Murdered, missing, imprisoned in camps...The guns may be
silent in Sri Lanka for the first time in 26 years, but the
price of peace for the innocent Tamils caught up in the
fighting could not be higher ... Dan McDougall travels from
the Tamils' UK protest in Parliament Square to the killing
fields of Sri Lanka
A foul-smelling monsoon closes in from the north, carrying
dark clouds of ash from the Hindu funeral pyres burning along
the "Highway for Peace and Unity". At the roadside, translucent
glasswing butterflies flutter and dance in the charred iron
shell of an old British Leyland bus, its undercarriage ripped
apart and shredded like paper by a Claymore landmine.
Little more than a cratered strip of asphalt running 100 miles
due north from the ancient city of Anuradhapura to Jaffna, the
road's grandiose Marxist title is typically deceptive: today it
bisects a dramatically transformed landscape - the broken heart
of Sri Lanka's former Tamil Tiger country, a battle-scarred
route lined with thousands of shallow graves, unexploded
landmines and the rotting stumps of palmyra trees blackened by
the rain.
Here, sheltering from the darkening skies at a remote army
checkpoint, a group of weary teenage soldiers gather around an
old Russian television impassively watching the capital,
Colombo, celebrate the end of the war.
Dressed in messianic white, the Sri Lankan president, Mahinda
Rajapaksa, is walking through the streets of the capital as
followers shower him with pink flower petals. At each street
corner he is offered traditional kiribath (milk rice) and kavung
(oil cakes). Crudely dubbed over the footage, hastily assembled
songs declare "Our King Rajapaksa", wishing him "Ayubowewa" - a
long life.
"We won the war, we won, OK!" shouts an army NCO in coarse
Sinhalese, breaking the silence and ordering the young soldiers
on to a personnel carrier heading north. "Now get back to work."
At their journey's end, no more than 30 miles north along the
single-track road, the conscripts will be brutally confronted
with more than a quarter of a million personal hells - Tamil
refugees who have fled the Sri Lankan civil war in recent days
and weeks, as the secessionist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
(LTTE) fought and lost a brutal endgame for a separate Tamil
state in the country's northeast. Malnourished and traumatised,
the displaced stare out from behind the barbed wire of
internment camps erected by the Sri Lankan government.
Elderly grandmothers, infants, pregnant women, wounded fathers,
their faces as twisted and contorted as the razorwire that
imprisons them, trapped in a state of incarceration the Colombo
authorities claim is necessary for the refugees' own "safety".
Further into the bush are the field hospitals, hidden from the
eyes of the world yet overflowing with civilian victims of the
war. Beyond the medical camps, according to eyewitnesses, are
thousands of freshly dug graves. Six thousand miles away in
London, a growing body of UK-based campaigners are calling it
quite simply "The War Without Witness".
"The British government doesn't give a fuck about Sri Lanka,
they just don't give a fuck, nobody here does." The British
Tamil student's anger peaks as he is marched across Parliament
Square in central London by his girlfriend, his fists, his
entire body shaking with grief and loss as he waves a photograph
of a bloodied child, much of her stomach missing. "Is it a
relative?" I ask. Nobody seems to know. In his fury the young
man lets go of the deathly image, and is forced to chase it down
in the breeze.
Another Tamil woman, middle-aged, an NHS nurse in faux ruby
earrings, holds up a photocopied print of her missing sister for
the photographer, pauses, and breaks down, lost in chest-racking
sobs. Nobody consoles her. Everyone stands back. Blinking in the
sunshine, the others are drowning in their own private grief.
Most of them wait patiently, portraits of their loved ones in
their hands, their own stories of horror at the forefront of
their minds. Behind them a crowd is gathering, their number is
growing. To reach our impromptu studio, each has passed by a
wooden hut erected in the heart of the square where hundreds of
passport photographs of the dead and the missing have been
posted. Some are gory. Bodies decapitated, dead eyes staring
out. Beneath each photograph are contact numbers for concerned
relatives.
