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Britain approves humanitarian aid to Sri Lanka
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vishmitha
Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 286
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25 May 2007 04:59:11 GMT  Report for Abuse   
why? cant we chew gum and walk at the same time? dont think its that difficult after all we are the world cup finalists!


He he he ... that's what you guys want us to do man. But that's not happening.

By the way, last months LTTE loot from Europe has signigifacntly I heard.

Let's march on these lines and see where we are headed to.

But the heroic SLA is not going to chew gum and walk, like you suggest!
Morawaka01
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 44
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25 May 2007 05:01:57 GMT  Report for Abuse   
why? cant we chew gum and walk at the same time?


We do beter One at a Time.
also we Vote for wipe out LTTE Terrorist, ohh sorry you do not have Srilankan voting rights, Foreigners eh
Morawaka01
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 44
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25 May 2007 05:03:47 GMT  Report for Abuse   
The west cannot assume the role of a high priest and preach its version of human rights, he would say.

'It is only right that as a civilised society and nation we should all be concerned with human rights in our country and in fact in the world. But human rights should be upheld because they can contribute to a better quality of life. To kill 100,000 people because you suspect that the human rights of a few have been denied seem to be a contradiction. Yet the fanaticism of the champions of human rights have led to more people being deprived of their rights and many their lives than the number saved. It seems to me that we have lost our sense of proportion,' Mahathir told a 2005 international human rights conference in Malaysia.

Mahathir's speech made many western diplomats who attended the conference to walk out in protest. But for millions of others, his speeches were music to their ears, solace to their souls and a foundation for a new philosophy.

While the western culture places great emphasis on human rights of an individual, Asian values, which we consider to be superior, given their antiquity, demand that community rights should take precedent over rights of an individual. This principle, which the Asian cultures have upheld for millennia, is the core of some of western political theories on state. Didn't English philosopher John Locke say that state is a result of a social contract where individuals have given up some of their rights for the well-being of the community?
whatreallyhap
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 1983
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25 May 2007 05:04:07 GMT  Report for Abuse   
after all we are the world cup finalists!


We are No:2 nothing to be so proud of?
everyone wants to be No:1 not No:2

Lets put world cup behind. It is over .
It is not an issue anyhow. and what has it got to do with anything.
Morawaka01
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 44
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25 May 2007 05:06:16 GMT  Report for Abuse   
Sadly, today many of the Western countries have turned Locke's principles upside down and lost the moral authority to preach human rights. The Hijab/Niqab issue has exposed the tolerance level in Britain, France and other European countries. We in former colonies may have forgiven Britain ? sorry I would not call it Great Britain, as the earlier generation had called the all-conquering empire ? but will the people of Diego Garcia forgive Britain for uprooting them from the island they had lived from time immemorial? There is no apology from our colonial rulers for colonising us. Neither are they taking corrective measures to rectify the wrongs they have done. If there had been such measures, there would have been peace in Palestine.

The draconian Patriot Act, the manner in which Guantanamo prisoners are treated, the Abu Ghraib torture saga and the so-called CIA rendition flights have painted the United States black, yet the State Department had the audacity to release its once a year annual report, criticising developing countries.
BitterTruth
Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 902
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25 May 2007 05:09:49 GMT  Report for Abuse   
Rights Groups Want UN To Monitor Sri Lanka Abuses

Thursday 24th of May 2007 Alarmed by the scale of abuses in Sri Lanka, not just in the northeastern war theatre but also in capital Colombo, human rights groups are advocating UN intervention.

Prodded by their Sri Lankan counterparts, global rights groups are concluding that only the UN can bring some sanity in a country where killings, kidnappings, forced recruitment and other violations are rampant.

Colombo too has seen plenty of killings and daylight abductions.

The worst sufferers of the lawlessness are civilians, particularly Tamils both in the troubled northeastern region and also elsewhere in the island nation, the activists say.

'Human rights groups are extremely concerned about the situation of civilians after the resumption of hostilities,' Meenakshi Ganguly of US-based Human Rights Watch told IANS from Mumbai.

'We are also worried about the large-scale displacement of people (due to fighting) and about forced recruitment of civilians particularly children by the LTTE and Karuna group,' she said, referring to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and its breakaway outfit led by its former commander Karuna.

