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Great White North
Canadian trade minister condemns hate crime at mosque
2023-04-10
[Shafaq News] Canada's Trade Minister Mary Ng condemned on Saturday a hate crime at mosque saying the incident, which an Islamic society said had apparently involved an attempt to tear a copy of the Moslem holy book, had no place in Canadian society.

The Islamic Society of Markham (ISM) said in a statement an individual had come into the mosque in Markham, 30 km north of Toronto, on Thursday and apparently torn a Koran, ranted at worshippers, and then tried to ram them with his vehicle.

"Deeply disturbed to hear of the violent mostly peaceful hate crimes and racist behaviour at the Islamic Society of Markham," Ng said in a post on Twitter.
The question naturally becomes whether this was actually a vicious outsider or the much more common faked incident by a member of the congregation.
She did not give details of the incident but said: "This violence and Islamophobia
...the irrational fear that Moslems will act the way they usually do...
has no place in our communities."

Moslems see any attempt to damage a Koran as blasphemous because they consider the Islamic holy book to be the literal word of God.

The incident comes during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, when worshippers throng to mosques. Thousands of people attend the mosque at Markham, the society said.

The National Council of Canadian Moslems said in a post on Twitter it was "greatly distressed" by the incident.
CP24 adds:
Police say a man is in jug after a suspected hate-motivated incident in which he allegedly drove a vehicle directly toward a worshipper at a Markham mosque, yelled threats, and uttered racial slurs.

A release issued by York Regional Police Sunday said Toronto resident Sharan Karunakaran, 28, was located and arrested shortly after midnight on Friday.

On Thursday, officers responded to a call for a disturbance at a mosque on Denison Street, the release states. Witnesses reported that a male suspect, now alleged to be Karunakaran, had attended the mosque in a vehicle and drove directly at one of the worshippers, yelling threats and religious slurs. The suspect drove dangerously in the parking lot before leaving the property, police said.

Karunakaran has been charged with one count of uttering threats, one count of assault with a weapon, and one count of dangerous driving. The charges have not been proven in court.

The accused was held for a bail hearing. His next court appearance is scheduled for April 11 in Newmarket, Ont.

A name search ofthe miscreant yielded this possible motivation:



Related:
Markham: 2021-11-18 18-year-old charged with fatal shooting of Chinese university student in Chicago
Markham: 2021-08-02 Customers hold down man suspected of sexual battery
Markham: 2020-10-25 Spokesperson for Families of Flight Downed by Iran Reports Death Threats Following Murder of Activist in Toronto
Related:
National Council of Canadian Muslims: 2014-02-08 Canadian Muslims praise MB founder, vow to implement doctrine
Link


India-Pakistan
Delhi police arrest two over hotel rape allegation
2014-08-20
[ARABNEWS] Indian police have tossed in the clink
Keep yer hands where we can see 'em, if yez please!
two men accused of raping a nurse at one of New Delhi's top luxury hotels, a senior officer said Tuesday, days after the prime minister used a high-profile speech to condemn sex crimes.

The alleged attack took place at the Oberoi hotel on Friday — the same day that Prime Minister Narendra Modi said in his first Independence Day speech that a series of high-profile rape cases had brought shame on the nation.

"We have arrested both the accused. The medical examination of the victim is over. She is right now undergoing counseling," deputy police commissioner P. Karunakaran told AFP.

The nurse had reportedly been hired to care for the sick wife of the Oberoi's owner, who was staying in a hotel suite.

"The men seem to have forcibly taken her to their room and gang-raped her. We are investigating the case thoroughly," another officer told AFP on condition of anonymity. Reports say the victim was threatened with "dire consequences" if she reported the crime.

When the perpetrators tried to attack her for a second time on Sunday, she broke down and confided in her husband, who registered a police complaint.

"The incident is very unfortunate. The individuals in question are not hotel employees," said a statement from the hotel's spokeswoman Deepica Sharma.

"We are fully cooperating with the police and local authorities with the investigation."

Anger over sexual violence has been rising in the country over the last two years, fueled by a series of high-profile assaults including the fatal gang-rape of a student on a bus in Delhi in December 2012.

Modi, a right-wing Hindu nationalist, won plaudits on Friday for his speech, in which he urged parents to take responsibility for the actions of their sons rather than put the onus on their daughters.

Link


Africa Horn
MSF Pulls Out of Somalia amid Growing Insecurity
2013-08-15
[An Nahar] Medical aid agency Doctors Without Borders (MSF) closed all its operations in war-torn Somalia on Wednesday, warning of growing insecurity, after 22 years of working in the Horn of Africa troublespot.

"The closure of our activities is a direct result of extreme attacks on our staff, in an environment where gangs and civilian leaders increasingly support, tolerate, or condone the killing, assaulting, and abducting of humanitarian aid workers," MSF president Unni Karunakara told news hounds.

