Marie Colvin: A mediator in white flag killings in srilanka
The death of journalist Marie Colvin in Homs in Syria calls to mind her work in another war zone: Sri Lanka. Based on her reporting in 2001 forward, she became an well meaning humanitarian intermediary in attempted surrenders that ended in the murder of those surrendering.
Also involved were UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon’s chief of staff Vijay Nambiar, who conveyed assurances of safety but refused to go witness the surrenders, and Shavendra Silva, a Sri Lankan General since made Deputy Permanent Representative and, unless it is stopped, a UN Senior Adviser on Peacekeeping Operations.
Imagine what Ms. Colvin would think. But what will others now do? Consider:
Marie Colvin, a reporter with The Times of London, wrote that on Monday, May 18, 2009, at 5:30 a.m. she personally called Nambiar in Colombo to relay a message she had received from members of the LTTE leadership, who were surrounded in a bunker with 300 loyalists including women and children, that they were ready to give themselves up to Sri Lankan government troops. According to Colvin the leaders wanted “Nambiar to be present to guarantee the Tigers’ safety”.
Nambiar told Colvin that he had been assured by Sri Lankan president Mahinda Rajapaksa that those who gave up would be safe if they were to “hoist a white flag high”. When Colvin suggested that Nambiar go personally to witness the surrender he told her it would not “be necessary” and that “the president’s assurances were enough”. Hours later the lifeless bodies of dozens of members of the LTTE leadership including the two men who told Colvin they were ready to give up, were put on display
The UN’s gloss on the incident is in Paragraphs 170 and 171 of Ban’s Panel of Experts report on Sri Lanka, which names Silva as well as the Permanent Representative who may as a a “fix” replace him, Palitha Kohona.
Twenty six days ago Inner City Press began asking the UN and then various countries’ missions to the UN how they could accept as a UN “Senior Adviser on Peacekeeping Operations” General Shavendra Silva, whose Division 58 is repeatedly named in connection with war crimes in Secretary General Ban Ki-moon’s Panel of Experts report on Sri Lanka.
Now, with no credit to the UN Secretariat of Ban Ki-moon, multiple Ambassadors have told Inner City Press that there is a “fix.”
“It’s very simple,” a well placed Permanent Representative told Inner City Press on Tuesday morning in front of the Security Council. “We can do one thing. When we created this [Senior Advisory Group], we insisted the membership must be a PR [Permanent Representative] level. Wherever it isn’t will not be welcome this time. Palitha [Kohona] will have to come himself, he cannot nominate anyone. That’s their choice.”
Inner City Press had predicted this semi-solution weeks ago but Sri Lanka Permanent Representative Palitha Kohona, who also appears by name in the Panel of Experts report in connection surrenderees who were killed, said that he would not switch with Silva.
The outrage of Silva’s nomination, which Sri Lanka got through the Asia Group not by election but by getting Nepal and Saudi Arabia to withdraw, has spread to other regional groups and major member states.
Also on Tuesday morning, Inner City Press asked UK Permanent Representative Mark Lyall Grant about l’affaire Silva. He said “there has been a lot of discussion” between the UN Secretariat and others — he mentioned “the Americans,” whose Ambassador Rice told Inner City Press of US concern back on February 17 — but added that “the Secretariat says they can’t do anything.”
This position, with which even UN High Commissioner on Human Rights Navi Pillay disagrees, as she told Inner City Press in response to a question after she briefed the General Assembly about Syria on February 13, was reiterated by Ban’s spokesman Martin Nesirky at Tuesday’s noon briefing.
Inner City Press noted that Ban was in effect disagreeing with Pillay, who wrote to him to say that the same vetting applied to UN peacekeepers should apply to a Senior Adviser on Peacekeeping Operations. Nesirky said it’s up to member states, you are putting words in my mouth and I think I’ll leave it at that.” [Both Ban and Nesirky have now left town for a week.]
Inner City Press had asked if the Secretariat had any role in the “fix;” Nesikry said “that’s a very very long question,” the “answer is very short: this is a decision that was taken by the Asia Group member states, it is for the member states to decide.”
This stands in contrast to instances when Ban Ki-moon urges the member states on the Security Council to reach consensus and take action, and expresses regret when they do not. Is having an alleged war criminal from Sri Lanka as a UN adviser just not of as much concern to Ban Ki-moon?
Prior to these developments, the Sri Lankan Mission’s action was to send a letter of complaint to Inner City Press, sending a copy to Ban’s spokesman Martin Nesirky as well as to some in the UN press corps.
Inner City Press in less than 24 hours published and responded to the letter, citing only some of the many references to Silva’s Division 58 in the report.
Now that’s updated, and Silva is blaming his problems on the Press. How about the deeds, of May 2009 and before?
By Matthew Russell Lee © Inner City Press
—————————————————————————————————-
Marie Colvin, wounded while working in Sri Lanka in 2001
Marie Colvin, a Sunday Times journalist, and French photographer Remi Ochlik have been killed in the besieged Syrian city of Homs after the house where they were staying was shelled, Feb 22, 2012.
