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Govt. says no room for UN monitors
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kotia
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LK Information  7 Aug 2007 16:27:47 GMT  Report for Abuse  
Anai

Of course tikkak tikkak katha karanda puluvang.


kongan kongan

hey can you give us a guide to learn Tamil
Aani
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LK Information  7 Aug 2007 16:28:46 GMT  Report for Abuse  
Plaxis:

I think what he meant was when you impose forced religious constructions after a military conquest you are doing the same thing the europeans did in those days, which is to capture an area and then forcibly convert the people.

His choice of words may not be good but the meaning resonates with most Tamils. Spreading religion by spontaneous methods are different to imposing religion on a captured population who have to depend on you for food and water. Hope you understand.
Kamani
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LK Information  7 Aug 2007 16:28:47 GMT  Report for Abuse  
Aani,

Koncham koncham thamil :)

You havve been communicating with Fareek, Jana and Berty all along and suddenly you are asking if I am any or all of them.


I don't know who is who now as its all confusing. I only know Berty for long time from the from but no idea about Fareek or Jana. May be Fareek and Jana the same. Thats all. In fact how would I know that you r genuine or another handle of Fareek or Jana. Because all 3 cannot come at one time.
TruthHurts
Joined: Aug 2007
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LK Information  7 Aug 2007 16:30:05 GMT  Report for Abuse  
Truthhurts,

So tell us PERA ... was it your wife .... who in HK.


Hmmm..U better ask Dirty anna :)

PERA


PERE, you mean to say she is with Dirty Your G-Kolla ? :)
kotia
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LK Information  7 Aug 2007 16:35:51 GMT  Report for Abuse  
Kamani

http://www.learntamil.com/


check this site.
Aani
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LK Information  7 Aug 2007 16:36:10 GMT  Report for Abuse  
Kotia,
I think there are lot of common words. There are words which we normally don't use in speech but only in written Tamil (Senthamil) - these words occur quite commonly in spoken Sinhala and many words of Hela Bhasawa occur in Tamil. The S in Tamil is usually H in Sinhala. Eg: Handiya is Santhi in Tamil. May be Appuhamy is Appusami in Tamil..

I am not an expert but I think there are lots of common words.
kotia
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LK Information  7 Aug 2007 16:41:07 GMT  Report for Abuse  
Anai

I think there are lot of common words. There are words which we normally don't use in speech but only in written Tamil (Senthamil) - these words occur quite commonly in spoken Sinhala and many words of Hela Bhasawa occur in Tamil. The S in Tamil is usually H in Sinhala. Eg: Handiya is Santhi in Tamil. May be Appuhamy is Appusami in Tamil..


Thanks.

i know the Tamil alphabet and able to find the words little bit.

I know there are no B sounds, G sounds in Tamil. Do you recommend the site I sent to kamai to learn tamil.

what is senthimail?Is that written tamil?
Thivya1
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LK Information  7 Aug 2007 16:44:34 GMT  Report for Abuse  
Sri Lankan 'Torture Monitor' Published
The Advocacy Project
New Publication Profiles the Needs and Courage of Torture Survivors in Sri Lanka


August 6, 2007, Colombo, Sri Lanka:
Any suspect unlucky enough to be detained in Sri Lanka's brutal conflict risks being hung upside down by their thumbs, beaten with metal poles, burnt with cigarettes, have petrol poured over their heads and boiling water forced down their throats.


This is the unsavory image to emerge from a new publication on torture from the Home for Human Rights (HHR), a leading advocacy organization in Sri Lanka.

The first issue of 'Torture Monitor' was published on Wednesday and 'dedicated to survivors of torture in Sri Lanka and around the world.'

HHR has been helping torture survivors to overcome their trauma and re-integrate back into society since 1987, and is currently dealing with a sharply increased workload following the renewal of fighting between the Sri Lankan Army and the Tamil Tigers. In the first six months of 2007, HHR treated 66 survivors, compared to 20 in the whole of last year.

The first issue of the Monitor profiles one 26-year-old Tamil farmer who was arrested in 1999 under the Prevention of Terrorism Act, questioned the next day and immediately tortured. Ten days later he was transferred to the Police
Counter Subversive Unit, where he was again tortured for 12 days. Eventually, he went before the Sri Lankan High Court, which found him not guilty and ordered him released in February 2001.

According to the Monitor, the experience of torture left the man suffering from 'heart pain, bodily pain, headaches and eye pain. After about one and half years of imprisonment he has lost his venture as a farmer and business.'

The newsletter will come out every three months, and contain regular profiles of survivors, as well as news about torture from Sri Lanka and around the world. It will also promote HHR's program of rehabilitation, which has been recognized internationally and received support from the UN Voluntary Fund for Victims of Torture.

HHR's approach builds on the resilience and capacity of survivors, who are offered medical assistance, counseling and social support. Follow-up visits by HHR staff have found beneficiaries of the program employed in fishing, agriculture, tailoring and carpentry. This support, says the Monitor, is intended to be 'sustainable' and also allow survivors to 'live with dignity.'

In addition to rehabilitation, HHR plans to submit victim summaries and profiles to the UN Committee Against Torture in Geneva, which monitors adherence to the UN Torture Convention - ratified by Sri Lanka in 1994. Within Sri Lanka itself, HHR is supporting 48 cases before the Sri Lankan courts, and was able to secure the release of five individuals last year.

In one notable case, HHR went to court on behalf of a woman who was gang raped by 12 police officers at a police station. She was subsequently awarded 250,000 Sri Lankan rupees ($2,500), a large amount in Sri Lanka.

One contributor to the Monitor is Madeline England from Columbia University, who is volunteering this summer with HHR as a Peace fellow of The Advocacy Project (AP). Ms England blogged about her feelings after meeting torture survivors in one recent blog:
'The unspeakable cruelty and humiliation that one human being can cause another is now imprinted on my mind and stays with me 24 hours a day. I feel guilty for taking a lunch break, checking my email.'


But, as Ms England also writes in a later blog, 'My favorite activity of all is listening to the survivors. When it all seems insurmountable, listening to someone who overcame the unimaginable is amazing and inspiring.'

http://us.oneworld.net/article/view/152029/1/


Edited By - Thivya1 - 7 Aug 2007 16:45:59 GMT
kotia
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LK Information  7 Aug 2007 16:45:19 GMT  Report for Abuse  
Thiviya

what is this copy-paste life?
Kamani
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LK Information  7 Aug 2007 16:46:08 GMT  Report for Abuse  
http://www.learntamil.com


Thanks Kotia.

I think if we can learn tamil then this whole issue would have sorted out. I think both Sinhalese and Tamils must me made to learn so we would have integrated in both communities.

This is why the Muslims who know both also called 'Thoppia herena peththata thambiya herenawa kiyala' :)
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