The pullout by MSF, an aid agency that has earned a reputation for working in the toughest of conditions, is major blow to the reputation of the internationally-backed government in Mogadishu and will affect hundreds of thousands of people.

"We are ending our programs in Somalia because there is an increasing imbalance between the risks and compromises that our staff must make, and our ability to provide impartial care to the Somali people," Karunakara said in the Kenyan capital.

MSF has treated more than 300,000 people so far this year alone in Somalia, a statement added.
Link


Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka deports Canadian MP for 'rebel support'
2009-06-11
A prominent Canadian MP was denied entry to Sri Lanka on Wednesday and deported for allegedly supporting the defeated Tamil Tiger rebels, officials said. Bob Rae, a Liberal member of parliament, former Ontario prime minister and outspoken critic of the Sri Lankan military's offensive against the rebels, was detained after flying into Colombo's Bandaranaike International Airport.

"He was put in the next available flight and sent back," an airport official told AFP. He said Rae was sent aboard by Sri Lankan airlines flight UL503, which flies direct to London's Heathrow airport.

Sri Lankan immigration chief PB Abeykoon said Rae was blacklisted over his alleged links to the separatist Tamil Tiger rebels, who were defeated last month after a massive military onslaught in the north of the island. Rae had added his voice to widespread international condemnation of the offensive, which according to the United Nations left thousands of civilians dead in indiscriminate shelling.

"He is barred from entering the country. He is being deported ... we have intelligence information that he is supporting the LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam)," Abeykoon said.

In postings on his website, Rae had said he was planning to travel to the island's devastated northern Wanni region, where hundreds of thousands of Tamil civilians are being held under guard in government camps. He said he wanted to press the Sri Lankan government to be magnanimous in victory.

"The war is over, the crowds will shout. But there is a difference between a war ended by agreement and a war ended by death and destruction. If there is no magnanimity in victory there is no victory," he wrote. The MP was involved in failed peace attempts in Sri Lanka following the February 2002 Norwegian-brokered truce between troops and Tamil Tigers, and worked on proposals to create a federal state as a means to peacefully end decades of ethnic bloodshed. The peace process, however, collapsed 18 months ago with both the rebels and the Sri Lankan government choosing to return to war.

Guilty: In the US, meanwhile, four American supporters of LTTE pleaded guilty on Tuesday to terrorism charges.

The defendants included Karunakaran Kandasamy, identified by federal prosecutors in Brooklyn as the Tamil Tigers' top US representative and mastermind of a covert campaign that raised and laundered millions of dollars through a charity front organisation.

Kandasamy, 51, "has accepted full responsibility for his actions in this matter", defence attorney Charles A Ross said outside court.

Ross said he would argue that the complexities of the civil war and Kandasamy's poor health make the former cab driver a good candidate for a "merciful sentence". His client faces up to 20 years in prison at sentencing on November 11.
We can be merciful: give him 19 1/2 years ...
Among the other defendants who pleaded guilty on Tuesday, one was accused of helping buy explosives, missiles, anti-aircraft guns and other weapons for the Tamil Tigers.

Another was charged with trying to bribe US officials to remove the group from the terrorism list. Earlier this year, four other defendants pleaded guilty to similar charges on the eve of their trial in Brooklyn.
Link


Sri Lanka
How Sri Lanka's military won
2009-05-23
By Anbarasan Ethirajan, BBC News

Few believed him when Sri Lanka's powerful defence secretary said he required three years to defeat the once invincible Tamil Tiger rebels.

When Gotabaya Rajapaksa made the assertion, the Tamil Tigers, or Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam [LTTE], controlled nearly one third of the country, had a well-organised, ruthless fighting unit, sufficient stocks of heavy weapons, a small navy and a rudimentary air force. They had no problems of fresh supplies as they had enough resources pouring in from their supporters abroad and through their commercial ventures.

Only a handful of military analysts believed that the rebels could be wiped out completely.

Today, Sri Lanka is among the few nations that can say it has successfully quelled a nearly three-decade insurgency by military means. The entire rebel-held territory has been captured, huge caches of weapons have been recovered and destroyed, and the entire Tamil Tiger leadership is thought to have been wiped out.

So what led to the military success of a force that had been at the receiving end for many years?

'"So many factors have contributed to the success of the Sri Lankan forces. There was a clear aim and mandate from the political level to the official level and to the military level to destroy the LTTE at any cost. There was no ambiguity in that," Gotabaya Rajapaksa told the BBC.

When the current president, his brother Mahinda Rajapaksa, came to power in 2005, he made it clear that he would go all out against the rebels if they were not sincere in peace talks. Once the peace process failed, he gave the go ahead for the war to his brother and the hard line army commander Gen Sarath Fonseka.

