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Friday, October 14, 2011

மத்திய ஆபிரிக்காவில் ஒபாமா திறக்கும் அடுத்த உலக மறுபங்கீட்டு போர்க்களமுனை.

ஏகபோக முதலாளித்துவத்தின் மூன்றாவது உலகப் பொது நெருக்கடியில் இருந்து மீள்வதற்கு ஏகாதிபத்தியவாதிகள் உலக மறு பங்கீட்டுப் பிராந்திய யுத்தங்களை நடத்தி வருகின்றார்கள்!

சோவியத் சமூக ஏகாதிபத்தியத்தின் வீழ்ச்சிக்குப் பின்னால்


முதலில் கிழக்கைரோப்பிய நாடுகளைப் பங்கீடு செய்தார்கள்.

இரண்டாவதாக மத்திய ஆசியாவைப் பங்கீடு செய்தார்கள்.



மூன்றாவதாக மத்திய ஆபிரிக்காவுக்குள் நுழைகின்றார்கள் 

ஒபாமா திறக்கும் உகண்டா களமுனை இந்தத் தொடர் யுத்தத்தின் அடுத்த உலக மறுபங்கீட்டு போர்க்களமுனையே ஆகும்!

=புதிய ஈழப்புரட்சியாளர்கள்=



U.S. Deploys Troops in Pursuit of African Rebels
WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama has authorized the deployment of up to 100 combat-equipped U.S. troops to central Africa to help hunt down the leaders of a rebel force known as the Lord's Resistance Army.

A senior administration official said 12 troops have been deployed so far under what he called a training mission aimed at helping African forces find and kill Joseph Kony, the fugitive head of the rebels.

The U.S. forces will deploy to Uganda, South Sudan, the Central African Republic and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

"Although the U.S. forces are combat-equipped, they will only be providing information, advice, and assistance to partner nation forces, and they will not themselves engage LRA forces unless necessary for self-defense," Mr. Obama said in a letter to Congress released Friday.

The U.S. deployment will include special operations forces, defense officials said. Pentagon officials noted that U.S. forces are routinely deployed to Africa for training missions.

 Former U.S. Deputy Undersecretary of Defense Jed Babbin discusses the White House's decision to send up to 100 combat-equipped U.S. troops to central Africa to help hunt down leaders of a rebel force known as the Lord's Resistance Army.

The Lord's Resistance Army is believed to have killed, kidnapped and mutilated tens of thousands of civilians since the 1990s. Military officials said they believed Mr. Kony, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court, and other top LRA leaders are currently hiding the Central African Republic.

The LRA, which says it is a religious group, first emerged in northern Uganda in the 1990s but was driven out by the Ugandan military. Although Mr. Kony is thought to command just a few hundred armed loyalists, the LRA's mobility and the difficulties of the terrain has made the group hard to find, officials said.

Foreign Firms Angle for Uganda's Oil Reserves
by  Guy Chazan and Nicholas Bariyo|The Wall Street Journal|Monday, February 01, 2010

(THE WALL STREET JOURNAL), Feb. 1, 2010

A skirmish over an oil field on the shores of Africa's Lake Albert highlights Big Oil's intense interest in Uganda -- a rising star of African energy.

The battle centers on the Ugandan assets of Heritage Oil PLC, a small U.K.-based explorer, which is selling its stakes in the much-coveted Lake Albert Rift Basin. The area has yielded some of sub-Saharan Africa's largest onshore oil discoveries of recent years.

Big energy companies like Italy's Eni SpA, France's Total SA and China National Offshore Oil Co. all are vying for access to Uganda's oil wealth. Uganda's onshore oil is particularly appealing because it is relatively inexpensive to produce. That sets it apart from other frontier provinces, like the deep waters off Brazil's coast and the Arctic Ocean, where the majors require an oil price of around $60 a barrel just to break even.

