"We Don't Want Development, We Want Our Rights!"


The message shouted from an elder woman inside Zone 2's internment camps in Sri Lanka was clear as she angrily harassed a humanitarian worker attempting to install latrines that would signal a longer, more permanent, residence in unlivable internment camps . It's a message that is perhaps best directed at the United Nations and donor countries who, in the case of Sri Lanka, have chosen "access" to hundreds of internally displaced civilians over "advocacy" in their best interests.

With small pockets of civilians uprooted by a bloody end to Sri Lanka's protracted civil war resettled in their home districts, the majority of the 300,000 Internally Displaced People (IDPs) from the minority Tamil population remain in sprawling internment camps with dwindling supplies of fresh water, quickly spreading communicable diseases, and up to three families in one tent . The camps are, however, equipped with ATM machines -- reinforcing within the camps what has become obvious outside of the camps. Those with money have power.

The actors with money: The Government of Sri Lanka (2.5 billion US$ wealthier after the approval of a recent International Monetary Fund loan), the UN, and donor countries (primarily China). Since they have neither the money nor the representation to influence their own destiny, Tamil civilians must rely on the UN as their voice. It is an option many in the camps trust less than the promises of a militaristic regime responsible for their captivity. Most of the animosity is directed at Secretary General Ban Ki Moon- who was notably silent as their loved ones perished in the final days of fighting. In a leaked memo, Norwegian Deputy Ambassador Mona Juul says of Sri Lanka, "the Secretary-General's moral voice and authority have been absent."

Why the silence? Perhaps because discussions in the Security Council of Tamil civilian lives were relegated to the basement of the UN, as opposed to Darfurian lives which are allowed consideration on higher floors. Perhaps because Sri Lanka was never an item on the Security Council Agenda, despite having the votes necessary. Some speculate it is the hardline position of the Secretary General's advisors, bolstered by a Human Rights Council debate deeming the Sri Lankan war an "internal matter". Officially, the UN laments that its lack of leverage on behalf of the affected civilians is derived from the growing influence of China and India on the island. In broad macroeconomic terms the Asian powers, capitalizing on the ill-gotten gains of peace, are certainly engaged in a fiscal duel for dominance in Sri Lanka. However, in development aid, most of their funds are dispersed through the UN - and a quick survey of any of the camps will reveal that UN tents far outnumber those provided by the Chinese government. The omnipresence of UN staff on the ground should imply a natural mandate in the debates around resettlement, but it is a power the organization has been hesitant to embrace.

It must be noted that in these internment camps there are sympathetic government soldiers (one lieutenant reportedly consistently siphons off food from rations to ensure children in his care are well-fed), and committed local UN staff -but all are beholden to a leadership which seems deaf to their concerns. While outside humanitarian groups are not (are never) entirely innocent, in Sri Lanka they too have been subsumed under the dominance of the UN (recently accused of not sharing crucial information). What is the message being conveyed by the actions of power players at the UN? That in a "post-conflict" environment, only a victor's justice is available to a marginalized constituency.

Talking heads and a growing number of colored rubber bracelets have tried to convince us that "development" will solve all problems, ethnic or otherwise. But what happens when in order to maintain a presence in a country, and access to displaced civilians, the largest outside "development" actor forgoes its responsibility to advocate for rights guaranteed in the Geneva Convention? While the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam are no longer the focal point for Tamil nationalism, separatist sentiments remain high among a population who will no longer accept the exchange of humanitarian aid for political rights.

The assassinated Sinhalese journalist Lasantha Wickrematunga predicted in January of this year, "A military occupation of the country's north and east will require the Tamil people of those regions to live eternally as second-class citizens, deprived of all self respect. Do not imagine that you can placate them by showering "development" and "reconstruction" on them in the post-war era." As Tamils around the world are now being recruited into "power-sharing" discussions and "trust-building" exercises, it is important to recognize that a significant amount of power remains in the hands of the UN, an institution that the minority Tamils once trusted with their lives.