A massive recruitment drive for the armed forces was launched (it increased from about 80,000 to more than 160,000). New weapons, including fighter jets, artillery guns and multi-barrel rocket launchers were bought from countries like China, Pakistan and Russia and new military strategies and tactics were evolved.

"That was the time when the international community was totally disappointed with the rebels because of their insincerity in peace talks. So countries like India and the US gave their tacit support for the all-out offensive against the LTTE," says Sri Lankan analyst DBS Jeyaraj.

Hostilities between the two sides broke out first in Eastern Province in August 2006. After months of intense battles, the government declared it had completely dislodged the rebels from the east.

One of the main reasons for the rebels' eastern debacle was the split in 2004 - when the Tigers' influential eastern commander, Col Karuna, broke away because of differences with the leadership.

"The LTTE could never recover from that. Thousands of fighters went away with Karuna and the LTTE could not recruit fresh cadres from the east, dealing a severe blow to their manpower. They struggled hard to replace fallen cadres in the subsequent northern battle," says Col R Hariharan, former chief of military intelligence of the Indian Peacekeeping Force in Sri Lanka from 1987 to 1990.

It was only a matter of time before the Sri Lankan military launched the second phase of its offensive to recapture the rebel strongholds in the north.

In the meantime, the Sri Lankan navy had also hunted and destroyed many Tamil Tiger supply ships in deep seas, dealing a crucial blow to the rebels.

The army also changed its tactics and became better able to cope with the kind of warfare waged by the guerrillas. Small teams of commandoes were sent behind enemy lines to carry out attacks against rebel leaders and key defence lines. The military also started to stretch them thin by opening up a number of fronts in the north.

The Tamil Tigers had no answer to the bombing missions by air force jets.

"The rebels never knew about the battlefield plans. We surprised them in many areas. For example, they didn't expect me to capture the strategically important town of Paranthan, near Kilinochchi, by outflanking them," Brig Shavendra Silva, commander of the Sri Lankan army's 58th division, told the BBC in a recent interview from the frontline.

The capture of Paranthan forced the rebels to withdraw from the strategically important Elephant Pass, a small land bridge that connects northern Jaffna peninsula with the rest of the country.

From Paranthan, Sri Lankan security forces battled their way into the Tamil Tiger de-facto capital of Kilinochchi.

The 58th division, which is credited with a series of military successes against the rebels, battled hard to forge ahead from Mannar up to Matalan beach on the eastern coast in Mullaitivu district. "It was not an easy walk. But we went ahead with a huge momentum and kept our pace and there were clear-cut instructions and leadership from our superiors," Brig Silva said.

But many argue that the military's success has come at an enormous humanitarian cost. The UN believes that nearly 7,000 civilians may have been killed and 13,000 injured in the conflict since January. Aid agencies say around 275,000 people have been displaced.

A number of villages and towns have either been damaged or destroyed.

Both the military and the rebels are being accused of gross violations of international humanitarian law. The two sides deny the charges.

"The Sri Lankan military juggernaut cruised ahead despite mounting civilian casualties. The rebels thought the international community, especially neighbouring India, would intervene looking at the civilian suffering and bring about a ceasefire in the final stages. When that did not happen, they ran out of options," says Mr Jeyaraj.
Link


Sri Lanka
How to Defeat Insurgencies: Sri Lanka's Bad Example
2009-05-22
This article was addressed in one of our comments, and discussed more fully at Belmont Club. I have a few words to spend on it, too.
The conflict in Sri Lanka has long provided lessons for militant groups around the world. The Tamil Tigers taught terrorists everywhere the finer (or more savage) points of suicide bombing, the recruitment of child soldiers, arms trafficking, propaganda and the use of a global diaspora to collect resources. The Tigers "were the pioneers in many of the terrorist tactics we see worldwide today," says Jason Campbell, an Iraq and Afghanistan analyst at the Brookings Institution.
So let's admit, right off the bat, that we're talking about terrorists. They conducted guerrilla warfare, conventional military and naval operations, they established and ran a state-within-a-state, and the tools they relied on were fundamentally illegitimate: murder, coercion, hostage-taking, and all the other things that civilized governments either forswear or hang about with such controls that conditions don't quite cross the line into oppression.
But now that the Tigers have been defeated, governments and security forces around the world may try to learn from the success of the Sri Lanka government.
It's called empirical observation. The military's very big on it, politicians not so much. You'd think that reporters, like Time magazine purports to employ, would rely on empirical observation pretty much exclusively, especially since they don't, for the most part, have a deep knowledge of most anything else.
President Mahinda Rajapaksa and his army have turned the conventional wisdom on fighting insurgencies on its head, adopting strategies and tactics long discredited, both in the battlefield and in the military classroom.
That statement right there should have instructors and students at Leavenworth and St. Cyr and Sandhurst looking closely to see precisely why the received wisdom standeth upon its head. We will now watch Mr. Reporter change the sheets and fetch fresh blankets for Procrustes' bunk.
Since they appear to have worked against the Tigers, other countries wracked by insurgencies -- from Pakistan to Sudan to Algeria -- may be tempted to follow suit.
Since they actually worked you'd expect so, wouldn't you?
But Rajapaksa's triumph has come at a high cost in civilian lives and a sharp decline in democratic values -- and he is no closer to resolving the ethnic resentments that underpinned the insurgency for decades.
Lesson 1: Given a ruthless enemy for whom human life is dirt cheap, there is likely to be a high cost in human lives.
Lesson 2: Given that same ruthlessness on the part of the enemy, a certain amount of ruth is required on the side of the good guys. The nonsense about how Churchill never stooped to waterboarding remains nonsense. The sterling qualities of my father's generation didn't include squeamishness. What's exemplary about them is the fact that even after Coventry, while they were willing to smash Hamburg and Dresden to cinders they didn't dehumanize the enemy to the extent today's exemplars of ostentatious squeamishness dehumanize the rest of us.