Initially, Eni looked to be the likely winner, announcing in November that it was buying Heritage's stakes for $1.5 billion in cash and assets. But Tullow Oil PLC, Heritage's partner in the oil field, exercised its contractual right to block the sale and acquire the stakes itself at the same price.

Tullow's purchase, however, is subject to approval by the Ugandan government. The initial reaction was negative, with the country's energy minister saying the government didn't want one company to end up with control of the whole oil field and would prevent the sale if necessary.

Heritage and Tullow share ownership of two blocks in the oil field, while Tullow owns all of a third. Acquiring Heritage's stakes would give Tullow full ownership of all three blocks, covering 3,900 square miles, more than twice the area of Rhode Island.

The government's position appeared to soften after Tullow Chief Executive Aidan Heavey met with Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni in Kampala recently. Tullow said that once in full possession of the oil field it would sell half to either Cnooc or Total to help finance the construction of a refinery and an 800-mile pipeline that would carry the oil to world markets.

Such an arrangement would allow Tullow to control who it works with as well as concentrate on its core activities -- exploring for and pumping oil, rather than refining and transporting it to market.

Tullow also announced plans last Wednesday to raise around $1.6 billion in a rights issue to help it develop Uganda's oil.

Tullow now is the favorite to take the Heritage stakes, with Cnooc edging out Total as Tullow's most-likely partner, a person familiar with the matter said. Mr. Museveni met with Cnooc executives in Kampala last week and is expected to meet them again this week to finalize details, the person said. Cnooc and Total declined to comment.

Eni hasn't given up, however, and last week sweetened its package. The company's CEO, Paolo Scaroni, said in a newspaper interview that Eni would not only develop the Lake Albert field and build a refinery and pipeline to the Indian Ocean, but also would construct an electricity plant in Uganda and upgrade a railway line from Kampala to the Kenyan port of Mombasa. He said Eni would invest $13 billion in the "integrated development plan." Eni declined to comment for this article.

Tullow declined to comment on Eni's new offer.

What has attracted companies like Eni to Uganda is the one billion barrels of crude already discovered in the Lake Albert Rift Basin, a vast, oil-rich area close to Uganda's border with Congo to the west, and the huge untapped potential of the region. Tullow estimates that about 1.5 billion barrels, roughly the same amount as Yemen's oil reserves, remain to be discovered in the basin.

Uganda also is seen as more stable politically than many of its neighbors, though the north of the country is wracked by armed conflict between the army and a rebel group, the Lord's Resistance Army, that has displaced hundreds of thousands of people.

Uganda plans to produce around 150,000 barrels of oil a day in four to six years, most of which will be exported. For comparison, that is slightly less than the output of Brunei. The steady revenue stream from oil could radically change the fortunes of the east African country, one of the world's poorest

October 14, 2011
Obama Sending 100 Armed Advisers to Africa to Help Fight Renegade Group
By THOM SHANKER and RICK GLADSTONE NYTimes
WASHINGTON — President Obama said Friday that he had ordered the deployment of 100 armed military advisers to central Africa to help regional forces combat the Lord’s Resistance Army, a notorious renegade group that has terrorized villagers in at least four countries with marauding bands that kill, rape, maim and kidnap with impunity.

The deployment represents a muscular escalation of American military efforts to help fight the Lord’s Resistance Army, which originated as a Ugandan rebel force in the 1980s and morphed into a fearsome cult-like group of fighters. It is led by Joseph Kony, a self-proclaimed prophet known for ordering village massacres, recruiting prepubescent soldiers, keeping harems of child brides and mutilating opponents.

“For more than two decades, the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) has murdered, raped and kidnapped tens of thousands of men, women and children in central Africa,” Mr. Obama wrote in a letter to Congress announcing the military deployment. “The LRA continues to commit atrocities across the Central African Republic, the Democratic Republic of Congo and South Sudan that have a disproportionate impact on regional security.”

