A hitherto unknown outfit (at least in Sri Lanka) that calls itself ‘Public Interest Advocacy Centre’ has made a very serious claim: ‘Mass graves may have been systematically destroyed by Sri Lankan security forces at the end of the island’s separatist conflict to hide evidence of large-scale civilian deaths’. The key word here is ‘may’. That’s conjecture through and through. Media queries regarding sources of information, reliability of sources, substantiation of claims, and of course the kind of corroboration that is basic to any ‘study’ have been responded to by this ‘Centre’ with dead silence. That’s telling too.
Tamil National Alliance parliamentarian, M. Sumanthiran, in one of his
occasional maverick avatars claims
that 75,000 to 150,000 lives were lost. There
are multiple ways of ascertaining approximate numbers of the overall
missing. There were many entities,
including UN agencies, involved in supplying food and medicine right up to May
2009. Anyone with basic arithmetic
skills can do the relevant subtraction.
The non-cooperation of countries that have offered asylum to Sri Lankan
Tamils has not help in the enumeration exercise. Nevertheless mechanisms to obtain the true
dimensions of ‘disappearances’ (a politically charged term that is inconsistent
with any academic exercise to obtain truth) have not yielded anything remotely
closed to the numbers trotted out by pro-LTTE elements or, as in Sumanthiran’s
case, those who have conveniently erased the LTTE out of the bloody story of
the war.
There’s also circumstantial evidence that counters these claims of
‘genocide’. The US Embassy, hardly Sri
Lanka’s best friend, has categorically stated at the time that the security
forces could have finished off the LTTE months before had there been no concern
for civilians. Let’s not forget that the
Government provided food and medicine, paid salaries, ensured that education
and health systems continued to function throughout the war in areas controlled
by the LTTE, even though it was known that the Tigers pilfered and routinely
inflated ‘need’ to secure more provisions.
Forget all that. A ‘curious’
individual has offered a ‘solution’ to explain the vexed numbers problem. A simple question has been asked: ‘Eta katu
ko?’ (where are the bones—read, ‘remains’).
The contention is that if indeed 40,000 were massacred by the troops in
Mullivaikkal, the remains, if piled up, would make a tower that puts Pisa to
shame. No bodies have been found
there. Were the remains vaporized, the
writer asks.
Let’s remember that there’s satellite footage available of the LTTE
shooting at Tamil civilians fleeing into Government controlled areas. That place was watched from above. It is also clear that there are many who want
to hang this Government over war crimes.
As of now their ‘best’ has been cleverly edited videos that is good as
‘collage’ but thin if they want to paint ‘systematic’, never mind the fact that
the sources of the sources of the sources cited are hardly reliable given their
loyalties. If these people really,
really, really, want to get the job done, they’ve had ample time (more than 4
years) to mine the relevant aerial footage.
It is, after all, a thin strip of land that we are talking about.
The fact remains that getting rid of 150,000 corpses is not easy. Not in the 21st Century. Forget 150,000 or even the 40,000 that is
being waved these days; ‘disappearing’ even 100 would be messy. We are told, after all, that soldiers
themselves were clicking away on their mobile devices to capture ‘trophy
photos’.
The claims, therefore, Sumanthiran’s included, constitute an affront to
general intelligence and common sense.
It is time that it was responded to likewise. ‘Curious’ has the answer.
‘The only possible explanation is
that our army has a secret weapon that enables it to VAPORISE corpses! If so,
Uncle Sam should purchase this secret weapon from us – to help them erase his
victims in poor Third World countries.’
Jokes aside, it seems the discussion has boiled down to a
search for ghosts that never grew out of bodies. That’s a nice pastime for the human rights
crusade to indulge in. Nations and peoples have better things to do.
Malinda Seneviratne is the Editor-in-Chief of 'The Nation' and can be reached at msenevira@gmail.com
"Jokes aside, it seems the discussion has boiled down to a search for ghosts that never grew out of bodies. That’s a nice pastime for the human rights crusade to indulge in. Nations and peoples have better things to do."
ReplyDelete- Never seen the whole situation summed up so well in so few lines before. Brilliant.
" A simple question has been asked: ‘Eta katu ko?’ (where are the bones—read, ‘remains’). The contention is that if indeed 40,000 were massacred by the troops in Mullivaikkal, the remains, if piled up, would make a tower that puts Pisa to shame. No bodies have been found there."
ReplyDeleteDid it ever occur to you that bodies can be burned, genius?
here's something someone said that might answer your questions: 'Incinerating a human body is not an easy task: 2-3 hours of more than 1000 degrees Fahrenheit is needed. And how are you going to hide the smoke? Also it is logistically impossible to setup in a short time (unless the SLA planned in advance).'
ReplyDeletemultiply by 40,000 or 150,000 as per Sumanthiran-Math and that's quite a bonfire. :)