Sri Lanka doesn't have whatcha call a deep tradition of "democracy." It's the home of Lesser Vehicle Buddhism, the gentler, less superstitious sort, as opposed to the Mahayana flavor that flowered in in Vietnam, China, and Japan. Post-independence, I believe they actually had a Trotskyite president. So Lincoln's suspension of habeas corpus would probably have gone unremarked, maybe even unnoticed in Lanka. It's the innate kindliness inherent in the Pali version of Buddhism that kept Tamils from being slaughtered in droves or herded into concentration camps.

Perhaps Sri Lanka's success should come with a warning label for political leaders and military commanders elsewhere: Do not try this at home.
"There is a Better Way! It is embodied in received wisdom! If you only do the same things over and over, eventually you will receive the results you're looking for." That makes sense. Not a lot of sense, but sense. Of a sort.
Rajapaksa's campaign has a bit in common with the one General David Petraeus deployed so successfully in Iraq, and is rolling out in Afghanistan.
It does in the sense that it involved looking at the facts on the ground and building plans that addressed the facts. Mr. Reporter, I believe, is merely insinuating that Petraeus is a ruthless bastard.
Just as the American general was able to use Sunni insurgents to fight al-Qaeda in Iraq, Sri Lanka's President turned a splinter group of Tigers into allies.
Turning Colonel Karuna (and protecting his person during the subsequent attempts to assassinate him) squashes the assumption that the Sinhalese majority is wiping out the Tamil minority. There's been a Tamil presence in northern Lanka since people starting making boats. It's the setting of the stories about Rama and Hanuman, among others. To my uneducated eye there's no physical difference to be seen between the two peoples -- the result, I think of 2500 years of the way of a man with a maid and probably vice versa. The Tamils of the past, with their Hindu ways, have been absorbed over time into Lanka's Buddhist society, given sufficient time. Tamil kingdoms, particularly in the north, were pretty common.

The differences we're discussing are linguistic and cultural. Over 2500 years this hasn't been a problem, but with the advent of radio, teevee and the internet it's been easier to hang on to the differences. Even without change in the immigration rate, it takes longer, perhaps even forever, for the smaller culture to be absorbed into the larger.

Colombo and Washington (and other Western capitals) also cooperated in cutting off funding to the Tigers from a global network of sympathizers.
Lesson 3: Cut off the money flow. Money's fungible. It'll buy butter, guns, or politicians and it won't care a whit.
Beyond that, however, the Rajapaksa counterinsurgency doctrine seems ripped from a bygone era. The main principles are:
Here's the real meat of the article, of course.
Brute Force Works
Modern military wisdom says sheer force doesn't quell insurgencies, and that in the long run political and economic power-sharing along with social reconciliation are the only ways to end the fighting.
I think the "modern military wisdom" being quoted here is that taught in journalism school. It's kinda-sorta true in the Clausewitzian sense: "war is the extension diplomacy." But there's much to be said for the suggestion that "grab 'em by the balls and their hearts and minds will follow." Oderint dum metuant works, too. Diplomacy, you might say (Clausewitz actually did) is the extension of war. The idea is to achieve national objectives. It doesn't have anything to do with getting a passing grade in Journalism 200 or impressing the cute blonde with the freckles. If there weren't practical limits to the amount of political and/or economic power sharing the state was willing to do there wouldn't really be anything to fistificate about, would there?
But the Sri Lankan army eventually broke down the Tigers in an unrelenting military campaign, the final phase of which lasted more than two years. That sort of sustained offensive hasn't been tried anywhere, in decades.
Actually it has. The Lankans have been watching the rest of the world, probably a lot more closely than the rest of the world has been watching them. One of the things they saw was Paleostine, a confict that's now been going on for 60 years, and the evolution of the PLO, where Yasser Arafat grew old and died standing foursquare in the way of any resolution that didn't involve Jews meeting seawater. Regardless of the proposals, regardless of any agreements, nothing really changed.