The decision by Mr. Obama to deploy armed military advisers into the region was welcomed by human rights advocates who have chronicled the atrocities committed by Mr. Kony and his subordinates. But it also raises the risk of putting American military personnel in harm’s way in another region of the world while the United States is winding down the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Mr. Obama wrote that he had decided to act because it was “in the national security and foreign policy interests of the United States.”. He also wrote that the deployment was justified by a law passed by Congress in May 2010, the Lord’s Resistance Army Disarmament and Northern Uganda Recovery Act, which favored “increased, comprehensive U.S. efforts to help mitigate and eliminate the threat posed by the LRA to civilians and regional stability.”

American efforts to combat the group also took place during the Bush administration, which authorized the Pentagon to send a team of 17 counterterrorism advisers to train Ugandan troops and provided millions of dollars worth of aid, including fuel trucks, satellite phones and night vision goggles, to the Ugandan army. Those efforts scattered segments of the LRA in recent years; its remnants dispersed and regrouped in Uganda’s neighbors. In the spring of 2010, apparently desperate for new conscripts, Mr. Kony’s forces killed hundreds of villagers in the Congolese jungle and kidnapped hundreds more, according to witnesses interviewed at the time.

Unlike the earlier effort, the 100 military advisers dispatched by Mr. Obama will be armed. They will be providing assistance and advice to their African hosts, Mr. Obama said, and “will not themselves engage LRA forces unless necessary for self-defense.”

The initial deployment will be in Uganda, the president said, and the advisers will operate in South Sudan, the Central African Republic and the Democratic Republic of Congo “subject to the approval of each host nation.”

A senior Pentagon official underscored that the American military personnel would not be operating independently nor carrying out unilateral operations.

The official also said the United States had provided about $33 million in support to regional efforts to battle the Lord’s Resistance Army since 2008, an effort that has not been sufficient to guarantee that local security forces dismantle the group.

One specific effort has trained a light infantry battalion of the Democratic Republic of Congo’s military, with that unit now deployed in the Dungu region of northeastern Congo where the Lord’s Resistance Army has been operating.

The Special Operations forces assigned to the new mission “bring the experience and technical capability to train, advise and assist partner security forces in support of programs designed to support internal security,” the Pentagon official said.

“Our intention is to provide the right balance of strategic and tactical experience to supplement host nation military efforts,” the official said. “Ultimately, Africans are responsible for African security, but we remain committed to our partners to enable their efforts to provide for their own security.”

Tom Malinowski, the Washington director of Human Rights Watch, said his group had been advocating for such a deployment. Putting more skilled advisers in the field with the armed forces of these countries would be a significant improvement over the previous level of assistance, he said. “I would not suggest that U.S. forces should be fighting the LRA themselves,” he said, but “there are lot of things they can do with this kind of deployment that they weren’t able to do previously.”

Mr. Malinowski also said the Lord’s Resistance Army probably has only a few hundred fighters, “but they are incredibly vicious and have committed numerous massacres. It’s a group that seems to exist for no other purpose than to kill.”

Thom Shanker reported from Washington, and Rick Gladstone from New York.
This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: October 14, 2011
An earlier version of this article misspelled Tom Malinowski’s surname as Malinowsky.

www.outlookindia.com | ‘We’re No Policy Advisors’

www.outlookindia.com | ‘We’re No Policy Advisors’

Thursday, October 13, 2011

E: லெப்.கேணல் விக்ரரின் நினைவுப் பகிர்வுக் காணொளி.

E: லெப்.கேணல் விக்ரரின் நினைவுப் பகிர்வுக் காணொளி.: விடுதலை வீரன் விக்டரின் நீங்கா நினைவு நீடூழி வாழ்க! லெப்.கேணல் விக்ரரின் நினைவுப் பகிர்வுக் காணொளி(2/1). லெப்.கேணல் விக்ரரின் நினைவுப் பக...