It had started as a simple idea in the dreary hotel room in
Colombo that I was sharing with photographer Robin Hammond. As
the lights of the old port twinkled below and Sri Lanka heralded
a new beginning, I read an Amnesty report that ranked Sri Lanka
second in terms of numbers seeking asylum in the UK. Tamils in
Britain, largely thanks to a mass exodus in the 1980s, now
number approximately 200,000, mostly in south and west London.
So I sent an email home, asking a few London-based Tamils I knew
had been affected by the war if they would pose for portraits
when we returned. The replies, within 24 hours, were staggering.
"We have 50 and can get you 500 more," said one source. "More
can come at short notice," said another campaigner. "How many do
you need? We have thousands of photographs, missing, dead,
children, grandmothers, this is a genocide, what do you expect?"
I shouldn't have been surprised. An organised and galvanised
diaspora, who haven't slept in two months, as the battle to end
all battles raged on the island that bore them - all of the UK's
Tamils have been affected by the war.
While the expenses scandal has gripped British political life in
recent weeks, Britain's Tamils have taken over Parliament
Square. Over a month ago, one of the protestors, Prarameswaran
Subramaniam, lay down on a fetid mattress opposite parliament
and went on hunger strike. His ultimatum was simple:
"I will stay here until either my body can continue no longer or
the British government persuades the Sri Lankan government to
stop shelling my people," he said. Subramaniam began his protest
at the end of April after discovering that his mother and
several siblings had been killed in Sri Lankan military attacks.
He is now recovering in hospital.
Other UK-based Tamils threatened to throw themselves off the top
of Big Ben or drown themselves in the Thames; two actually made
it into the water but were rescued by a police boat patrol. In
response to the Tamil takeover of Parliament Square, Westminster
council complained about their numbers and moved to protect the
grass, which they claimed was going through an "urgent
reseeding". The Times accused the Tamils of turning Parliament
Square into a "shanty town", a banner headline that particularly
irked the Tamil diaspora - professors, doctors, school teachers,
engineers and architects among their number.
In the Commons, the Speaker of the House, Michael Martin,
condemned the actions of some Tamil protesters, who, he claimed,
put young children "in the way" of police officers. Conservative
MP Gerald Howarth raised a point of order to ask what powers the
Speaker had to order the Metropolitan Police to secure "free
access to Parliament" for MPs. He said: "It is completely
outrageous that members of this House have been subjected to
this inconvenience, that the people of London have been
subjected to this inconvenience. The situation in Sri Lanka is
nothing to do with this House. Surely law and order has broken
down outside the Houses of Parliament." Not surprisingly,
Howarth's stance provoked fury among the new occupants of
Parliament Square.
As he unfurled a peace banner in Parliament Square, Tamil
campaigner Prakesh Mano, 36, told me: "Britain is to blame for
this; like Palestine, like Zimbabwe, your history has a hand in
the death of innocents in 2009, and the British government
should stand up and take ownership of it - and you are more
worried about some overpaid politicians not being able to get to
work?" It is a view of history held by most Tamils, who believe
that Sri Lanka's substantial Tamil minority once had their own
autonomy in the north before the British Empire turned the whole
island into the colony of Ceylon. Britain, they claim, then
handed Ceylon's Sinhalese majority rule and independence in 1948
as a single entity, without enshrining the rights of the Tamils
to their own land and language.
Krishna Ruban, another protester, said: "This is a war without
witness. The media is cut off from what is really happening in
Sri Lanka. A genocide is being hidden from the world." He then
added: "London-born teenagers who have never even been to Sri
Lanka are marching with their grandparents. This is about
brothers and fathers and sisters being killed. I know people who
have lost 15 members of their family. It is not just here -
there are demonstrations in France, Germany, Holland,
Switzerland, America and Canada. It is literally everywhere."
According to the UN, more than 8,000 civilian refugees were
killed on the Sri Lankan battlefield this year, mostly in the
past three months in a government-designated "no-fire zone".