Marie Colvin, recognized as Best Foreign Correspondent in many Press Awards, was wounded in the eye when she was fired upon in Vavuniya, Sri Lanka in April 2001.
Marie Colvin “an extraordinary figure, driven by passion to cover wars”,
In May 2009 Marie Colvin was in contact with LTTE, Sri Lankan officials and diplomats during the ‘White Flag surrender’ of LTTE Fighters and their families.
News Report by Marie Colvin on March 21, 2009:
by Marie Colvin
A THOUSAND amputees were among the wounded and dying waiting to be rescued from a beach in northeast Sri Lanka yesterday, according to aid agencies.
Frightened Tamil families, the latest victims of the country’s 26-year civil war, were hiding in makeshift trenches as they came under artillery fire while waiting to be evacuated from Puthumathalan beach.
[Artillery in Maththalan-Vanni-March 2009]
Last week the International Committee of the Red Cross removed 460 injured and their families from the area, using local fishermen to carry the wounded on wooden dinghies to the Green Ocean ferry leased for the operation. The ferry was due to return last night to rescue more of the injured.
Sophie Romanens, a Red Cross representative in Sri Lanka, said the scene was desperate. “The capacity for evacuation is far below the need,” she said. “We have to decide to take the casualties who are more badly injured and leave behind the ones who are less badly injured.” They are among 150,000 civilians trapped in an area of 13 square miles after fleeing a government offensive against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, known as the Tamil Tigers.
More than 300 civilians were being killed every week in artillery or air attacks, or were dying for lack of medical care, food or water, aid agencies said. The Tamils are desperate because the last hospital in the area was forced to close after twice being bombed by the Sri Lankan army.
The only medical treatment available is in a makeshift clinic at Puthumathalan, where the injured lie under tarpaulins with drips suspended from tree branches. The numbers trying to escape via the beach had “increased dramatically over the past week”, the Red Cross said.
The United Nations said 2,800 Tamils, mostly civilians, had been killed since the offensive began in January in the predominantly Tamil region of the island off the coast of India.
In an interview yesterday with The Sunday Times Balasingham Nadesan, the political leader of the Tamil Tigers, pleaded for an urgent ceasefire. He said the Tigers, classified as a terrorist organisation in Britain because of their use of suicide attacks, would enter negotiations with the government “without pre-conditions”.
The daily bombing and shelling was described by Nadesan as “geno-cidal warfare”. “We call for a ceasefire, loudly and clearly,” he said. “Continuous denial of humanitarian access to the civilian population, and non-stop artillery and aerial attacks, are creating an unbearable situation.”
He called for international monitors to see the situation, adding that the Tigers would respect the outcome of any referendum on an independent Tamil state as long as it was held “once people were allowed to return to their homes”.
Some civilians have managed to cross government lines to find safety at a hospital in the northern town of Vavuniya. The only foreign surgeon there, Hugues Roberts of Médecins Sans Frontières, said 960 casualties had been treated, most of them wounded by shells, landmines or gunshots. The victims ranged from a child of three to men and women in their seventies. “The ones dead, or gravely injured, we don’t see them,” said Roberts.
Joan Ryan, a Labour MP, said: “If the Sri Lankan government does not respond to this call for a ceasefire within 24 hours, Gordon Brown should call for the suspension of Sri Lanka from the Commonwealth.”
A Commons debate on Sri Lanka is scheduled for Tuesday.
[courtesy: The Sunday Times]
————————————————————————————–
[London Times reporter Marie Colvin visitng Iraq mass graves, lost her eye in a grenade attack in Sri Lanka, April 2001.-cbc.ca/Courtesy Hot Docs.
News Report on Marie Colvin’s wounding in Sri Lanka appeared in Oyster Bay, NY Newspaper, Enterprise Pilot on FRIDAY APRIL 27, 2001:
Woman Journalist Gets Her Story:In Spite of Grenade Attack, Marie Colvin Files Her Report
By Dagmar Fors Karppi
Marie Colvin has earned her award as the Best Foreign Correspondent in the British Press Awards, many times over with events that happened last week. A foreign correspondent with the London Sunday Times this class of 1974 Oyster Bay High School graduate has faced danger as a regular component of her career. She faced her most life threatening danger, being hit by a grenade thrown at her in Sri Lanka on Monday, April 16.
“Marie was medivacked Thursday, April 19, to Columbia Presbyterian Hospital. At first they thought her eye would have to come out, now they are trying a series of three operations to save the eye,” said her mother Rosemary Colvin, a retired Oyster Bay-East Norwich teacher. She is co-chair of the annual toy drive in Oyster Bay.
“She will have no vision in one eye; she is deaf in one ear, but that might change; her lung is better – she was stomped on,” said Mrs. Colvin.
In spite of the injuries she sustained after being hit by a grenade in what was originally reported as a skirmish between Sri Lankan troops and Tamil separatists, Marie Colvin, 44, a native of Oyster Bay, wrote a 3,000 word report of what had happened to meet her newspaper deadline. “It was two full pages in the London Sunday Times,” said her mother.
