Pitfalls in Counting the Dead during the Final Phase of Eelam War IV

Gerald H. Peiris, courtesy of Colombo Telegraph where a range of blog comments will be found…. https://www.colombotelegraph.com/index.php/encountering-death-counts-in-the-final-phase-of-the-eelam-war 

85a-february_09_vanni_04 TamilNet 8 Feb 200988b-daru 35from Darusman report

Contents

1. PreambleCross-Section   of Estimates Computation Methods

 2                     

2.

4

3.

7

3.1. ‘Population Change Method’: Applications

8

3.2. ‘Injury-to-Death Ratio Method’: Applications

10

3.3. ‘Sporadic Information Method’: Sample of   Applications

16

3.3.1. University Teachers for Human Rights – Jaffna 16
3.3.2. UNSG- Panel of Experts on Accountability in Sri   Lanka 20
3.3.3. Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission 21
3.3.4. Michael Roberts 24
3.4. ‘Satellite Imagery Interpretation Method’:   Applications

24

3.5. ‘Census Method’: Applications

26

3.5.1.     Government of Sri Lanka                                                             26
4. Endnotes

28

5. Main References

30

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Dear President Rajapaksa, Face up to these Tasks and Issues Ahead

Rajasingham Narendran, in May 2013, responding to the President’s Victory Day Speech … courtesy of Colombo Telegraph where comments will be found 

While the 4th February is often a moment for fanfare and pomposity, so too is the 19th May now celebrated in most (but not all) parts of Sri Lanka and the occasion for a display of leadership and sermons from above. But sermons and addresses can, in this democratic age, flow both ways. At a time when we are seeking pathways that will generate amity among ethnic and religious communities at loggerheads and acrimonious political rivalries at many levels it is advisable for us to take note of voices of dissent and caution that are not an integral part of these divisive forces, especially where those vices demand self-examination. As with the interventions of Izeth Hussain and Jayantha Dhanapala, the courageous efforts of Rajasingham in Narendran challenging various Presidential proclamations provide us, one and al, with food for thought… and, of course, debate – debate in the democratic manner that President Rajapaksa must perforce embrace. Unless our political associations and leaders  look deep within themselves and re-examine cherished notions, the roads to reconciliation will remain blocked and potholed. Needless to say, this applies to the Tamil and Muslim political forces as well. Michael Roberts

MR 22 I read with much interest the President’s ‘Victory Day’ speech at the Galle Face Green, yesterday, reproduced in CT. While I agree with much of his recount of recent history, there are glaring gaps in the story he recalled.  Further, he has failed to address the current concerns of the victims his forces liberated at all.  I have selected some sentences and sections from his address to express my concerns.

  • “Today we have the fourth opportunity to celebrate with dignity the great victory of our Motherland.”

Mr. President, victory over whom?   I raise this question in terms of the word ‘Conquered’ used in a war memorial in Mullaitivu.  Was it a victory over the LTTE or the Tamils?  Motherland!  Whose?  I did not see any opposition figures in the podium?  There were also no representatives of the Tamils, who were liberated by the armed forces, on the podium. I also did not see any Hindu priests, Christian padres or Muslim Moulavis on the podium, except for a handful of Buddhist monks.  The absence of Sarath Fonseka, the man who led the army from the front, at this function and his name and role not being even mentioned were glaring omissions that portrayed  the smallness this great country is being reduced to. Continue reading

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Around Galle and the southern coast: a magical family holiday

John Gimlette, courtesy of the Daily Telegraph and  http://www.dailynews.lk/?q=features/sri-lanka-family-holidays-amazing-mr-elephant where the title reads “Sri Lanka family holidays: the amazing Mr Elephant”

If you were to design a child’s perfect holiday, it would involve beaches, a castle, a little magic, something gruesome and a few monsters. That, broadly speaking, describes Galle. Sri Lanka’s elephants may not be monsters exactly, but there are 500 of them in the region, each as wonderfully weird as any Roald Dahl creation. So, box ticked. Admittedly, Galle’s fortress wears its gruesomeness lightly these days. The three of us often climbed the old Portuguese ramparts, Lucy (aged 8) trailing her kite. At sunset everyone would gather up here: monks, clerics, a bright pink tuk-tuk, and newly-weds in exotic silk doublets. Life wasn’t always so chirpy. Locals told us that the great coral blocks were cut by Mozambican cannibals so fierce they had to be muzzled. The slave-pits are still there, together with siege-proof sewers (1663) and a gunpowder store (1782). Continue reading

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From the Break-up of Stalinist Russia towards an Indian Imposition of a Cyprus-Solution upon Sri Lanka?

