Teach the World to conduct
Humanitarian Wars
By Gomin Dayasri
With the security forces at the entrance to Killinochchi, the foreign
legion unhappy with the military success they failed to achieve in
their military exercises in Iraq and Afghanistan, have commenced to
preach humanitarian values which they never exercised in their military
operations. It is ironical to hear Richard Boucher, Benita -Ferrero
Waldner, Julian Wilson and our undiplomatic German Ambassador spout
on human rights in Sri Lanka displaying their abbreviated memory of
events of November 2004 in Falluja, Iraq where the occupying US Forces
launched their second major attack on the city of Falluja.
It had all the ingredients required to bring the US military on charges
against the War Crimes Act of USA on allegations of human rights violations.
Where were these eminent persons? Were their distance voices heard?
The attack on Faluja started with eliminating the power supply and
pounding the city with 500 lb bombs. The US marines targeted ambulances
and randomly shot civilians, US Marines closed the main hospital in
order to use it as a military position. Mark Curtis- Unpeople (2004)
page18. Marines blocked the road leading to the two main hospitals.
Steven Poole- Unspeak (2006) page 111. In Operation Phantom Fury of
Falluja, US military command tried to justify the attack on the hospital
describing it as a haven for the insurgents but as expressed by Guardian
Weekly of Nov 12-18, 2004 this was a centre from which high death
tolls of patients were accounted, much to military frustration. [We
are providing the hospitals at Killinochchi and Mullativu which treats
the terrorists' medical facilities and pays staff and medical expenses]
The bombing campaign was directed to empty the city but not the male
population between ages 15 to 45; they were not permitted to flee
Falluja to ensure the bombing reached the required target. It was
the reverse of the Srebrenica massacre where the Serbs trucked out
women and children holding the men captive. In Falluja babies and
pregnant mothers unable to leave were killed because the attackers
who ordered their flight thereupon cordoned off the city, closing
the exit roads. (Micheal Byers- War Law: An Introduction to International
Law and Armed Conflict page 85).[Can these human rights angels in
the Wanni operations refer to any such calculated atrocities targeting
a selective civil population where men of fighting age are exclusively
identified for elimination and no safe passage is left for the infants
and invalids to leave. We have an open corridor for safe passage and
humanitarian assistance on crossing which are prevented by the LTTE
with no limitations]
Celebrated journalist Jo Wilding in his account 'Eye Witness in Falluja'
( Tell me No Lies-edited by John Pilger page 573) "Snipers are
causing not just carnage but also the paralysis of the ambulance and
evacuation services. The biggest hospital after the main one was bombed,
is in US territory and cut off from the clinic by snipers."
The US Army began its ground attack with the infantry conquering
the Falluja General Hospital. The front page of the NewYork Times(8.Nov
2004) reported "patients and hospital employees were rushed out
of hospital rooms by armed soldiers and ordered to sit or lie on the
floor while troops tied their hands behind their backs". A supporting
photograph was also published and presented as a gallant accomplishment.
[ Is not our Press more objective and less jingoistic?]
It was confirmed by BBC and Reuters in a report by Dr Sami al-Jumaili
of US war planes bombing the Central Health Care Centre in Falluja
killing 35 patients and 24 staff members. Dr Eiman al Ani of the Falluja
General Hospital stated the entire Health Centre shortly after the
attack collapsed on the patients. It is no surprise as the US air
planes shelled the Chinese embassy in Belgrade and a moving passenger
train during NATO bombing of Serbia in planes equipped with precision
bombing devices. [ NATO pilots have much to learn on accurate targeting
from the Sri Lanka Air Force with less sophisticated leaser instruments.
The core issue is- we are concerned of our Tamil citizens in the North
and are treated like fellow citizens unlike the US Forces who treated
the Iraqi civilians as alien Islamic terrorists.]
The US military denied access to the Iraqi Red Crescent to Falluja
which amounts to a gross violation of international humanitarian law.