There is also mounting evidence, including testimony from those
who escaped it, to suggest that army bombardments were mostly to
blame for this. Some, although fewer in number, have also
accused the LTTE of shooting at them to try to prevent their
escape.
On 25 May, the United Nations Human Rights Council convened a
special session on Sri Lanka, following a request submitted by
Germany on behalf of 17 mostly European countries. Its members
proceeded to vote down a proposed resolution decrying the Sri
Lankan government's disregard for civilian life. But another
draft resolution tabled by the Sri Lankan government itself,
praising its own commitment to human rights, was passed by a
vote of 29 to 16. Its supporters included China, Cuba, India,
Russia, Pakistan and Egypt.
By effectively welcoming the "liberation" of tens of thousands
of the island's citizens from the grip of the Tamil Tigers, the
UN made no mention of the shelling of civilians and kept silent
on the desperate need to allow the Red Cross and other
humanitarian groups into the camps where some 300,000 Tamil
civilians have been interned.
Navi Pillay, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, insisted
that there still needed to be an inquiry into "very serious
abuses", yet Sureen Surendiram, of the British Tamils Forum,
said that the UN was paying lip service to the civilised world,
again. Human Rights Watch and leaked UN documents recently
suggested the death toll was closer to 20,000, with many of the
dead women and children, he said. "And now the Sri Lankan
government is holding our loved ones in massive internment
camps, the likes of which we haven't seen since the Second World
War." He added: "The fighting may be over, but retribution
killings are being carried out in the camps. Our people are also
starving and dying from lack of medical help."
The Lonely Planet guidebook says the beach at Uppuveli is the
most beautiful on Sri Lanka's east coast. As the sun sets it
certainly looks like an island paradise, a curve of white sand
with palm trees and deep emerald water. If you drive through the
jungle in the east, you can see errant herds of wild elephants
crossing the road. Long-tailed monkeys watch nervously from the
trees. At night, fireflies hang by the roadside. This is the Sri
Lanka tourists flock from around the world to see, but along the
road to the town, hundreds of soldiers line the road, looking
nervously into the jungle. Despite the war coming to an end,
fear of last-gasp Tamil Tiger suicide attacks cuts to the core
of every soldier here in the northeast. On closer inspection,
Uppuveli's beach is littered with sewage and rubbish, its hotels
boarded up. No tourists come here any more. The jungle, long
burned by government soldiers trying to clear the roads of
hiding places for Tamil Tiger guerrillas, is a twisted and
charred wasteland.
Here in the Sivananda Thaovanam Orphanage, more than 100
children huddle together against the pounding rain outside. The
children's eyes betray the tragedies they could not easily put
into words. Each child has his or her own story, but they all
have one thing in common: their parents were killed in the war.
Four-year-old Mohanapriya's eyes light up as she speaks about
her parents, telling us how she is waiting for them to come and
take her home. "She is too young to understand they are gone,"
says one of the orphanage directors. "What can we say to her?"
The orphanage is threadbare, like its inhabitants. The room
which serves as their bedroom, a communal hall with peeling
paint and a few lockers with broken locks, overflows with
second-hand clothes and toys that have seen better days. The
only bed is piled high with mats, sheets and pillows. Despite
its woeful lack of facilities, Sivananda Thaovanam has been a
safe haven for 240 children for four years. Twelve-year-old
Theverajah Kajenthini cries as she remembers the day she lost
her mother. Trapped on the frontline of the war, a Sri Lankan
government shell ripped through their home, killing her sister,
her aunt and her mother. Several months later her father,
accused of being a Tamil Tiger sympathiser, was executed by
"unknown forces". "I don't understand what has happened to me,"
she says. "Like the other children in here we don't talk about
the past. I am old enough to know my parents are gone but the
younger children laugh and play and tell us their mums and dads
are coming back. Many of the children in my village became
orphans during the fighting. I can't deny what happened to me. I
saw my mother's body. She was on fire after the shelling and
died of burns to her face and neck. Her head was black, it was
the last I saw of her."