E: விடுதலை வீரன் விக்டரின் நீங்கா நினைவு நீடூழி வாழ்க...

E: விடுதலை வீரன் விக்டரின் நீங்கா நினைவு நீடூழி வாழ்க...: மாவீரன் விக்ரரின் நினைவு நாள் விடுதலை முழக்கங்கள்! மன்னார் மாவட்ட விடுதலைப்புலி மூத்த தளபதியும் மகளிர் தாக்குதலணியின் முதற் தளபதியும் ஆன...

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

புதிய ஈழம்: புலம் பெயர் தமிழர்களின் போராட்டம் தத்தம் நாடுகளின்...

புதிய ஈழம்: புலம் பெயர் தமிழர்களின் போராட்டம் தத்தம் நாடுகளின்...

Keiser Report 195

ஏகபோக நிதியாதிக்கக் கும்பல்களும், அவர்களின் நலன்காக்கும் ஏகாதிபத்திய அரசுகளும் சேவகம் செய்யும் புல்லுரிவிகளின் சனத்தொகை
1%

Boston Police Attack Veterans for Peace

*Walls St ஏகபோக நிதியாதிக்கக் கும்பலின் ஏவல் நாய் ஒபாமாவே,
வேலைவாய்ப்பு கோரி போராடும் அமெரிக்க உழைக்கும் மக்கள் இயக்கத்தின் மீது வெறி கொண்டு பாயும் சமூகப் பயங்கரவாதத்தை உடனே நிறுத்து!
*அமெரிக்க ஐரோப்பிய நாடுகளில் வாழும் ஈழத்தமிழ் உழைக்கும் மக்களே இந்நாடுகளின் அரசுகளை எதிர்த்து போராடும் மக்களின் உள்நாட்டு ஜனநாயக இயக்கத்துடன் தமிழீழ தேசிய விடுதலைப் புரட்சியை ஒன்றிணையுங்கள்!
* புலம்பெயர் தமிழர் பேரவைகள்,மற்றும் உருத்திரகுமாரன், நெடுமாறன்.TNA-சுரேஸ் பிரேமச்சந்திரன்,Tamil Net அடங்கிய நவீன காலனியாதிக்க ஆதரவு அணியின் இடைவழிச்சமரசப் பாதையை நிராகரியுங்கள்!
*சுயநிர்ணய உரிமைக் கோரிக்கையை உயர்த்திப்பிடியுங்கள்!
சுதந்திர ஈழம் காண ஊற்றெடுங்கள்!

Boston Police Attack Veterans for Peace

Monday, October 10, 2011

ஆறுபடை வீட்டோடு அறுவடைக்கலையும் `இலட்சியவாதி` மனோ கணேசன்


எத்தகைய ஐக்கியம்!

File Photo: Mano with Tamilchelvan


Mano Ganeshan to decide about his alliance this evening
Mon, 2011-10-10 15:10 — editor
News
Colombo, 10 October, (Asiantribune.com):

Mano Ganeshan, the leader of the Democratic People’s Front said he will be deciding about their position in the two Municipalities and in the Urban Council after a decision at the Presidium meeting schedule for this evening in Colombo.

He told Asian Tribune that UNP has already approached him for the support of his 6 councilors, whom his party has bagged in the Colombo Municipality.

He said that he can’t decide anything alone, but it is his party that has to resolve and direct him of the future course action.

Given below the excerpts of the Interview Asian Tribune had with Mano Ganeshan, the leader of the Democratic People’s Front:

Asian Tribune: Congratulation for winning 6 seats in the Colombo Municipality and one each in the Dehiwela Mount Lavania Municipality and at the Kolonnawa Urban Council elections. I want to know your next move?

Mano Ganeshan: Thank you very much. We will be deciding tonight. Our Party’s Presidium Committee is meeting tonight. We will have to discuss all the available options and come to a conclusion.

