Elevated Voices

Dear Friends, Over the past year, I have been visiting Sri Lanka to work with amazing human rights and health organizations to create collaborations to help forward their agendas and, ultimately, affect change. I work for the International Women's Health Coalition and we began working with Sunila Abeysekera and her human rights documentation center, INFORM, to help ensure that women's voices were heard during the tsunami reconstruction process. Our work in Sri Lanka was marked by the cease-fire agreement which has since reversed as Sri Lanka tumults back into conflict. Moved by colleagues and friends, I create this website to help share the news and stories of Sri Lanka. Sometimes the world gets tired of hearing the same old story, but this is one that cannot go unheard or forgotten. Postings on this site will include communiques I receive from treasured colleagues, including Sunila and friends at INFORM, Bhavani Fonseka at the Centre for
Policy Alternatives
, friends at the Women and Media Collective and others. I welcome your feedback. In solidarity, Supriya Pillai

Friday, December 15, 2006

Dr. Ellyn Shander sent this to me with the request to post it today. Please contact Senator Leahy's office and ask for further action on the peace talks in Sri Lanka. I post Dr. Shander's letter with some edits. For a brief history of the conflict, a better sense of Dr. Shander's work in Sri Lanka and more of her views on what needs to be done, please read her article Update: Humanitarian Catastrophe in Sri Lanka.

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Mr. LEAHY. I want to take a moment to discuss the situation in Sri Lanka, which not long ago was one of promise after a cease fire agreement was signed in 2002 between the former government and the LTTE Tamil Tigers. The ceasefire was never perfect, but for several years negotiations on a political settlement offered a ray of hope for an end to the conflict. After April 2006, however, there was escalating violence and an increasing pattern of violations of the ceasefire agreement by both sides.


On July 20, the LTTE closed a reservoir sluice gate in an LTTE-controlled area near the eastern town of Trincomalee, cutting the water supply to about 60,000 people in government-controlled territory. In response, Sri Lankan government forces conducted air strikes over several days against LTTE positions in the area and on July 30 began a ground offensive to capture the reservoir's control point. This increase in violence contributed to the more than 800 deaths reported between January and August, including some in which large numbers of civilians were killed in flagrant violations of international law by both sides, and hundreds more combatants and civilians have died since then.


Politically motivated killings, the recruitment of child soldiers, indiscriminate raids on civilians, targeting of international aid workers, and torture in police custody are only some of the human rights abuses that have been recently committed as reported by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch. Additionally, a looming humanitarian crisis exists as the number of Sri Lankans displaced within the country by fighting this year has passed the 200,000 mark, and an estimated 8,700 citizens have fled to India. Road, air and sea links to the Tamil population in the north have been cut, and food, water and fuel shortages are severe.


We should be deeply concerned with the collapse of the peace process and escalating violence in Sri Lanka. Although it is apparent that neither the government nor the LTTE can defeat the other militarily, nor have they demonstrated the political will to stop the fighting and resolve this conflict peacefully. A report on September 13 that the government and the LTTE have proposed new peace talks is welcome. But the Sri Lankan people have been disappointed countless times before. Several steps should be taken immediately, most importantly to prevent further harm to civilians who have suffered disproportionately.


It is critical that humanitarian aid be allowed to reach those who have been displaced, whether as a result of the conflict or the lingering effects of the December 2004 tsunami. Relief agencies need unimpeded access to the affected populations, and civilians should be allowed to leave contested areas....


[W]e should reaffirm our support for the Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission, which reports on violations of the ceasefire by both sides. A stronger monitoring presence would deter abuses, provide systematic documentation of violations, and help to address the problem of impunity that has contributed to the recurrent cycles of violence and reprisal in Sri Lanka....

The chairs of the Tokyo Donors' Conference – Japan, the European Union, Norway and the United States, need to find more effective ways to convince both sides to return to the bargaining table. There is no other way to end this conflict. The longer it takes to resume a process of good faith negotiations the more responsibility the LTTE and the government will bear for the needless deaths of innocent civilians.


Respectfully,

Dr. Ellyn Shander MD

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