Across the north of Sri Lanka, hundreds of orphanages such as
this house are the legacy of Sri Lanka's 30-year civil war, the
orphans cast adrift like flotsam. Most remain traumatised. With
no funding for rehabilitation or counselling, their fates seem
to be sealed at a tragically young age. Most are introverted and
prone to intense periods of grief and depression. They all live
a bleak and meagre existence.
"The camps to the north of here are full of children like me, I
am told," says 11-year-old Mahetevan Suganya. "Tamil boys and
girls like me who cannot escape. At least I have my friends here
in the orphanage and I can walk in the garden and play with my
toys. The director tells us all we are fortunate to be here and
to be protected from the war. I don't feel particularly lucky. I
feel angry and upset at what is happening to me."
In the corridors of power in Colombo, the hard-won victory over
the Tamil Tigers would have been savoured by one family above
all: that of the Sri Lankan president, Percy Mahinda Rajapaksa,
who carved out victory with the help of his brothers, Gotabaya,
the defence secretary, and Basil, who largely masterminded the
political and diplomatic strategies that accompanied the war
effort. The brothers, members of a prominent political family of
Sri Lanka's Buddhist Sinhalese majority, won through utter
ruthlessness. In contrast to previous Oxbridge-educated leaders,
they had no links to the English-speaking elite of Colombo and
showed few qualms in severing Sri Lanka's ties with the west in
favour of strengthening relations with China and Russia -
countries that supplied sophisticated military hardware and
diplomatic muscle.
In giving the cold shoulder to Britain and the United States,
the president also won the approval of ultra-nationalist
Buddhist monk MPs, who had demanded victory at any cost over the
Tigers and on whom Rajapaksa depends for his parliamentary
majority. In 2006, a year after he became president, air, sea
and ground assaults were launched against rebel strongholds in
the north and east. The army nearly doubled in size to 180,000
men in two years and began to adopt guerrilla tactics, using the
Tigers' own methods - sending in death squads to kill rebel
leaders. Now the president, a lawyer who worked as a film actor
and library clerk before entering politics, enjoys
messianic-like status in the country he rules with an iron fist.
Many Sri Lankans feel he has deliberately blurred the genuine
grievances of the Tamil minority - a community that has been
oppressed since it lost its favoured status with the end of
British rule - with the atrocities carried out by the terrorist
Tigers over 26 years. They also suspect that a new period of
persecution and oppression of the Tamils will emerge with a
victorious Sinhalese government.
As I travelled across Sri Lanka, President Rajapaksa, basking in
victory, declared the final defeat of the Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in a speech to his parliament on 19 May. But
more than 30 opposition chairs in the 225-seat chamber were
vacant. Members of the Tamil National Alliance, the largest
group of parties representing the Tamil minority in the north
and east of the island, had refused to take their seats. It was
a reminder of an unhappy and uncomfortable truth: the Tamil
Tigers may be finished as a fighting force, but the bitter
ethnic divisions that fuelled the 26-year war live on.
Some hours later, as I walked the streets of the Sri Lankan
capital, state television aired footage of the dead Tamil Tiger
supremo, Velupillai Prabhakaran, the back of his head missing
from what was undeniably a summary execution, a cloth covering
the top of his skull, which appeared to have been blown off.
Prabhakaran's Tamil Eelam once existed as an unofficial nation
within a nation, a state that ran on a different time zone
(Indian time), had its own police force, jails, judicial system,
and semi-extortionate system of tax collection. Everywhere
across Tamil Elam flew the Tamil Tiger flag: a roaring tiger
backed by a pair of crossed Kalashnikovs, pouncing with claws
bared from a cartoonish explosion. Walking through Wellawetta, a
predominately Tamil district of Colombo, nationalist Sinhalese
flags flutter from every Tamil home for fear of Government
reprisals. In a dark corner of the slum suburb a scrawl of
graffiti quotes an adapted Indian proverb: "Do not blame God for
having created the tiger, thank him for not giving it wings."