Asian Tribune: There is a report to say that UNP has already approached you?

Mano Ganeshan: Yes UNP… obviously they will approach, you know.

Asian Tribune: What else you like to tell?

Mano Ganeshan: Well at the moment, I don’t want to commit anything. Our party is a democratic party, not only in name, but also in the real sense of it.

Therefore, as I said in the beginning that we will have to discuss and then come up with our next move. I also take this opportunity thank my voters who have placed confidence in us. I also wish to assure them that we will never betray the mandate.

Asian Tribune: What is the mandate you are speaking of?

Mano Ganeshan: The mandate specially the Tamil people in the region of Colombo, Dehiwela and Kolonnawa have placed confidence in me. During the election campaign those in the Government, as well as in the opposition made accusation against me and some of them went up to the level of character assassination and amidst all these things, a sizeable number of people has placed confidence in me and that is a respectable mandate which I have received against all the odds.

Asian Tribune: In fact according to reports, 60% of the voters in the Colombo municipal area are non Sinhala people. But you have only got 6 seats. Why you couldn’t get more from the non Sinhala speaking voters?

Mano Ganeshan: The problem is that this is being a local government election and a large section of the Tamil people has simply kept away from voting in this election. So this mental tendency of the voters also had an impact.

Asian Tribune: If all those Tamils would have voted, how many seats you would have got.

Mano Ganeshan: we got 6 seats. But that cannot be answered.

Furthermore, under this proportionate voting system nobody can foresee the number seats one party can win. We have polled 26,000 votes and have 6 seats, but some parties have received very less votes, but they have received two seats.

- Asian Tribune -

Saturday, October 08, 2011

இந்தியாவைத் தொடர்ந்து ஆப்கானிஸ்தானில் அமெரிக்காவுக்கு முண்டுகொடுக்கும் இனப்படுகொலை கோதபாயா இராணுவம்!




“Assistant secretary Robert Blake raised the possibility of Sri Lanka contributing to US – led coalition operations in Afghanistan, noting that would be a significant step in support of improving military – to – military engagement.” a leaked US diplomatic cable reveals.


WikiLeaks – Gota to provide mercenaries to Afghan war
Posted by Colombo Telegraph ⋅ October 6, 2011 ⋅ 20
By Colombo Telegraph

“Assistant secretary Robert Blake raised the possibility of Sri Lanka contributing to US – led coalition operations in Afghanistan, noting that would be a significant step in support of improving military – to – military engagement.” a leaked US diplomatic cable reveals.

In an attempt to avoid the stigma associated with mercenaries
The Colombo Telegraph found the leaked cable from the WikiLeak database. The cable classified as “CONFIDENTIAL” and recount details of a meeting US Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs Robert O. Blake had with Sri Lankan Defense Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa on 8th December 2009. They discussed the subjects such as accountability and reconciliation, security and reconstruction, ICRC and ex- combatants, military missions, LTTE links to Eritrea and potential Sri Lankan contributions to peace keeping operations and US – led coalition efforts.

“Rajapaksa replied that contributing forces for combat operations right now would be too politically sensitive during the current election season in Sri Lanka. He added that the GSL would have to consider seriously the implications for its Muslim minority as well as the danger of drawing the ire of groups like Al – Qaida and Lashkar –e –Taiba by becoming a force provider. He said possible alternative for Sri Lanka might be to provide training assistance to Afghan security forces under the auspices of a non – governmental organization or private company.” the cable reveals.

The cable further says “Blake warned that Lakshar – e – Taiba, which had used Nepal and Bangladesh as staging posts to attack India, could next turn to Sri Lanka. Rajapaksa related that GSL had arrested two men transiting Sri Lanka to Nepal based on information provided by India’s research and Analysis Wing (RAW). The GSL has since turned them over to RAW. Rajapaksa noted that the GSL has assigned separate officers to watch extremists. Blake suggested that the GSL exchange further information about LTTE networks with US counter – terrorism experts.”