The monsoon rains this fall are predicted to trigger a humanitarian crisis as every existing concern outlined by human rights groups (poor sanitation, collapsing tents, lack of medical care) will be exacerbated by massive flooding. Local and international NGOs have warned that no amount of money poured into the overcrowded camps will prevent the loss of thousands of civilian lives. Logistically, at least 100,000 (approximately 1/3) of the displaced civilians must be evacuated to their original homes in the Northern and Eastern districts before the onset of the rains. It seems that only when the international community recognizes the limits of "development" will Tamil civilians, inadvertently, be granted the most basic of rights- the right of return.


 
 
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08:33 PM on 09/19/2009
West and UN should rather support screening (terrorists) and demining (northern previous war zone). Presently, Sri Lankan government is with the attitude that hypocratic west is not concerned about Sri Lanka but they just play the traditional human right song to imply that 'west is more civilized'. This issue has to be solved with collaboration than mere accusition and fight. Presently much of the effort is wasted on these arguments without any direct solution to the problem at hand: 300,000 people are held in camps agasint their will in order to ensure safe return to their homes and to gurnatee no terrirst uprise in Sri Lanka in the future.
Clearly there is a tradeoff to be made and neither UN nor west support Sri Lankan governement in solving the problem, instead they casue more 'trouble'. Has anybody gained anything with those 'troubles'?
11:10 AM on 08/28/2009
Nimmi -FYI,
Not majority of 300,000 IDPs are tamils. All of them are from the tamil population. All of the Sri Lankan military are from the majority Sinhalese.

If you view the execution video from Channel 4 smuggled out by the Sri Lankan military personnel, you could listen to the conversation of army personnel demeaning the dignity of basics of human rights.

Many of the detainees are potential witnesses for war crimes for the 'war without witness' of the 21st century.

I pity you that you still uphold confidence in the UN system under Mr. Ban and his corrupt aides.
10:09 AM on 08/28/2009
Now for a nice story (not hallucinated):

"Mydilly and Subhaskaran Reunited With Their Parents":
http://www.asiantribune.com/news/2009/08/26/mydilly-and-subhaskaran-reunited-their-parents
10:03 AM on 08/28/2009
"The government has reliable information that LTTE cadres have infiltrated the ranks of the IDPs in Vavuniya and utmost care has to be taken in permitting even limited freedom of movement, Minister of Disaster Management and Human Rights Mahinda Samarasinghe said." -
Now, would the US/UK/Allied forces let all the Taliban 'cadres' go from IDP camps without weding them?
03:32 AM on 08/28/2009
While the world is distracted by the Sri Lankan violation of UN Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement in the detention camps in the North, Tamil IDPs in the East were forcibly dumped in places they fear to live in, eg elephant-infested jungles or in the midst of Sinhala villages, according to a report by Ruki, a human rights defender from Law and Society Trust, who won a justice and peace award in South Korea in April 2009:

http://www.groundviews.org/2009/08/01/forcible-resettlements-in-east/
Forcible resettlements in East, Ruki, 1 August 2009:
''... On 18th June 2009, the Divisional Secretary (DS) together with the Police and Military had forced around 57 families to resettle in Pullumalai area. ... ....''
12:02 AM on 08/28/2009
What Sri Lanka has been doing to innocent Tamils in the IDP camps is simply WRONG. Any democratic government should not be doing this for whatever reason: this is illegal, period! There is no way anyone can justify, and I will go one step further, this can be only done in a country ruled by dictator!

If Sri Lanka does not change its course, the civilized would should impose ban on it!
11:38 PM on 08/27/2009
if you dont want develpment why live in US, Canada, Australia ete, you should go to Tamilnadu instead. Tamils have more rights in Sri Lanka, Tamil is a national language but not in US , Canada, Australia etc. But you never protest cause most of you are economic migrants.
Stop trying to spilt the country to create a mono ethnic Tamil state. Majority of Tamils live in the south and non traditional tamil land in Developed countries.