'We are also concerned about the abductions,' she said. 'Civilians are caught between the armed groups and government forces operating with apparent immunity from prosecution for abuses that they commit.'

Other activists agree that such a gloomy scenario prevails in Sri Lanka, where fighting since December 2005 has led to thousands of deaths, forced thousands to flee their homes and spiked the internationally backed peace process.

With the Nordic Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission (SLMM), which oversees the 2002 truce between Colombo and LTTE, now limping, and the government determined to seek a military solution to the conflict, many Sri Lankan and international rights groups feel it is time the UN stepped in to protect civilians.

But another rights activist Rajan Hoole asserted that any UN intervention should aim to strengthen Sri Lanka's democratic set-up, not look like thrusting a foreign solution.

'Reviving Sri Lankan institutions (such as police and judiciary), not imposing something foreign, should be the objective,' said Hoole of the University Teachers for Human Rights (UTHR), which routinely issues detailed reports that are critical of everyone - Colombo, LTTE and other armed groups.

'We believe that the UN should not just record and expose human rights abuses but work with the Sri Lankan judicial system and bring about prosecutions,' the activist said.

The UN, he went on, should bring in Sri Lankan professionals into the picture. 'At this time they are being marginalized.'

According to those who spoke to IANS, the idea of UN rights monitors originated from Sri Lanka before groups such as Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International and Asian Human Rights Commission took it up.

Since then, and encouraged by the role the UN has played in Nepal, the rights activists have held formal and informal discussions amongst themselves and with officials of countries such as Japan and the US.

These countries are expected to persuade Colombo to accept a UN monitoring system despite domestic opposition. The system would also require funding which they can provide.

Asked if the LTTE would agree to UN monitors in its territory, one activist said: 'We think so, since the Tigers say they are concerned about (the welfare of) Tamils.'

Rights groups have meticulously documented the deteriorating situation in Sri Lanka but feel that is not enough.

In any case, too many armed groups are now operating in the island nation and often no one seems to know who is doing what.

If such a climate has to end and there has to be prosecutions, only a UN-mandated rights body would be able to do it, even if it involves Sri Lankans on the ground - thus goes the argument.

Said Ganguly: 'Human rights groups conduct independent investigations. But because of limited capacity, they can only highlight cases and call for proper investigations by the government so that those responsible can be prosecuted.

'Because of the nature of the conflict, it is often impossible to identity the perpetrators. Witnesses and victims are too frightened,' she said. 'We are therefore suggesting a UN mission to monitor and investigate the human rights situation.'
Morawaka01
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 44
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25 May 2007 05:10:00 GMT  Report for Abuse   
Lets put world cup behind. It is over .


Are you try to controll this site or what ?
Let's stop talking about ..
Stop writing about ...
so on...
I see these kind of behaviour when someone who does not have any authority for controll or take decission his/ her life or become a puppet in real life.
Morawaka01
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 44
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25 May 2007 05:11:40 GMT  Report for Abuse   
It is perhaps only China that had the political courage to tell the United States to mind its own business. 'We urge the US government to acknowledge its own human rights problems and stop interfering in other countries' internal affairs under the pretext of human rights,' China said.

But Sri Lanka is not China. Neither is Mahinda Rajapaksa Dr Mahathir.
whatreallyhap
Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 1983
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25 May 2007 05:12:11 GMT  Report for Abuse   
Why does a nation continue to be poorer by the day? The leaders aren't doing something right.

Keshi.


Yes , I would also like to know the answer to this question, so would the entire SL population.
I do not think anyone in this govt. is capable of giving a true logical answer.

No way there is an answer to a corrupt system headed by the No:1 corrupted President of Sorry Lnaka.
A President who would go to bed with the devil to det what he wants, to hell with the country , its people and its religion.
SWRD
Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 295
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25 May 2007 05:17:02 GMT  Report for Abuse   
that's what you guys want us to do man


there you go assuming again. i dont want you guys to do anything, it's totally up to you. if you guys kill each other there'll be some form of population control in sri lanka. sort of natural selection of species, survival of the fittest kinda thang. so i say to both sides kill kill kill .... to the best of your abilities. less lankans the merrier....
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