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Tamil Eelam Weekly, 13 October 2009
;'நாடு கடந்த தமிழீழ அரசு சாத்தியமா? செய்திக் கருத்தாய்வில் கனடாவில் இருந்து சேரன் - அவுஸ்திரேலிய தமிழ் ஒலிபரப்புக் கூட்டுத்தாபனம், 11 October 2009
Committee for the Formation of a Provisional Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam - A Booklet on the Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam 9 September 2009
Advisory Committee for the formation of the Provisional Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam, Press Release, 3 August 2009
நாடு கடந்த தமிழீழ அரசு தொடர்பாக அவுஸ்திரேலிய தமிழ் ஒலிபரப்புக் கூட்டுத்தாபனத்தில்  ஒலிபரப்பாகிய ~செய்தி அலைகள்| நிகழ்ச்சிக்கு நாடு கடந்த தமிழீழ அரச உருவாக்க செயற்குழுவின் தலைவர் விசுவநாதன் உருத்திரகுமாரன் வழங்கிய நேர்காணல் 2 July 2009
Press Release by Selvarasa Pathmanathan, Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam - Department of International Relations [also in PDF], 16 June 2009
Press statement  by Mr Visuvanathan Rudrakumaran, Coordinator of the Committee for the formation of a Provisional Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam, 16 June 2009
 LTTE Plans Government in Exile, Joe Leahy in Mumbai, Financial Times, 16 June 2009  "The declaration of the transnational government may be intended to help it keep the independence hopes of the diaspora alive so that the LTTE can maintain its financial networks, analysts said."

Sri Lanka rebels try to rise again after defeat - Ravi Nessman, The Associated Press 17 June 2009 "There are also signs that the Tamil Diaspora is divided over whom to support. The TamilNet Web site, seen as a mouthpiece for the rebels, has refused to carry statements from Pathmanathan."

US does not recognise  LTTE transitional government - and renews listing of LTTE as terrorist organisation 24 June 2009
Ilankai Tamil Sangam US welcomes and supports the Committee for the Formation of a Provisional Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam, 24 June 2009
Swiss NGO against Racism,  ACOR SOS Racisme, welcomes Provisional Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam, 24 June 2009
 

Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
Department of International Relations

Formation of Provisional Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam

[see also  Krishna Ambalavanar-  இன்றைய வரலாற்றுக் கடமை   "தோல்வியில் இருந்து மீண்டெழுதல், இன்றைய வரலாற்றுக் கடமை இது.  “இயற்கை எனது நண்பன். வாழ்க்கை எனது தத்துவாசிரியன். வரலாறு எனது வழிகாட்டி.”  இது தமிழீழத் தேசியத் தலைவர் வே.பிரபாகரன் கூறிய மிகப் பிரபல்யமான கருத்து.......தமிழீழ தேசிய விடுதலைப் போராட்டம் பாரிய பின்னடைவைச் சந்தித்தற்கான காரணங்கள் ஆராயப்பட்டு, அவை கண்டறியப்பட வேண்டும். அப்போது தான் எமது வரலாற்றுத் தோல்வியில் இருந்து எம்மால் மீட்சிபெற முடியும். தோல்வியில் இருந்து பாடம் கற்கின்ற மனிதனே வரலாற்றைப் படைப்பான்..." more ]


 

Press Release by Selvarasa Pathmanathan, Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, Department of International Relations [also in PDF]. 16 June 2009

Mr Selvarasa Pathmanathan, the Head of International Relations for the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Edam while explaining the necessity for a Provisional Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam has issued a media release today announcing the establishment of a working committee under the leadership of legal advisor, Mr Rudrakumar Viswanathan to make all necessary pre-arrangements to form such a Government.

"The struggle of the people of Tamil Eelam, for their right to self rule has reached a new stage. It is time now for us to move forward with our political vision towards our freedom, hearing in mind the practical realities in our homeland. Understanding the need for a common work plan based on a unified policy, we had called upon our people for their advice and opinions. Incorporating the advice provided by our people and the advice of our sectoral experts, we have deemed as necessary the formation of a Provisional Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam to take forward the next phase of the struggle. To make all necessary pre-arrangements to form such a Government, a working committee has been established under the leadership of our legal advisor, Mr Rudrakumar Viswanathan. We call on all Tamil people and Tamil organisations to provide this committee their whole hearted support and assistance". Mr Selvarasa Pathmanathan, the Head of International Relations for the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam has stated in a media release today.

Mr Pathmanthan has further stated that, "the political aspirations of the people of Tamil Eelam were built on the foundations of a Tamil Nation, Homeland, and the right to self rule. These were expressed explicitly through the Vaddukoddai resolution of 1976, during the negotiations at Thimpu in 1985 and in the proposal fir an Interim Self Governing Authority in 2003. These aspirations should he kept alive, nurtured and strengthened.