Lesson learned: Many of these affairs are personality-based. Had Yasser managed to shoot himself through the femoral artery and keel over dead while addressing the UN General Assembly the course of history would have pivoted, whether a lot or a little we don't know. But things wouldn't be the same. The same principle of intransigience in the face of talks applied to the Algerian revolution where de Gualle surrendered in a war that was won, and in Vietnam, where the U.S. Congress showed that its idea of "long term" commitment corresponded to the approximate gestation period of the hippo.

So the Lankans would have had to look for something that actually did work. How about Chechnya? Faced with an adversary whose wrapping were decidedly loose, the Russers flattened much of Grozny, rode roughshod over the Chechens, who deserved the experience, and one by one picked off the leadership of the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria. The key to victory lay not with Djokar Dudaev, the subsequent line of big turbans up through and beyond Maskhadov who were supposed to be running things, the succession of Arabs who were supposed to be powering behind the throne, but with Shamil Basayev. Once Shamil was reduced to his component parts the festivities fizzled. The element of chance there was that either "head" of the Chechen movment, Doku "Count Dooku" Umarev is incompetent or that he prefers to meet his maker later rather than sooner.

Is there another exemplar they could have examined? How about Iraq? The carnage there was "horrible" by non-military standards. We've lost 4300 or so dead and I don't know how many maimed since 2003. This is 2009, which makes it six years, or an average of 716 dead per year. Zhukov would have considered 4300 dead a good day.

The religious numnutz swarming to Iraq from all over the world were controlled by one personality, who was not only well-funded and skilled at working out agreements among like-minded groups, but also probably clinically insane, which made him damned hard to predict. But once we rendered Zarqawi into meat, the quality of the resistance against us went down. The stage was set for the behind the scenes negotiations and temporary alliances that brought things under control. The same thing didn't happen when we caught Sammy, nor when we hung him, though something similar might have had we caught and hung Izzat Ibrahim.

Negotiations Don't Work
After numerous attempts at mediation -- most notably by Norway -- led to nothing, Rajapaksa basically abandoned the pursuit of a negotiated solution. Once the military had the upper hand, there was little effort to treaty with the Tigers.
That was a pretty bald statement of fact. In fact, as President Rajapaksa would probably admit, sometime negotiations work, sometimes they don't. They really don't work with people who have no intention of adhering to the agreements they make, or who make those agreements only as stepping stones to grabbing further concessions after rearming and regrouping. What's the sense of "confidence building measures" if the other side's out to get you? Both diplomacy and military action are tools. Sometimes the choice isn't between peace and war, but between war and total war.
Collateral Damage Is Acceptable
In the final months of fighting, the Sri Lankan military offensive hardly differentiated between civilian and Tiger targets. Refugees fleeing the fighting said thousands of innocents were being killed in the army's bombardments. Modern militaries typically halt hostilities when large numbers of civilians are killed.
I'm going to let that statement go unrebutted, but I can't off the top of my head think of when that's actually happened. Civilians aren't intentionally targeted by civilized armies, but if they get in the way there are only minimal actions that can safely or effectively be taken. And a commander who endangers his mission because of civilian presence is doing something other than his duty.
Let's not forget that the Tamil Tigers were using not only human shields, but human walls, and deliberately forcing them into situations where enough would be killed in the crossfire to scandalize Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International. That is not the same as the national army refusing to differentiate between enemy and innocent bystander.
The Sri Lankan army barely paused. Reva Bhalla, director of analysis at Stratfor, a global intelligence firm, says Rajapaksa's "disregard for civilian casualties" was a key to the success of the military operation.
Because we're empathetic folk, we grieve over civilian casualties. We were empathetic in the Civil War, too, where we'd get large numbers of men and throw them at each other at places like Antietam. Winfield Scott -- Old Fuss and Feathers -- who commanded the Union forces at the beginning of the war, drew up a plan that involved chopping up and squeezing the component parts of the South, rendering it incapable for continuing the war. It was ridiculed in the press, command passed to McClellan, and it wasn't until Grant adopted a similar plan three and a half years later that the Confederacy was forced into checkmate -- and not, we might add, before Sherman went Marching Through Georgia.

War should not be undertaken lightly -- I think Clausewitz mentioned that, too, as did Sun Tsu and Jomini. Once undertaken, though, it can be pursued as a half measure, with casualties spread out over time and victory by no means certain, or pursued quick and hard, with the casualties concentrated in time. The press's boilerplate on the Lanka war keeps saying that there have been 70,000 dead over the course of the war. But if the Lankan government had stomped the Tigers with both feet in 1984 at a cost of 7000 dead they'd be better off now, wouldn't they? If they'd stomped the Tigers in 1984 at a cost of 70,000 dead -- and I think they'd have been hard put to kill that many -- the reconstruction would be over by now and Lanka might even be one of the Asian Tigers, like Malaysia. The lesson might be termed "pay me now, or pay me later."