"You can't go down that road. You shouldn't have come this way,"
the soldier bellows, first in Sinhalese and then in English, his
hand menacingly stroking the nuzzle of the rifle splayed across
his chest. I look at his bony black fingers - he is pointing
east towards the coastal town of Pulmoddai and the road we have
just travelled down.
"How did you get here from there? It is a dangerous route and
you are a target for terrorists." Behind our interrogator I
recognise a parked Alvis Saracen personnel carrier, its adapted
gun turret trained on our minivan. As we speak three other
soldiers come out of a small hut. The tallest flourishes a
revolver and demands we hand over our passports. He then
disappears to make a call. I'm convinced after a series of close
shaves we will finally be arrested, possibly beaten, certainly
deported.
"We are tourists and we are lost," I explain, without prompting.
In the back of the van, in the stitching of the carpet, we have
hidden digital memory cards and a small notebook, the only
record we have of a refugee camp we stumbled across 20 miles to
the north. Our presence there, to witness the incarceration of
around 6,000 Sri Lankan refugees, had sent the camp directors
running for their satellite phones. On Sri Lankan radio,
government-sponsored adverts have called on the nation to
effectively "finger" foreigners trying to head north.
Behind the barbed-wire fence at the Pulmoddai camp, tiny
children had stared out at us, open-mouthed, their eyes sunken
and hollow, the first signs of malnutrition. Around the camps,
scarcely functioning mothers and grandmothers waited patiently
for brown trickles of water to emerge from the earth. The
inmates were surrounded by a cordon of steel: dozens of Sri
Lankan soldiers sitting at 10-yard intervals around the
perimeter of the compound, their weapons cocked and trained on
their captives.
It had taken a 13-hour drive along dangerous roads and past a
dozen heavily militarised checkpoints to get this far. At every
corner the Sri Lankan military, which has effectively created a
border across the entire country, cutting off the north of the
island to foreigners, tried to intimidate and stop us,
brandishing weapons and forcing us back at each turn.
Brought down by ship from the frontline 50 miles to the north,
the Pulmoddai refugees before us are effectively prisoners of
war - their plight among the first evidence of an attempt by the
Sri Lankan authorities to inter stricken refugees in dozens of
camps across the north of the island. To the north, hundreds of
thousands more share a similar fate, and the looming threat of
deadly disease and malnutrition.
Along the hard road to the Pulmoddai refugee camp is heard the
sound of hammering and the clink of metal. Before our eyes Sri
Lankan soldiers hammer huge wooden stakes into the ground to
create another perimeter fence to "imprison more refugees".
Beside the road lies thousands of yards of razorwire fencing.
"More are coming," says a locally recruited engineer drafted in
to help build an access road. "They are coming from the front,
perhaps tens of thousands more, for the long term. Each hole in
the ground stretching into the far distance over there is
another stake to imprison them."
It is closing in on midnight. A police siren breaks the
stillness of the summer evening as a handful of weary Tamil
protesters begin packing up for the night, folding banners and
neatly packing flyers and posters with red elastic bands. Their
organisation and attention to detail is meticulous; there is
little money for more flyers, and those they have left over for
another day are precious - each thin piece of paper a witness
statement from their families and loved ones.
A young Tamil student returns to the square after scouring the
bins in the streets around Westminster, retrieving the crumpled
and folded flyers nonchalantly discarded by passers-by. "Did
they stop to look at these?" he cries, pointing to a crudely
photocopied photograph of a dead child cradled in his father's
arms.
Some of the protesters will take the trundling night bus to
Neasden and Wembley, and home to their extended families.
Others, who have come down from the Midlands, will share hostel
rooms or sleep rough in the backstreets sweeping down towards
the Embankment, avoiding CCTV cameras and police patrols, before
returning to their placards and rainbow banners at dawn,
tramping bleary-eyed over the grassy heart of democratic
Britain.