At the same time, in our homeland where our people are subjected to a life under Sri Lanka's military domination, it is not practical for these people to vocally express their political aspirations freely. The need for us to function understanding this pragmatic reality is imperative. Under these circumstances the Tamil Nation should implement two parallel operations to achieve a common vision under a common agreement.

"The Provision al Transnational Government of Tamil Edam to he established shall operate representing the political aspirations and being the voice and conscience of the people of Tamil Eelam in the international arena. At the same time, the operational plan implemented in our homeland, the under the leadership of the Tamil National Alliance that represents the political aspirations of the people of Tamil Edam, shall hear in mind the existential circumstances on the ground. There shall he a link between the two operational plans.

"The established working committee which, is to function within democratic principles shall espouse the details of its operational plans to the people and maintain an active link with the people to capture the opinions and aspirations of our people. In order fir this working committee to achieve its goals in whole I call on all Tamil People to work in unity" Mr Pathmanathan further stated in the media release."


Press statement  by Mr Visuvanathan Rudrakumaran, Coordinator of the Committee for the formation of a Provisional Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam, 16 June 2009 [also in PDF - English - Tamil]

The legitimate campaign of the Tamils to realize their right to self: determination has been brutally crushed through military aggression, which has been in violation of humanitarian laws and all civilized norms. People all over the world are shocked and deeply saddened by the massacres of Tamils in the Vanni.

Of particular note, banned weapons and heavy shelling by the Sinhalese military were responsible for the massacre of an estimated 30,000 Tamil civilians in the no fire zone this year. Today the government of Sri Lanka continues to incarcerate 300,000 Tamils, who have been herded into internment camps guarded by the Sinhalese military. The UN, INGOS and other relief organizations and journalists have been barred from free access to these internment camps. Those Tamils who live outside the camps hardly fare better in terms of their safety and wellbeing. The Jaffna Peninsula is an open prison camp. The Eastern part of the island, part of traditional habitation of Tamil-speaking people, is occupied territory. The South of the island is under the control of an anti-Tamil government, and the Tamils who live there are securitized, harassed and live in constant fear of violence. All Tamil civilians are being targeted solely on account of their Tamil ethnicity. Tamils are on the verge of being annihilated as a nation, a people and a community through deliberate killing and disappearance, forced assimilation, ethnic cleansing and colonization.

Not only is the very physical survival of Tamils in danger in the island of Sri Lanka, but Tamils also do not have any political space to articulate their legitimate political aspirations on the island.

Politicians who articulate the voices of their people are in grave danger of their life. Three Tamil Members of Parliament have been killed since Pres. Rajapakse was elected in 2005, more have fled the country and the ones who remain are very brave. In addition, because of the systematic colonization of Tamil areas, the gerrymandering of electoral districts, the large numbers who were driven from or fled the Tamil areas because of violence and the lack of new voter registration, Tamil representation has decreased substantially in the legislature since independence. Moreover, the electoral process in the island of Sri Lanka is entrenched with pervasive racism and has resulted in further marginalization and oppression of Tamil people at each and every election as acknowledged by academics. Consequently the Tamils are denied effective participation in the political process of the island.

A symptom of this lack of political space is the 1983 Sixth Amendment which prohibits even discussion of a separate state in violation of freedom of speech. The physical insecurity of Tamils is embodied in the 1979 Prevention of Terrorism Act which has been described as "an ugly blot on the statute book of any civilized country" by the International Commission of Jurists, and in the Emergency laws that have allowed hundreds of thousands of enforced disappearances, extrajudicial executions, torture and rape of Tamils with total impunity by the perpetrators. There is no political space for the full articulation of Tamil political aspirations within the constraints of the Sri Lankan state's constitutional structure, and, with the lack of personal security for Tamils within the island, the Tamils' political campaign for their rights can he pursued only from outside the island.

We, the people of Tamil Eelam and its Diaspora, therefore, firmly believe that the formation of a Provisional Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam is imperative. It is a well accepted proposition in international law that the legal claim to establish a government in exile arises the more readily when the exclusion of its political leaders is achieved through acts contrary to principles of ius cogens, such as the unlawful use of force, abductions with a view to torture, genocide, war crimes, detention in internment camps or "open prisons," the rape of women and the kidnapping of children.

In this connection, we, the people of Tamil Eelam and its Diaspora, propose to put together a committee for the Formation of a Provisional Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam. Our program and efforts in this regard are fundamentally democratic.