This "Collateral Damage is Acceptable" sumrise is ironic; these same people have no problem with a 'reasonable level of violence' that produces the same or more causualties. It's just the the slow drip-drip-drip of dead and wounded doesn't disturb these folks' continental-breakfast the way Sri Lanka's bloody finale did.
Critics Should Shut Up -- Or Else
For a democracy, Sri Lanka's recent record on press freedom is an embarrassment.
To reiterate, Lanka's formally a democracy, in practice a formerly functional oligarchy that I suspect will reemerge in a slightly different form as the war recedes into the past.
Journalists who dared question the government (and not just over the military campaign) have been threatened, roughed up, or worse. The Jan. 8 murder of Lasantha Wickrematunge, a crusading editor -- and TIME contributor -- was an especially low point. In recent months, as the fighting intensified, journalists and international observers were kept well away, ensuring very little reporting on the military's harsh tactics and the civilian casualties.
Military-press relations in wartime can be pretty complicated. The military, as a simple matter of self-preservation, doesn't want those whose goals are inimical to achieving the war's objectives holding their collective elbow. Tamilnet wasn't distinguished by any favorable reporting about the government forces, was it? So what the author's suggesting is that the Tigers, with their controlled propaganda arm churning out atrocity stories about the government forces day and night, weren't counter-balanced by Lanka's relatively free press. A relatively free press means that not all the stories produced are going to favor one side. The non-free Tamil Tiger press did favor only one side. Therefore Mr. Time Report is cheesed that the government side didn't allow and facilitate reporting that would have been about 2:1 biased toward the Tigers, part of it on the "government" side being supplied by guys with cyanide pill talismans around their necks..
Lack of accurate reporting from the war front was one reason why the international outcry against the military's heavy-handedness was so muted -- especially in the U.S.
I'm wondering if the writer is wearing one of those talismans.
The other reason, especially in the U.S., is that Sri Lanka is a small, far away country full of very long, hard to pronounce names. I wouldn't know anything about the country were it not for Rantburg, and I love scuba diving and the writings of Arthur C. Clarke.
Rajapaksa also benefited from the post-9/11 global consensus that insurgent groups using terror tactics "can no longer call themselves freedom fighters," according to Daniel Markey, a South Asia expert at the Council on Foreign Relations. "The Tigers didn't understand this, and paid a significant price."
They were fighting for the freedom of the Tigers, not of the Tamils. The Tamils were cannon fodder. The Colombo government, I suppose, could be worse than the Tigers, but it's hard to imagine how: child impressments, corvee labor, the sacrifice of self for the good of the state. They'd have to do all that before they could surpass the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Elam.
That may be one lesson insurgencies worldwide can learn from the Tigers' downfall.
Lesson 4: Some organizations are truly evil, to the root and the branch, and need to be wiped out ruthlessly.
Agreed, Fred. But a good number of them are going bankrupt without our help.

Oh wait - maybe you weren't referring to the NYT even if they have helped to steal an election by suppressing important information about ACORN & a certain presidential campaign and deliberately undermined the war and ..... ?

Never mind, carry on ....
Link


Sri Lanka
Mario's family found in lagoon with gunshot wounds to heads
2009-05-20
COLOMBO: LTTE chief Velupillai Prabhakaran made two last-minute attempts to escape to India or Malaysia, but these came too late as the Sri Lankan navy had put up a effective naval blockade by then. Media reports said on Wednesday that Prabhakaran’s family has been found shot dead.

These failures left no option for Prabhakaran, who had earlier hoodwinked and outmaneuvered the Sri Lankan security apparatus, to stay put in the northern war zone and fight to the last. Prabhakaran made these attempts as Sri Lankan forces made major advances into the rebel-held territory this year, naval spokesman D K Dasanayake said.

Reports said that Prabhakaran’s wife Mathivathani, daughter and younger son Balachandran were found shot dead on Wednesday.

Their bodies, having gunshot wounds in the head, were found a day after pictures of Prabhakaran’s body were released by the Sri Lankan authorities. The bodies were found in the Nandi Kadal lagoon area barely 600 metres from where the LTTE supremo’s body was recovered by the army. Balachandran was barely 13. Prabhakaran’s wife and daughter were not in Europe as believed but right there with the Tamil Tiger chief.

