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Civilians are fleeing from the Tamil
Tiger forces who claim to protect them and
revealing the fears of the thousands still
trapped by desperate last-ditch fighting,
states Nick Meo of the Sunday Telegraph, UK,
of March 28, reporting from Kilinochchi in
the north of Sri Lanka. “The haunted eyes
of the grandfather who had just escaped from
the Tigers at their most furious betrayed
the horror he had left behind him. "I want
to live, not die, and that's why I have come
here with my family," he said.
The exhausted businessman was safe in a Sri
Lankan Army base after enduring weeks of
terrible stress - trapped among 150,000
other civilians on a seven square mile strip
of land on Sri Lanka's north-east coast,
short of food and fresh water and
incessantly pounded by shells.
The fighters of the Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam, who for the last 26 years have
claimed to be fighting to protect Sri
Lanka's Tamil ethnic minority, have
forbidden the refugees to leave - on pain of
death.
But as the long civil war grinds slowly
towards its end with the Tigers apparently
facing final defeat, conditions within their
enclave have become so grim that in the last
week alone an estimated 5,000 people - men,
women and terrified children - have risked
their lives to flee. Many have been shot by
rebel gunmen and some of those caught have
been executed.
We publish below the unedited text of
Nick Meo’s piece to the Sunday Telegraph.
“The haunted eyes of the grandfather who had
just escaped from the Tigers at their most
furious betrayed the horror he had left
behind him. "I want to live, not die, and
that's why I have come here with my family,"
he said.
The fighters of the Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam, who for the last 26 years have
claimed to be fighting to protect Sri
Lanka's Tamil ethnic minority, have
forbidden the refugees to leave - on pain of
death.
But as the long civil war grinds slowly
towards its end with the Tigers apparently
facing final defeat, conditions within their
enclave have become so grim that in the last
week alone an estimated 5,000 people - men,
women and terrified children - have risked
their lives to flee. Many have been shot by
rebel gunmen and some of those caught have
been executed.
The elderly man, wearing a grimy T-shirt and
sarong and clutching a single bag that he
said contained all that remained of his
worldly possessions, had managed to get out
that morning.
He described how he had gathered his
family and friends, as quietly as possible
in the dead of night, before slipping past
guards. They had been wading across a muddy
lagoon towards Sri Lankan army lines when
things went wrong.
"We left at 2am today in a group of 23 but
the Tigers fired at us and only 12 of us
arrived here," he told The Sunday
Telegraph as his bewildered
granddaughter, aged seven, looked on. "I do
not know what has happened to the rest. We
became separated in the confusion."
The survivors were now sheltering in the
northern town of Kilinochchi, once the
Tigers' capital. The Sunday Telegraph was
told the man's real name, but is not
publishing it in case it exposes him to
revenge attacks. What he had to say about
the Tigers would have been unthinkable for a
subject of their dictatorial mini-state a
few weeks ago.
"The people do not like the Tigers any
more," he said angrily. "They are trapped by
them and they are scared. They want the Sri
Lankan Army to rescue them."
At their peak, early this decade, the Tigers
controlled almost one third of Sri Lanka's
territory - governing it with an iron hand
while neglecting to develop its economy,
spend money on schools or provide medical
care. Much of the money which poured in from
sympathisers abroad to support the
"liberation" cause was creamed off by
corrupt leaders.
Three years ago the island's government
launched a tough offensive which has
steadily driven the rebels from almost all
the territory they held in the north and
east. Now the Sri Lankan army believes that
the Tigers are finished militarily. All that
stands between them and defeat is their
ruthlessness in using trapped civilians as a
human shield.
The Sunday Telegraph was the first British
newspaper to visit the Tigers' former
capital since it fell in January, flying in
by helicopter which skimmed low over the
jungle canopy as the door gunner scoured
below for guerrillas.
The previous day two anti-aircraft missiles
had been fired by the Tigers. "Don't worry,
they didn't hit anything," the army escort
said with a grin. "They never do."
One of the architects of the Sri Lankan
victory is Brigadier Shavendra Silva, a
commander whose proudest boast is that his
58 Division has killed more than 5,000
Tigers since it began its bloody push north
in 2006. He said the rebels could let all
the civilians go free if they wanted to.
"They were forcibly taken," he said. "That's
the only weapon that the LTTE has left. They
wanted human shields so we could not bomb
them, and they needed a pool of recruits so
they could keep on fighting."
Young Tiger fighters who have been captured
alive have terrible stories to tell of the
life they led within the enclave. Sennappu,
a 25-year-old teacher, was forcibly
recruited and sent into battle after just a
month of weapons training with the Tigers'
standard kit: an AK-47 for fighting, and a
cyanide capsule in case of capture.
Assigned to a bunker in command of six
younger women, she couldn't hold out for
long and when they were surrounded two of
her comrades decided to blow themselves up
with a hand grenade. She begged them to
surrender as shells exploded around them.
"Mathuvanthy, who was 23, really believed in
the Tamil Tigers' cause. She preferred death
to surrender," Sennappu said. "Nalliessa,
who was 18 and had not long passed her
O-levels, had been told she would be
tortured if she fell into the hands of our
enemies in the Sri Lanka Army. She killed
herself because she was terrified of
capture."
Sennappu is now safe, but fears that her
friends and relatives may well have been
press-ganged as the Tigers' position becomes
ever more desperate. In recent weeks gangs
of Tiger gunmen have been roaming civilian
camps under their control, at first taking
one recruit from each family and then
grabbing anyone over 14, putting a gun in
their hands and forcing them to the
frontline - where their life expectancy can
be measured in days, or sometimes hours.
Fears are growing that the Tigers want mass
civilian casualties, forbidding the refugees
from leaving so they are killed by army
shelling. Sri Lanka's president, Mahinda
Rajapaksa, appealed yesterday for the
separatists to lay down their arms, to
ensure the safety of the trapped civilians.
Another frightening scenario is a mass
suicide: tiger cadres are ordered not to be
captured alive, and they may be willing to
force their families and neighbours to die
with them.
The intensity of the battle is clear in what
the Sri Lankan army calls the "liberated
zone". Surrounding paddy fields and jungle,
with patches of burnt and blackened trees
marking bunkers where Tigers had fought to
the death, were devoid of farmers. There was
nothing to be seen of the thousands of
people who had lived in Kilinochchi, an
empty, eerie ghost town now full of stray
dogs and wandering goats.
Much of the population must have gone
willingly with the Tigers. The group had
fanatical support in the area and people
feared the army.
Western nations and the United Nations have
criticised the government's ruthless
determination to continue the battle no
matter the cost in human suffering. But aid
workers and diplomats in Colombo described
how refugees were treated with kindness when
they gave themselves up to soldiers.
Sergeant Sumeda Hettiarchchi, who was in
transit in Kilinochchi returning to the
front from ten days leave, said the fighting
was the worst he had seen in 17 years
service but worth it.
"Our morale is high and we want to finish it
now," he said. "We feel very sad for the
civilians who are trapped there. We want to
help them, and the only way to do that is by
finishing the LTTE."
Disease is spreading now as heavy rains lash
the mass of refugees, who have no proper
shelter and no sanitation.
Another 18-year-old schoolgirl who was
forced to fight but managed to escape in
February said she cried every day at the
thought of old school friends who were still
caught in the battle. "They are only there
because of fear of the Tamil Tiger
commanders," she said. "They told us so many
lies. The people will hate them after this."
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