanka and the broader
region. China, Russia and Japan have resisted such a
move, hoping to curry favour with Rajapakse and boost
their own standing in Colombo.
As the war in Sri Lanka draws to its tragic close,
all the powers that have backed the Rajapakse
government for the past three years are now
manoeuvring to exploit the carnage they have helped
inflict on working people throughout the island.
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