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LIONS AND TIGERS

Just because the civil war between the Tamil Tigers and the Sri Lankan military has come to an end (or maybe a pause) the suffering of the islands Tamil civilians continues unabated. In order to hammer home this message, British peace campaigner Maria Gallastegui imprisoned herself in a mock-up concentration camp in front of Churchill’s statue, Parliament Square. 

Tens of thousands of Tamils suffer appalling conditions at the hands of the Sri Lankan state. At least 250,000 are being held in concentration camps where whole communities have been uprooted and collectively punished (See SchNEWS 681, 672). 

Maria managed to stay put, surrounded by barbed wire and placards on a plinth under the shadow of the old Tory, from the early hours until mid-morning on Wednesday (1st). She was evicted by cops who, rather than use a specialist cutting team, seem to have used some blokes from the council and a stepladder to remove the barbed wire wreathed protester. 

Maria was arrested for a host of spurious rubbish - criminal damage (nothing was so much as scratched) and that old standby public order offence of ‘threatening words or behaviour likely to cause alarm or distress’, as well as some mumblings about byelaws. The only distress around seemed to be found in the porcine form of Churchill’s grandson, Nicholas Soames, who was reportedly thoroughly narked at his ancestor’s legacy being subverted for peaceful causes. There was talk of Maria getting an ASBO for her persistent opposition to genocide. Maria was released the same day (after eight hours in the nick).

* See http://peacestrike.org.uk

Keywords: maria gallastegui, solidarity, sri lanka, tamil


 
 

The following comments have been left on this story by other SchNEWS readers...

Added on 5th July 2009 at 05:25 by Lion descendent

OK I was pig spotter a minute ago. Since tiger emblem has attracted some news in recent times...
I changed name to highlight the Mahavamsa story - which sort of starts with a lion mating a human to narrate further fiction based around some historical events.
Hence the lion flag.
This 'orderly' 'mass' march past beckons some attention here...

http://www.defence.lk/new.asp?fname=20090628_01

The source, Defence Ministry website, has on numerous occasions called for blood of local journalists (and others like politicians) and got it!! Still the article has a gem of a sentence ...

'[...] it's common knowledge that UK extended military assistance to the armed forces of Sri Lanka worth millions of pounds'

Are they trying to destabilise the UK or speaking the truth in matters they know best?


Added on 5th July 2009 at 05:09 by Pig Spotter

If Soames is porcine then Brahminical caste advocate N. Ram, editor of The Hindu (author of the previous comment and multiple! awards winner from the incumbent president of Sri Lanka) is the worst form of human being one can find in India.


Added on 4th July 2009 at 13:14 by Anonymous

Visiting the Vavuniya IDP camps: an uplifting experience N. Ram (The Hindu India)
Colombo: The last phase of Sri Lanka’s low-intensity military conflict saw the elimination of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam as a military force. It simultaneously witnessed a poignant human drama in which some 300,000 Tamil civilians were rescued by force of arms from a terrorist organisation that, claiming to fight for their freedom, had no compunction in using them as a human shield.Most of these internally displaced Sri Lankans are now housed and cared for by the government in transitional relief camps located in five demarcated zones of the 1500-acre Menik Farm on the outskirts of the town of Vavuniya in the mainland North. International concern has been expressed over the present condition and the future of these Tamil civilians, who include a large number of children, women, and senior citizens.Following a three-hour conversation, including a recorded interview, with President Mahinda Rajapaksa at ‘Temple Trees’ in Colombo, I had, at his suggestion and thanks to the helicopter and other facilities provided by the Defence Ministry, the opportunity of seeing for myself how the Tamil IDPs were being sheltered and cared for in the camps. It was an uplifting experience, which is reflected in some measure in the photographs by Thilak Bandara published on this page. The sight of tens of schoolchildren returning from makeshift schools and of the distribution by the Controller of Examinations and his team of preparatory material for the A-level exams, which will be taken in a month, was special.

http://www.hindu.com/2009/07/04/stories/2009070457542000.htm




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