The Committee is given the task of structuring such a provisional government, with the view of

1. Uniting all Tamil entities and elements who subscribe to the fundamental tenets of Tamil political aspiration, namely the recognition of Tamil Nationhood, a Tamil homeland as recognized in the 1987 Indo- Sri Lanka Agreement, and the Tamils' right to self determination found in the 1976 Vaddukoddai Resolution, which was subsequently endorsed and mandated in the general election of 1977, the 1985 Thimpu Declaration and the 2003 Interim Self Governing Authority (ISGA) proposals;

2. Working in partnership with the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), considering that the political policies and aspirations articulated by the TNA at consecutive elections in 2001 and 2004 were strongly endorsed and, thereby mandated, by the Tamil people, and with any other Tamil political party or representatives of other parties that support and advocate for the realization of the Tamils' right to self-determination.

3. Articulating positions for negotiations with the Sinhala nation;

4. Conducting voter registration among the Tamil Diaspora within various countries in collaboration with an internationally reputed firm in preparation for electing a constituent assembly to frame a Constitution and to vote at a referendum subject to international supervision with respect to a final resolution of the Tamil national question;

5. Establishing procedures for electing a Congress and an Executive;

6. Establishing direct links with foreign Governments and other international organizations;

7. Working for the social, economic and cultural well-being of the one million members of the Tamil Diaspora;

8. Building a political program with the participation of Muslim representatives, taking into account that the diversity of Tamil and Muslim regions has been used as a threat in the past against the realization of the Tamils' right to self-determination;

9. Performing such other tasks as may be necessary to promote the interests of the Tamil people in the North East of the island of Sri Lanka and the Tamil Diaspora.

Given the urgent need to halt the ongoing genocide of Tamils on the island, the Committee is also given the task of liaising with international nongovernmental organizations and international organizations to ensure that Tamils' physical survival is guaranteed; to stop the sexual violence against Tamil women; to stop the physical abuse of Tamil children by the Sri Lankan government's mono-ethnic armed forces and ensure their speedy reunification with their families; to ensure the return of the 300,000 Tamils held in internment camps to their homes and to bring to justice those who have committed genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity.

The Committee shall also liaise with organizations representing the global Tamil Diaspora from various parts of the world and, especially, the second generation, to realize its task.

Members of the Formation Committee consist of a core team and many subcommittees on a country and sector basis, and are now being recruited.

The Formation Committee is supported by an Advisory Committee of experts in various fields. Professor M Sornarajah (UK), Professor Francis Boyle (USA), Professor P. Ramasamy (Malaysia), Professor Rev A.J.C Chandrakanthan (Canada), Professor Nadaraja Sriskandarajah (Sweden), Dr Murugar Gunasingham (Australia), Dr Sivanendran Seevanayagam (Australia), Dr A.L. Vasanthakumar (UK), Ms Karen Parker (USA), Dr N Jeyalingam (USA), Mr Selva Sivarajah (Australia), Mr Paul Williams (Netherlands) and Professor Peter Schalk (Sweden) have agreed to function as Advisory Committee members.

We kindly request all committed individuals to come forward to work for the important task of the formation of a Provisional Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam.

The Formation Committee is expected to function until December 31, 2009. Upon completion of its term, the Committee is required to produce a report of its work. The Committee invites suggestions from the general public in the above matter. In this connection the Committee has setup an email address for the public to use - info@govtamileelam


LTTE Plans Government in Exile
Joe Leahy in Mumbai, Financial Times, 16 June 2009

"The declaration of the transnational government may be intended to help it keep the independence hopes of the diaspora alive so that the LTTE can maintain its financial networks, analysts said."


Sri Lanka�s defeated ethnic Tamil rebel movement has sounded a note of defiance by announcing it is setting up a �transnational� government among the group�s overseas diaspora in a move likely to anger Colombo.

The statement was released by the pro-rebel Tamilnet website and was reportedly signed by Selvarasa Pathmanathan, the head of international relations for the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, which was crushed by government forces on the battlefield last month.

The LTTE has been quiet since the death of Velupillai Prabhakaran, its supreme chief, in May.

The declaration of the transnational government may be intended to help it keep the independence hopes of the diaspora alive so that the LTTE can maintain its financial networks, analysts said.

It is also likely to prompt Colombo to step up pressure on western governments, including the UK, the US and Canada, to take stronger measures against alleged LTTE sympathisers among their ethnic Sri Lankan Tamil communities.

Colombo achieved a crushing victory against the LTTE when it killed most of the group�s leaders, including Prabhakaran. But the ferociousness of the battle has fuelled anger among Tamils, with unofficial United Nations estimates putting the number of civilians killed in the final phase of the war this year at 20,000.

The government has disputed these figures, claiming it did not use heavy weapons in the final weeks of the war.

Pressure for an independent inquiry by the UN into possible war crimes was this month thwarted by China and Russia.

Mr Pathmanathan said the group would be aligned with opposition Sri Lankan Tamil parliamentarians.