Izeth Hussain, in the Island, 8 February 2014 where the title is “Darkness at Noon in the Ethnic Front, II

IPKF TROPS WITHDRAWI must first of all make some clarifications on the point I made in my last article that India might someday impose a Cyprus-style solution to the ethnic problem in Sri Lanka: Indian troops invade Sri Lanka, carve out territory in the North-East for the separate state of Eelam, and hold the frontier thereafter. That process would be comparable to what happened in Cyprus: Turkish troops invaded that country, carved out territory for the Turkish Cypriots, held the frontier, and the de facto division has held for four decades. Continue reading

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Izeth Hussain’s Reflections on Sri Lankan Politics

I. Re-thinking the Ethnic Imbroglio   Island,  24 January 2014

It is always difficult to see things as they are. Somerset Maugham, a shrewd observer of human frailty in his best work, claimed that the transcendental geniuses such as Shakespeare and Dostoevsky – I am not sure of the names he actually used – could see through a brick wall, whereas he himself, unlike average humanity, could clearly see what was directly under his nose. Wyndham Lewis was even more scathing about the limitations of average humanity: he wrote that only a few people of very exceptional intelligence can see that the cow is in the field. Many readers will write all that off as misanthropic hyperbole. But most will agree that in general we are usually reluctant to see things as they are when they are unpleasant. Continue reading

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Great Men live to regret their inventions: the Kalashnikov

Quintus De Zylva

ALBERT EINSTEIN reflecting on his role in the development of the atomic bomb said “ If only I had known, I should have become a watchmaker”!

AK 47 AND KALSHNIKOV Continue reading

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The Burghers in Sri Lanka: A Hunt for Photographs

 The VOC heritage in Sri Lanka: The Dutch Burghers of Ceylon 1640 -2015

 I. An Appeal from Nina Van Dort:

Dear Burghers,  …….. Our team members will be in Melbourne from the 13th – 20th February 2014, Australia for 8 days collecting images. We are staying with Roger and Norreen Wright who are so kind to put up with us .Once again the team would like to ask your kind assistance , as we are on the look-out for more images which will be presented  at the 2015 Burgher Heritage  Exhibition in Amsterdam.

Since we equipped with a camera, scanner and gadgets, we have the capacity to scan photographs at your homes if desirable and/or feasible.  Kindly   spread the word around.  My contact address is ninavandort@live.com.

NINA VAN D ORT Nina is in black 4th from right as you face the pic Continue reading

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Homely Warmth. Basking in Sri Lanka yet again — our 11th visit

Bryan and Joy Atkinson

This would be our eleventh visit to Serendipity and a new adventure was awaiting us, our Guide from our very first visit and now a family friend of long standing, Rohana would as usual be waiting for us at the Airport as he has on every occasion, however he had not informed us that a new levy had been imposed on all visitors who now have to pay $35.00 US upon entry, we only learned of this after standing in the passport queue for some time. Continue reading

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Australia’s Emergence: Western civilisation’s legacy has a dark side

Riaz Hassan,  Sociology, Flinders University, Adelaide …. from http://theconversation.com/curriculum-review-western-civilisations-legacy-has-a-dark-side-22082 – where revealing blog comments can be located.

The push is currently on for Australia’s national curriculum to place more emphasis on the history of Western civilisation and its values. But if we accept that the purpose of such an education is to achieve a proper and fuller appreciation of this legacy and its role in the making of the modern world (and Australia), we cannot ignore the many significant elements of its dark side.

ABORIGINAL GENOCIDE  Western civilisation and history have a darker side of genocide and land dispossession: a history that is often ignored. Wikimedia Commons

Core Values: It is commonplace to hear that Judeo-Christian values are the core of Western civilisation. But, ironically, destroying Jewish religious idols was key to historical anti-Semitism in Christian European societies. Jews were accused of various kinds of conspiracies and evil designs. Continue reading

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“When will we ever learn!” Lessons from the Horrors of War. Declassified plans for the WW II invasion of Japan

Buz on  the  Declassified plans for the WW II invasion of Japan: Operations “Downfall”, “Coronet”, et  cetera

For those interested in WWII, it’s a good short read. Now that the documents have been downgraded I’m sure there are going to be many new books both pro and con on this subject. Interesting!! The magnitude of the planning and operation is unbelievable!!

Deep in the recesses of the National Archives in Washington, D.C., hidden  for nearly four decades lie thousands of pages of yellowing and dusty documents stamped “Top Secret”. These documents, now declassified, are the plans for Operation Downfall, the invasion of Japan during World War II.

OKINAWA 33 American troops disembarking at Okinawa

Only a few Americans in 1945 were aware of the elaborate plans that had been prepared for the Allied Invasion of the Japanese home islands. Even fewer today are aware of the defenses the Japanese had prepared to counter the invasion had it been launched. Operation Downfall was finalized during the spring and summer of 1945. It called for two massive military undertakings
to be carried out in succession and aimed at the heart of the Japanese Empire. Continue reading

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