Many of the Tamils here have abandoned their jobs to make their
stand. Karunakaran, 28, files through a shoe box of belongings
and pulls out a dog-eared passport photo of his younger brother.
He nervously fingers the Kavala, the sacred Hindu red string
wrapped twice around his wrist.
"He is dead, my brother; this is what my head says, but there is
still hope in me that he is lying in a hospital somewhere,
fighting for his life, making it through for me and my mother.
There are so many trapped in the camps and they are unable to
get messages to the outside world. People are scouring websites
and the news for a glimpse of their parents or their brothers.
It's the uncertainty that kills you slowly. You see their faces
in your sleep, you wake up at night and cry, wondering where
they are, if they are suffering, if they are starving to death,
if they are in prison being tortured or cast out to sea in a
boat."
As he speaks Karunakaran produces a pile of paperwork from a
file. At the head of the most recent document from Eaton House
Immigration Service in London the words "Liability to Detention"
glare out bleakly from the page. "I've been in Britain for 10
years but the immigration authorities are now telling me it is
safe for me to go back to Sri Lanka," he says. "My sister was
killed, my brother and cousin are missing. They are telling me
to go back, and I'm not the only one. Your country gives me the
right to protest here on Parliament Square, but your government
is also intent on sending me back to a land where those same
protests will lead to my death."
Taming the Tigers
1972 Armed with just a revolver, Velupillai Prabhakaran forms a
Tamil militant group, which eventually becomes the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE)
23 JULY 1983 LTTE ambushes an army patrol, killing 13 soldiers
in the Jaffna peninsula and sparking anti-Tamil riots elsewhere
that leave around 600 people dead
8 JULY 1985 Sri Lanka opens first direct talks with Tamil
guerrillas. They fail
29 JULY 1987 India and Sri Lanka reach agreement on the
deployment of an Indian peacekeeping force
24 MARCH 1990 India loses 1,200 troops at the hands of the LTTE,
and withdraws to leave the Tigers in control of large parts of
northern Sri Lanka
21 MAY 1991 Indian prime minister Rajiv Gandhi is assassinated
by a Tamil Tiger suicide bomber
1 MAY 1993Sri Lankan president Ranasinghe Premadasa is
assassinated by a Tiger suicide bomber
2 DECEMBER 1995 The Sri Lankan army captures the Jaffna
peninsula
8 OCTOBER 1997 The United States declares the LTTE a foreign
terrorist organisation
25 JANUARY 1998 An LTTE suicide bomber devastates Sri Lanka's
holiest Buddhist shrine, the Temple of the Tooth, killing 17
people
FEBRUARY 2001 Britain outlaws the LTTE as a terrorist
organisation, followed in 2006 by Canada and in 2007 by
Australia
DECEMBER 2002 At peace talks in Norway, the government and
rebels agree to share power, with the minority Tamils enjoying
autonomy in the mainly Tamil-speaking north and east
3 MARCH 2004 Renegade Tamil Tiger commander, V. Muralitharan,
known as Karuna, leads a damaging split from the main rebel
movement
2 NOVEMBER 2007 The head of the Tamil Tigers' political wing, SP
Thamilselvan, is killed in a government air raid
2 JANUARY 2008 Sri Lanka withdraws
from a ceasefire deal and steps up attacks against the Tigers
2 JANUARY 2009 Sri Lankan forces capture Kilinochchi, leaving
the Tigers only the jungle district of Mullaittivu
14 APRIL 2009 The Tamil Tigers say they are ready to negotiate a
ceasefire and restart peace talks. The government refuses,
ordering them to surrender
20 APRIL 2009 Tens of thousands of trapped civilians manage to
flee from the shrinking area still under rebel control
13 MAY 2009 For the first time, the United Nations Security
Council asks the warring parties to spare civilians
16 MAY 2009 President Mahinda Rajapakse says the rebels have
been defeated
17 MAY 2009 The Tamil Tigers concede that the battle "has
reached its bitter end" and that they have "decided to silence
our guns"