Contributing forces for combat operations right now would be too politically sensitive during the current election season in Sri Lanka
“Private Military Companies (PMC) refer to their business generally as the private military industry, in an attempt to avoid the stigma often associated with mercenaries.” a military analyst told Colombo Telegraph.

The services and expertise offered by PMCs are typically similar to those of governmental military or police forces, most often on a smaller scale. While PMCs often provide services to train or supplement official armed forces in service of governments, they can also be employed by private companies to provide bodyguards for key staff or protection of company premises, especially in hostile territories. However, contractors who use offensive force in a war zone could be considered unlawful combatants in reference to a concept outlined in the Geneva Conventions and explicitly specified by the US Military Commissions Act.

Many countries, including the United States and the United Kingdom, are not signatories to the 1989 United Nations Mercenary Convention banning the use of mercenaries.
Read the full cable below.

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 03 COLOMBO 001159 

SIPDIS 

DEPARTMENT FOR SCA/INSB 

E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/08/2019
TAGS: PGOV PREL PREF PHUM PTER EAID MOPS CE
SUBJECT: DEFENSE SECRETARY DEFENDS SRI LANKAN POLICIES WITH
A/S BLAKE 

COLOMBO 00001159  001.8 OF 003 

Classified By: DCM VALERIE FOWLER.  REASONS: 1.4 (B, D) 

¶1. (C) SUMMARY:  In a December 8 meeting with A/S Blake, Sri
Lankan Defense Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa discussed
accountability and reconciliation; the State of Emergency;
disarmament of ex-combatants and paramilitary groups;
reconstruction in the North; rehabilitation of Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) ex-combatants; LTTE child
soldiers; access to LTTE ex-combatants for the International
Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC); potential Sri Lankan
contributions to peacekeeping operations and to U.S.-led
coalition efforts, and Sri Lankan military expansion plans.
A/S Blake noted that ICRC access to LTTE ex-combatants and
GSL action to hold members of the military accountable for
any human rights abuses or possibly war crimes would be
important for the normalization of our military-to-military
relations.  END SUMMARY. 

ACCOUNTABILITY AND RECONCILIATION
--------------------------------- 

¶2. (C) A/S Blake emphasized American and international
expectations and concerns about accountability and
reconciliation, and urged the GSL to make every effort to
show it had investigated and when appropriate held
accountable members of the military alleged to have committed
human rights abuses or war crimes.  Rajapaksa asserted that
the military was taking action, and -- in response to A/S
Blake's request -- agreed to provide the United States with a
copy of the Ministry of Defense's input into the GSL response
to the European Union's Generalized System of Preferences
(GSP)-Plus report.  (NOTE: The Embassy subsequently received
a copy of the "Observations of the Government of Sri Lanka in
respect of the 'Report on the Findings of the Investigation
with Respect to the Effective Implementation of certain human
rights Conventions in Sri Lanka'."  The Observations were
essentially a narrative defense of the GSL position, appeared
to have little input from the Ministry of Defense, and
contained no statistics on military investigations of
potential criminal acts.  The Embassy has continued to try to
get the report on military investigations that the Defense
Secretary promised to A/S Blake, as well as to Ambassador
Butenis, but thus far has been unsuccessful.  END NOTE.) 

SECURITY AND RECONSTRUCTION
---------------------------- 

¶3. (C) A/S Blake suggested that lifting the State of
Emergency would help demonstrate GSL progress addressing
long-term human rights concerns.  Speaking hours after
Parliament had extended the State of Emergency for another
month, Rajapaksa replied the provisions remained necessary,
primarily to keep in detention the 1,000 or so hard-core LTTE
cadres.  He said the GSL was trying to figure out a way ahead
to process the detainees within the judicial system, but if
the Emergency were lifted now, the GSL would have to release
them.  Rajapaksa emphasized that most of the other security
restrictions had already been eased or lifted, including
restrictions on air travel, transportation, and those related
to the fishing industry. 