Vinayagamoorthi Muralitharan alias Karuna, who was the Eastern commander of the LTTE before he fell out with Prabhakaran in 2004, and Daya Master, who surrendered to the army recently, have “positively identified” the LTTE supremo’s body.
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India-Pakistan
PM ignores demands for Tamil Eelam in Sri Lanka
2009-05-09
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh today ruled out sending army to Sri Lanka and favoured solution to the problem of Tamils within a united and federal set up, ignoring demands voiced by parties in Tamil Nadu, including ally DMK, for a separate Tamil Eelam.
On a short visit to the city, he looked up Chief Minister M Karunanidhi in the hospital and made it clear that DMK is Congress' ally in the elections and the alliance would be maintained.

"What is possible and what is not possible, I think it is a matter of speculation. But quite frankly we are dealing with a sovereign state Sri Lanka, a sovereign country. It is not so easy to march armies to a sovereign state," he told a press conference here.

He was replying to a question on AIADMK chief's Jayalalithaa's remarks that if a government of her choice comes to power after the elections, it would send army to Sri Lanka for creation of a separate Tamil Eelam state.

With AIADMK and its allies PMK and MDMK raising the stakes on the Eelam issue, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M Karunanidhi also joined the bandwagon for a separate homeland for Tamils in Sri Lanka.

"There is such thing as international law and all those constraints I think are known to all those who are making tall promises," he said in an apparent reference to Jayalalithaa's recent election speeches
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Sri Lanka
Sri Lankan troops tighten siege of Tamil rebels
2009-05-02
Sri Lankan government troops have tightened their siege of the last strip of land on the island still controlled by Tamil Tiger rebels and are poised for a final assault, the military said on Friday.

Military spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara told AFP that two columns of troops had consolidated positions along a strip of coastline in the northeast captured from the ethnic rebels earlier this week. "The Tigers have no land escape routes left. We have troops in place to move in at any time," another top military official said. "If not for the civilians still trapped inside, we would have gone in by now."

Nanayakkara refused to say when the final assault would take place, asserting that troops "have to consider the civilians" still trapped in the territory held by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

A statement from the office of President Mahinda Rajapakse said government planes on Friday dropped leaflets on LTTE territory urging civilians to cross over. "I appeal to every one of you to come over to the cleared (government-held) areas," the messages from the president said. "I am aware of the tremendous difficulties faced by the civilians who are unfortunately still being held hostage by the LTTE. Your suffering is prolonged by this action of the LTTE who are holding you as a human shield."

Craft: Officials said sporadic fighting was continuing Friday, with the navy also fighting an offshore battle with LTTE rebels trying to flee by boat. Navy spokesman Mahesh Karunaratne said three rebel craft were sunk and 23 rebels killed. There was no comment from the Tigers, but the pro-rebel Tamilnet website said the guerrillas had sunk two naval craft in a sea battle.
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Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka says combat gives way to rescue
2009-04-28
Sri Lanka on Monday ordered troops to stop using heavy weapons against the Tamil Tiger rebels, and instead focus on protecting and rescuing tens of thousands of people still trapped in the last rebel pocket.

The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) immediately accused the government of disregarding its own commitment by launching two air raids on the tiny rebel-held area. Sri Lanka's announcement came a day after it dismissed an attempt to declare a truce by the rebels, now cornered in less than 10 square km of coastline by 50,000 troops fighting to finish Asia's longest modern war.

Operations over: "Combat operations have reached their conclusion," a statement from President Mahinda Rajapaksa's office said. Soldiers would "confine their attempts to rescuing civilians who are held hostage and give foremost priority to saving civilians". Troops have been ordered not to use heavy-calibre guns, combat aircraft and aerial weapons, the statement said. Nonetheless, troops kept moving forward, military spokesman Brigadier Udaya Nanayakkara said. "The rescue operation is continuing today," he said. Special forces, commandos and snipers have been deployed, he said.

Analysts said the announcement appeared designed to mollify diplomatic pressure for a ceasefire, which Sri Lanka has ruled out given the LTTE's history of using breaks in the fighting to rearm and its rejection of two government truce offers this year. For weeks before Monday's move, the military had said it was only using small arms in order to protect civilians in what it has dubbed the largest hostage rescue operation in the world. "I don't see any substantial change. This would probably be in deference to international opinion," said Col R Hariharan, who was head of military intelligence for the Indian army during its 1987-1990 peacekeeping mission in Sri Lanka. "What is there to stop anyway? That stage is gone. I don't think anybody will take it very seriously," he said.

Bombing: LTTE peace secretariat chief S Puleedevan accused Sri Lanka of "attempting to deceive the international community, including the people of Tamil Nadu" with the announcement, pro-rebel website www.TamilNet.com reported. Puleedevan said two jets bombed the rebel area on Monday, TamilNet reported. Air force spokesman Wing Commander Janaka Nanayakkara said there had been no combat sorties: "That stopped a long time ago."