“She loves her job. In England she’s a big deal,” said Mrs. Colvin.
According to the AP report: Tamil Tiger rebels accused the military of deliberately opening fire on Ms. Colvin as she tried to re-enter government areas after an assignment in the rebel-held north.
“It is an act of cowardice by nervous trigger-happy soldiers,” the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam rebels said in a statement issued Thursday, April 19, from its northern Wanni headquarters.
The AP reported that the Sri Lankan government said on Wednesday, April 18, it would not prosecute Ms. Colvin on allegations of overstaying her visa, traveling to a war zone without permission and interacting with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, which is banned in Sri Lanka, Britain, the United States and India.
The rebels have been fighting for a homeland for minority Tamils in the north and east of the country since 1983.
The Wounding
According to the AP, an army patrol spotted Ms. Colvin and a group of rebels escorting her as they tried to enter government-held Vavuniya, 130 miles north of the capital, Colombo. She was wounded in the skirmish on April 17. Under Sri Lankan law, journalists must obtain written permission from the defense ministry to travel to rebel-held areas. Authorization is rarely given except to those accompanied by the military.
Press Credentials
“After she held up her press credentials, they lobbed a grenade at her,” said Rosemary Colvin. “She was arrested and tied up for 10 hours without medical care before the US State Department could get her out.”
It was a problem to get her out since she was under arrest, but the embassy just took her out saying she needed medical treatment. Her lung was so bad they couldn’t fly her out of the area for another three days.
Mrs. Colvin said, “The Committee to Prevent Violence Against Journalists, with a full time staff in New York, has information that she was targeted because of the prior week’s article she wrote telling of the atrocities taking place. She was there interviewing the second in command of the Tamil. He was saying they were giving up their right to being an autonomous group and were agreeing that it was time for peace. The journalists think that is why it happened. The military want the war to continue. They said that 30 jorunalists have been murdered worldwide.”
She said someone from the Freedom Fighters wants to send her flowers. Marie will have her first operation on Wednesday to see if they can save her eye. Then two more operations will follow. The question is if they can leave the eye in.
“All the shrapnel is out except for a piece in her forehead which they will let surface,” said Mrs. Colvin.
After they knew the extent of the damage and what she needed to have done, they searched to find the best doctor and all agreed that was Dr. Stanley Chang of Columbia Presbyterian Hospital. She is on the British National Health Program and they have been very good, she said.
Marie Colvin recently won the British Press Award, said her mother. “I just assumed that was the call from a Newsday reporter in the middle of the night, (April 16).” Tom Demoretcky gave her the first news of the attack.
This frightening news was akin to when Marie was lost for three days in Chechnya during the 1999 Christmas holidays and walked 40 miles to Georgia to get out.
She won the 2000 Courage in Journalism Award from the International Women’s Media Foundation for her behind-the lines action in Chechnya and Kosovo.
After hearing Marie received the recent British Press Award, her mother told her, “Now is the time to get a lottery ticket.” That was before the grenade attack.
The American Women in Courage Award was presented to Marie (one of four winners that year) by Mike Wallace. Cokie Roberts did a film about Marie and the events in Chechnya. Maria Schreiver presented her with an award in California. Mrs. Colvin was sent tapes of all the award ceremonies.
Marie has been working as a journalist in England for 12 years. After graduating from Oyster Bay High School in 1974 she attended Yale University.
An email from K. Thiru Kumaran was sent to the Enterprise Pilot. He said, “I am writing, to highlight a proud, courageous and triumphant moment for the freedom of press brought to the world today by none other than an Oyster Bay resident.
“A tragic event that occurred thousands of miles away from Oyster Bay is touching the hearts of many Tamils just like myself.
“Marie Colvin of Oyster Bay was wounded deliberately by the armed forces of Sri Lanka. As a journalist with Britain’s Sunday London Times she traveled to the North of the island nation to cover the sufferings of the Tamil
people living under a brutal embargo of the Government of Sri Lanka. Many Tamils around the world are praying for the speedy recovery of Marie Colvin.”
The Colvins have been keeping on top of the story by reading the London Times home page on the Internet. There are pictures on CNN.com and BBC’s home web page, she said. courtesy:




















கடற்புலிகளின் சிறப்புத்தளபதி பிரிகேடியர்
மே16 2009 இரவு வரை எம் செவிகளோடு உறவாடிய புலிகளின்
30 ஆண்டுகளாக யுத்த பூமி… 3 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முன்
நந்திக் கடலும் காலிமுகத் திடலும்
Tamil community members re-affirm call for justice on War Crimes Day May 18 2012
Former Sri Lanka Tamil Tiger rebels ‘disappear’
Is BBC guilty of Genocide of Tamils in Sri Lanka?
Raising concerns with UK companies trading with Sri Lanka
No unitary is our understanding: TNA says sharing stage with Indo-US diplomats