¶4. (C) In response to A/S Blake's suggestion that the GSL
disarm paramilitary groups in the North as it had done in the
East, Rajapaksa noted that the government had disarmed all
militant groups, including those in Vavuniya.  He said every
day the security forces are collecting arms and ammunition,
uncovering many hidden caches from information provided by
Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) and LTTE ex-combatants.
He dismissed recent media reports of a Tamil group
identifying itself as a Peoples' Liberation Army and calling 

COLOMBO 00001159  002.6 OF 003 

for an independent homeland for Tamils.  Rajapaksa said the
GSL has excellent security controls in the Eastern Province,
and had seen no indication of any such group. 

¶5. (C) Rajapaksa said the GSL had encouraged the Tamil
diaspora to take a greater role in reconstruction.  He said
that there was a critical need for construction of housing
and hoped the diaspora would provide assistance as they had
done after the devastation caused by the 2004 tsunami in the
North, the South, and in the Eastern Province.  A/S Blake
mentioned his trip to the IDP camps and resettled areas in
the North.  He noted few patients in the hospital in the
camps.  He said the area around Madhu Church had not appeared
as damaged by the war as expected.  He said the resettled
IDPs had expressed the need for two types of assistance,
namely more computers and more bicycles, adding that the IDPs
had told him that the Sri Lankan Army had passed out a lot of
bicycles to them, but they would like more.  Rajapaksa
responded that the Army had carried out most of the clearing,
reconstruction and renovation around the Madhu Church. 

ICRC AND EX-COMBATANTS
---------------------- 

¶6. (C) In response to A/S Blake's support for the ICRC's
mandate, Rajapaksa said the ICRC continued to visit LTTE
cadres in prisons and there was no problem with ICRC visiting
the LTTE ex-combatant camps.  Rajapaksa said he had no issue
with ICRC performing its monitoring mission.  He said it was
inappropriate, however, for the ICRC to interfere in the
rehabilitation programs that were the purview of
International Organization for Migration (IOM) and the GSL.
He blamed the ICRC for undermining international donor
support for IOM rehabilitation programs, and encouraged A/S
Blake to discuss the problem with IOM representatives.  Blake
clarified that the ICRC was not undermining such support.
Rather, by granting ICRC periodic access, the GSL could
improve prospects for international support. Rajapaksa
highlighted that the LTTE child soldiers' education program
at Hindu College in Ratmalana was going well.  He said that
during his recent visit to the facility, he had spoken to the
children and that most wanted to continue their studies and
rejoin their families.  Rajapaksa noted that there were two
or three cases of children with no families and that one
child thought his parents had gone to London, but no one had
been able to trace them. 

MILITARY MISSIONS
----------------- 

¶7. (C) Rajapaksa discussed his future plans for the Sri Lanka
military to participate in UN Peacekeeping missions.
Rajapaksa said he could make 10,000 peacekeepers available
"today" for deployment on UN missions.  Although Sri Lankan
Air Force (SLAF) aircraft were also available, deployments
were impractical given the unaffordable up-front costs the
GSL would incur just to deploy them.  Regarding participation
in maritime coalition operations to counter piracy and the
trafficking of persons and narcotics, Rajapaksa noted that
Sri Lanka would be very open to the idea.  Regarding reported
plans to expand the military, Rajapaksa said he had
instructed the military to develop a plan for expanding
maritime capabilities, with the primary intent of preventing
the LTTE from once again smuggling arms and ammunition into
Sri Lanka.  He said the Sri Lankan Navy would be critical to
stopping any LTTE smuggling operations, and would also play a
significant role in countering the LTTE's human trafficking
operations throughout the region to destinations such as
Australia and Canada. 

