23.8.2008
Walter Jayawardhana
Canada's Globe and Mail newspaper has highlighted an
exhibition which it calls an eye opener to some of the
worst human rights abuses perpetrated by the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) that zero in on "torture,
child conscripts and suicide bombings."
In a write up about the exhibition which has been funded
by Canadian trade unions and organized by dissident Tamils
who do not belong to the banned terrorist organization,
the LTTE, the Globe and Mail said, "The ordeal of
a Canadian Tamil who says he survived torture at the hands
of the Tamil Tigers will be among the shocking stories
delved into this weekend, when artists and activists hope
to expose the full range of human-rights abuses perpetrated
in Sri Lanka."
"Organizers of the Call of the Conscience exhibit
hope," said the Globe and Mail, " their photos,
films and written words will be an eye-opener for Toronto,
the largest centre of Tamils outside of Sri Lanka."
The exhibition features a written life story of a 50
year old man called Samaran (a fictitious name) who has
been interviewed by the newspaper. Quoting him The Globe
and mail said, "At the time, the rebels were solidifying
their hold on northern Sri Lanka, and ridding the area
of suspected government collaborators and rival rebel
factions.
"They beat me till I fainted just for wearing a
rosary," recalled Samaran, a Christian from a land
that's mostly Hindu. He says a young rebel guard told
him that "Here, I am the God - you tell the truth,
you get released" - but he could only respond that
he had no information to give.
"Hundreds of those he was jailed with were tortured,
he said, and many were killed. Then, in a turn of events
that proved less fortunate for other prisoners, he said,
he escaped when Sri Lankan military planes bombed the
jail."
The full story is as follows:
"Canada and several other Western governments have
recently blacklisted the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
as a terrorist group, but the focus of many Toronto Tamils
is on alleged acts of "state terrorism" by the
Sri Lankan government. Organizers of tomorrow'sevent at
Roy Thomson Hall say they will criticize both sides and
zero in on the Tamil Tigers' use of torture, child conscripts
and suicide bombings.
"The show will make a distinction between Tamil
nationalism and the Tamil Tigers, who claim to be the
only standard bearers of the cause. The stand has some
support, but not everyone agrees.
"I hate the Tamil community here. The way they support
the terrorists," said Samaran, a Tamil in his 50s.
Portions of his written life story will be an exhibit
at the event, and he agreed to speak about it only on
the condition that this newspaper not use his real name,
photograph his face, or reveal the Canadian city he lives
in.
"Samaran" translates as "survivor,"
but his fears of reprisal still run high. Calling the
Tigers the "world's biggest terrorists" in an
interview, he said he was picked up as a suspected dissident
in 1990 and held for months in a Tamil Tiger prison.
"At the time, the rebels were solidifying their
hold on northern Sri Lanka, and ridding the area of suspected
government collaborators and rival rebel factions. "They
beat me till I fainted just for wearing a rosary,"
recalled Samaran, a Christian from a land that's mostly
Hindu. He says a young rebel guard told him that "Here,
I am the God - you tell the truth, you get released"
- but he could only respond that he had no information
to give.
"Hundreds of those he was jailed with were tortured,
he said, and many were killed. Then, in a turn of events
that proved less fortunate for other prisoners, he said,
he escaped when Sri Lankan military planes bombed the
jail.
"In 1996, he arrived in Canada, where he said he
remains amazed at the level of support the guerrillas
enjoy. "I'm living away from the Tamil community,"
he said. He said he urges his teenaged children not to
believe everything they hear about the war from Tamil
student groups in Canadian universities. Samaran was persuaded
to tell his story by a friend who organized the event,
a dissident Tamil journalist who also claims the Tigers'
reach extends to Canada. Manoranjan Selliah said Tiger
supporters burned down a Tamil library for dissidents
in Toronto in 1996, and adds that he moved to Canada after
articles he wrote in Sri Lanka criticizing the Tigers
led to threats.
"Today, "I'm getting attacks on both sides,"
Mr. Selliah said. He said his decision to organize the
exhibit has led to charges he is partisan. "Government
supporters say, 'Oh, you are getting money from the LTTE
now," he said and the other side is saying, 'Oh you're
getting money from the government.' "
"The space for the exhibit at Roy Thomson hall was
paid for by donations from individuals and trade unions,
he said., adding that he feels particularly "smeared"
by rumours that he arranged the event to counter last
month's "Black July" rallies. Tamils around
the world have just marked the 25th anniversary of pogroms
that killed hundreds of their brethren in Sri Lanka.
"This weekend's exhibit will include six short films
that intend to show the evolution of the bloodletting
in Sri Lanka. The films will explore the use of "cyanide
capsules, child soldiers and suicide bombs," he said.
"The Tigers' drive toward an independent state has
lately lost momentum. Mr. Selliah points out that Sri
Lankan military campaigns have reduced Tiger-held Sri
Lanka to a rump of 300,000 residents in the northern jungle
regions.
"Toronto now has more than 200,000 Tamils. Yet it
is getting a lot harder to turn sympathy for the independence
movement into possible material support for the Tamil
Tigers.
"The Call of the Conscience exhibit will run today
from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. (August 23)"