Sir Nigel Young CEO of British Red Cross condemned it as a dangerous
precedent. Doctors reported that the entire medical staff had been
locked in the main hospital and tied up when the US attack began under
military orders. Red Cross issued a statement blaming all combatants
of "utter contempt of humanity" Guardian 15 December 2004.[
ICRC operated freely in the Wanni region including transferring the
dead of all combats.]
In Dining with Terrorist Phil Rees at page 372 describes "a
photographer working for Associated Press saw American helicopters
cutting down a family of five as they tried to flee .......A US marine
was filmed in a mosque in Falluja shooting an unarmed wounded man
in the head while he lay on the ground."
The ruined city of 250000 in Falluja was devoid of electricity, running
water and schools. [ Sri Lanka provided all these facilities to areas
under LTTE domination without levying any taxes. Till the LTTE forcibly
dislocated the population in Killinochchi these facilities were available
to the Northern public.] John K Cooley in Alliance against Babylon
page 219 states homes were bull dozed and tanks punched holes in buildings
without totally collapsing them.
The UN Special Rapporteur on Right to Food Jean Zieglar accused US
and UK troops in Iraq of "breaching international law by depriving
civilians of food water in besieged cities as they seek to flush out
the militants". He also alleged that US forces "cut off
or restricted food and water to encourage residents to flee before
the assault". He further stated" using hunger and deprivation
of water as a weapon of war against the civilian population {in} flagrant
violation of the Geneva Conventions" Reuters 15 October 2005;
also Los Angeles Times and Boston Globe and London Independent 15.Oct
2005. [UN officials are permitted to accompany supplies vehicles to
Killinochchi and Mullativu and before LTTE deserted Killinochchi UN
and other NGOs maintained established bases in Killinochchi. The Forces
gave them adequate notice until 29th September to leave as a security
concern yet permit them to operate from safe sanctuaries]
The leading medical journal of UK Lancet in October 2004 reported
the death toll associated with the invasion and occupation of Iraq
may be higher than 100,000.World Food Program reported "significant
countrywide shortages of rice, milk and infant formulas". Acute
malnutrition doubled within 16 months of the occupation of Iraq to
the level of Burundi, well above Haiti and Uganda, a figure that translates
to approximately 4000000 Iraqi children suffering from 'wasting',
a condition characterized by chronic diarrhea and dangerous deficiencies
of proteins.[We are ensuring a flow of the essentials notwithstanding
attempts by the LTTE to disrupt humanitarian operations]
Shiite and Kurdish militias often operating as part of the Iraq government
security forces carried out abductions and assassinations. More than
a million since US occupation have sought refuge in Syria and Jordan
mostly professionals and secular moderates. ( Chomsky Failed State
page 54)
Boucher's master George Bush told his troops "I know what you
are doing in Iraq is right". Jo Wildings in Eye Witness in Falluja
responded "Well George. I too know now. I know what it looks
like when an operation is being done without anesthetic because hospitals
are destroyed or under sniper fire and the city's under siege and
aid isn't getting in properly. I know what it sounds like too. I know
what it looks like when tracer bullets are passing your head, even
though you are in an ambulance".
Falluja is just another fang in a venomous elongated trail that runs
in living memory across borders of Vietnam, Laos, Guatemala, Chile,
Nicaragua, Grenada, Panama, Columbia, Haiti, Afghanistan and Pakistan
relating back to Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
After a 30 year war in an economically backward society our human
rights record stands distinctly superior to the United States in military
matters; welfare measures are provided for the people in the uncleared
areas though our economy is not healthy.
These western observers who carry the self proclaimed tag 'international
community' (though in fact they represent just a few countries) must
practice what they preach and if they desire to learn the art of safeguarding
human rights while facing the deadliest of terrorists they should
follow the Wanni battle for their edification and education of a humanitarian
exercise. In war, breaches of humanitarian restrains are inevitable
but in the present exercise in Sri Lanka the preservation of human
rights is high on the agenda than in the wars US are engaged in Iraq
and Afghanistan. Should they not tell it to the Marines!