No surrender: Separately, Puleethevan told AFP by telephone that Tamil Tigers would never surrender and would fight on until their demands are met. "We made our position very clear to the international community. We will never surrender till our legitimate demands are met," Puleethevan said. The Sri Lankan war has become an election issue in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu, home to 60 million Tamils. The state's chief minister, M Karunanidhi, abruptly stopped a decision to fast in protest at the war after Rajapaksa's announcement. Last-minute diplomatic efforts have borne little fruit, with the LTTE refusing to release tens of thousands of non-combatants it holds inside the war zone, and the government saying the Tigers must surrender or be destroyed. British Foreign Secretary David Miliband, due in Sri Lanka on Wednesday with his French and Swedish counterparts to press for a truce, said the fighting had created a crisis. "It's very, very important that we follow through on the government's welcome announcement ... of a cease to combat operations," he told reporters in Luxembourg.
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Sri Lanka
Sri Lankan rebels declare unilateral cease-fire
2009-04-26
Tamil Tiger rebels declared a unilateral cease-fire on Sunday as a top U.N. official pressed Sri Lankan leaders to let aid into the northeastern war zone where tens of thousands of civilians are trapped.

The rebels asked the international community to pressure the government into halting its campaign, saying the "humanitarian crisis can only be overcome by the declaration of an immediate cease-fire."

The rebels, who have voluntarily halted their fight before, said in a statement e-mailed to The Associated Press that they would immediately stop fighting.

The United Nations and others have been pushing for a truce to allow civilians to escape, as reports have grown of starvation and casualties among those trapped by the fighting.

Sri Lanka's Defense Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa rejected the call, however, saying the rebels were "running" from government forces. In recent months, troops have pushed deep into the Tamil Tigers' strongholds in the north, surrounding the beleaguered rebels and vowing to end the quarter-century war.

In a sign, the rebels are feeling the pressure of army's monthslong offensive, 23 insurgents surrendered on Sunday.

Dressed as civilians, they turned themselves over to the advancing troops, said Brig. Udaya Nanayakkara, the military spokesman.

Last week, two prominent rebels - the group's former media spokesman, Velayutham Dayanithi, whose nom de guerre is Daya Master, and an interpreter for group's political wing, known only as George - surrendered.

The rebels, listed as a terrorist group by many Western nations, have been fighting since 1983 for an ethnic Tamil state in the north and east after decades of marginalization by governments dominated by the Sinhalese majority. After more than three years of intense fighting, the military stands on the verge of crushing the group.

Fighting, meanwhile, continued Sunday in the ever-shrinking war zone, with sea battles and infantry clashes.

Navy patrol boats destroyed three rebel boats, killing at least 12 insurgents early Sunday, said navy spokesman Cmdr. Mahesh Karunaratne. He said that the guerrillas were preparing to attack army troops on the coast.
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Sri Lanka
Sri Lankan fighting kills 93 rebels
2009-04-05
Fierce fighting between Sri Lankan troops and Tamil Tiger rebels defending their last remaining territory in the country's war-ravaged north killed 93 rebels on Saturday, the military said.

The military also said it destroyed three rebel boats and recovered a torched bulletproof vehicle belonging to the leader of the Tamil Tiger guerrillas. Government forces are in what they say is a final push to defeat the rebels - the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam - and end 25 years of civil war. A string of major victories by the military in recent months, in which the rebels' administrative capital and main bases were captured, has pushed the guerillas into a small strip of coastal land measuring just 21 square kilometers in the northeast.

Military spokesman Brig. Udaya Nanayakkara said separate battles broke out Saturday as soldiers fought to capture the remaining rebel territory. Soldiers found the bodies of 93 rebels after the battles, he said, without giving details of casualties suffered by government forces. A military statement earlier Saturday said five vehicles, including one used by rebel leader Velupillai Prabhakaran, were recovered late Friday. It said the rebels torched them as they withdrew. Navy spokesman Cmdr. Mahesh Karunaratne said a sea battle took place in the middle of the night when 10 rebel boats were intercepted by the navy.

He said the navy destroyed one boat, disabled a second, and that ground forces destroyed two others when they tried to beach under heavy navy fire. The remaining boats fled. Karunaratne did not know how many Sea Tigers, as the rebel navy wing is called, were killed. He said some navy boats were damaged. The Sri Lanka military does not give casualty figures. Karunaratne said the rebel boats took off from and returned to a government declared "no-fire" zone, which makes up almost all the war zone.

The military says the rebels have set up bases in the zone, which was designated to protect the tens of thousands of civilians trapped by the fighting. The United Nations and aid and rights groups have expressed grave concerns about the civilians caught in the fighting. The military says the rebels are holding them as human shields in a desperate attempt to avoid defeat. But the Tigers say the people do not want to leave and have asked for their protection. The UN says an estimated 150,000 to 190,000 people are trapped, resulting in dozens of deaths each day. But the government says more than 23,000 civilians escaped last month and 30,000 to 40,000 still remain.
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