Jehan Perera, of the National Peace Council of Sri Lanka, said the group�s defiant statements would provide ammunition for hardline nationalists in Colombo, who argue that security needs to be tightened to counter a resurgence by the LTTE.

Rohitha Bogollagama, Sri Lanka�s foreign minister, has called for international co-operation in rounding up members of the LTTE among the diaspora, particularly Mr Pathmanathan, who is reputed to be custodian of Mr Prabhakaran�s finances.

The government is also keen to deflect criticism from the huge detention camps it has set up for refugees from the conflict in the north of the island.


Sri Lanka rebels try to rise again after defeat - Ravi Nessman, The Associated Press
17 June 2009

"Sri Lanka's Tamil Tiger rebels are trying to rise from the ashes of their devastating battlefield defeat, swearing off violence and pledging to transform their internationally shunned terror group into a democratic movement for Tamil statehood. Their rebranding effort faces long odds. There are also signs that the Tamil Diaspora is divided over whom to support. The TamilNet Web site, seen as a mouthpiece for the rebels, has refused to carry statements from Pathmanathan and there have been reports that many Tamils are furious with him for quickly acknowledging Prabhakaran's death while others refused to believe the rebel chief had been killed."


COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) � Sri Lanka's Tamil Tiger rebels are trying to rise from the ashes of their devastating battlefield defeat, swearing off violence and pledging to transform their internationally shunned terror group into a democratic movement for Tamil statehood.

Their rebranding effort faces long odds. The Tamil Tigers' self-proclaimed new leader is a wanted arms smuggler, the group has no presence inside Sri Lanka and the government has brushed off the remaining rebels as irrelevant. It's not even clear if anyone is really in charge of the tattered and demoralized group.

"There is no LTTE now, because we have totally destroyed their capabilities and their hierarchy," Media Minister Anura Yapa said, referring to the rebels by an acronym of their formal name, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.

The rebels once controlled a shadow state across northern Sri Lanka backed by thousands of guerrilla fighters, a navy and even a nascent air force. They were crushed by government forces last month after a quarter century of civil war.

In the final days of the battle, the military killed much of the Tamil Tigers' leadership, including Velupillai Prabhakaran, the unquestioned ruler of the group. His dispatch of hundreds of suicide attackers � whose victims ranged from former Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi to commuters in a train station � landed the group on terror lists around the world.

Now, nearly 300,000 ethnic Tamil civilians from the rebels' former stronghold are being held in displacement camps in the north as security forces sweep through the rest of the country searching for remaining sleeper cells.

But the rebels also maintained a vast international support network among the estimated 800,000 Tamil expatriates living in Canada, Australia, Britain and other countries.

In the wake of Prabhakaran's death, Selvarasa Pathmanathan, the group's chief of international relations, has seized the leadership mantle and immediately begun trying to recreate the Tamil Tigers' image.

He acknowledged the rebels could no longer hope to achieve their dream of a separate state for minority Tamils � known as Eelam � on the battlefield and renounced violence. He promised the group would reorganize itself based on democratic principles � a major change from Prabhakaran's almost cult-like leadership style. And he announced the creation of a committee to set up a "provisional transnational government" for the proposed Tamil state.

"The struggle of the people of Tamil Eelam for their right to self-rule has reached a new stage," he said in a statement Monday. "It is time now for us to move forward with our political vision towards our freedom, bearing in mind the practical realities in our homeland."

Visuvanathan Rudrakumaran, a former rebel legal adviser appointed to head the committee, said he planned to register Tamils abroad to vote for a constitutional assembly. The committee would also reach out to foreign governments and create a platform for negotiations with Sri Lanka.

But Pathmanathan may not be the ideal person to transform the Tamil Tigers into an internationally respected liberation movement. Known as "KP," he ran the group's vast international weapons smuggling ring and remains a wanted man internationally. The government has appealed to foreign governments in recent days to find and arrest him.

"I don't know where he is, but basically we are asking his extradition from whatever country (he is in)," Yapa said.

There are also signs that the Tamil Diaspora is divided over whom to support. The TamilNet Web site, seen as a mouthpiece for the rebels, has refused to carry statements from Pathmanathan and there have been reports that many Tamils are furious with him for quickly acknowledging Prabhakaran's death while others refused to believe the rebel chief had been killed.

Pathmanathan's efforts to transform a violent rebel group based in the jungles of northern Sri Lanka into a peaceful government-in-exile will be "extremely difficult, if not impossible," said Indian journalist M.R. Narayan Swamy, who has written books on the rebel group and Prabhakaran.

Western governments are not likely to lift their bans on the group, Sri Lanka has no incentive to entertain its demands and Tamils abroad may no longer be willing to give money to the remnants of the defeated and discredited rebels, he said.

"As far as I'm concerned, the LTTE does not even exist," he said.

 

 

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