COLOMBO 00001159  003.8 OF 003 

AFGHANISTAN
----------- 

¶8. (C) A/S Blake raised the possibility of Sri Lanka
contributing to U.S.-led coalition operations in Afghanistan,
noting that would be a significant step in support of
improving military-to-military engagement.  Rajapaksa replied
that contributing forces for combat operations right now
would be too politically sensitive during the current
election season in Sri Lanka.  He added that the GSL would
have to consider seriously the implications for its Muslim
minority as well as the danger of drawing the ire of groups
like Al-Qaida and Lashkar-e-Taiba by becoming a force
provider.  He said a possible alternative for Sri Lanka might
be to provide training assistance to Afghan security forces
under the auspices of a non-governmental organization or
private company.  He recalled a local precedent for this
approach, dating back to 1985-1986 when a South Africa-based
company had provided security assistance to Sri Lanka in the
early years of the war with the LTTE.  He said the company
had provided military and security experts from a host of
countries, including the United Kingdom, other Commonwealth
nations, and even some Russians.  For four or five years, the
company was based in Jaffna and had trained Sri Lankan pilots
and taught infantry tactics, including close quarters combat
skills.  He said that while the South African company had not
participated in combat operations, it had closely monitored
Sri Lankan military operations, assisting in de-briefing
patrols and conducting after action reviews. 

LTTE LINKS TO ERITREA AND LET
----------------------------- 

¶9. (C) Rajapaksa briefed that the GSL knew of five planes
that the LTTE had purchased in Eritrea, where they remained.
The LTTE had also established boat-building operations in
Eritrea, he added.  The Eritrean government has rebuffed GSL
attempts to open a diplomatic mission.  He claimed that LTTE
operatives also helped train Somali terrorists in Eritrea.
Rajapaksa outlined that the LTTE employed middlemen in India,
Philippines, Eritrea, Thailand and Malaysia, and used
Singapore as the financial hub.  The brokers usually married
a native, started a business, and bribed officials to
facilitate deals.  The shipments originated in North Korea,
and usually contained Chinese-origin goods. 

¶10. (C) A/S Blake warned that Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), which
has used Nepal and Bangladesh as staging posts to attack
India, could next turn to Sri Lanka.  Rajapaksa related that
the GSL had arrested two men transiting Sri Lanka to Nepal
based on information provided by India's Research and
Analysis Wing (RAW).  The GSL has since turned them over to
RAW.  Rajapaksa noted that the GSL has assigned separate
officers to watch for extremists.  A/S Blake suggested that
the GSL exchange further information about LTTE networks with
U.S. counter-terrorism experts.
BUTENIS

Thursday, October 06, 2011

வெளிவந்து விட்டது! ஈழத்தில் வர்க்கப்போராட்டம்


வெளிவந்து விட்டது 
இணைய நூல்
(உதய சூரியனை உறுமும் புலி வென்ற கதை)

ஈழத்தில் வர்க்கப் போராட்டம் 
தேசிய இன விடுதலையில் தமிழ்த்தரகு முதலாளிய வர்க்கத்தின் பாத்திரம்,
(`தமிழர் மகாசனசபை` இலிருந்து தமிழர் விடுதலைக் கூட்டணிவரை 
1921-1976) 

குறிப்பு: இக்கட்டுரை நவம்பர் 1989 இல் (22 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முன்னால்), எழுதப்பட்டு புதிய ஈழப்புரட்சியாளர்களால் தமிழீழத்தில் தலைமறைவாக விநியோகிக்கப்பட்டது. 22 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முன்னால் பிரச்சாரப்படுத்தப்பட்ட இச் சிறு பிரசுரம் எந்தக் கருத்துத் திருத்தமும் இல்லாமல் இங்கே அப்படியே மறு பிரசுரம் செய்யப்பட்டுள்ளது
http://senthanal.blogspot.com/2011/10/blog-post.html 

படியுங்கள்!                                                                                            பரப்புங்கள்!!

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