Sri Lanka – camps, media…genocide? | Martin Shaw
July 8, 2009, 10:37 am
Filed under:
Indian Subcontinent | Tags:
Chavuinism,
Civil War,
Francis Boyle,
Genocide,
IDPS,
Internment camps,
Iran Elections,
Lebensraum,
LTTE,
Mahinda Rajapaksa,
Nation-State,
Nationalism,
Nazi,
Nazism,
Racism,
Self-Determination,
Sinhala,
Sri Lanka,
Sri Lankan Army,
State Terror,
Tamil Diaspora,
Tamils

* * * * *
30 June 2009
Source: Open Democracy
What kind of violence has the Sri Lankan state been committing against its Tamil civilian population as the island‘s civil war ended; on what scale and with what intentions? Martin Shaw explores the difficult terrain where war, atrocity and genocide meet.
President Mahinda Rajapaksa, in his “victory speech”, told Sri Lanka’s parliament that “our heroic forces have sacrificed their lives to protect Tamil civilians”, and he took “personal responsibility” for protecting Tamils. Yet his government is now scandalously confining this huge population – who have already suffered not only from the LTTE but from Sri Lankan bombardments which caused probably tens of thousands of deaths and injuries – in squalid conditions. The government has officially backtracked, under international pressure, on plans to hold the displaced, while screening them for potential “terrorists”, for up to three years; it now says that 80% will be resettled by the end of (more…)
A nation divided | Alireza Doostdar
June 26, 2009, 12:19 pm
Filed under:
Asia,
Middle East | Tags:
Ali Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani,
aqazadeh,
Azad,
Azadi,
Basij,
Green Revolution,
Iran,
Iran Elections,
Iranian Elections 2009,
Iranian Revolution,
Islamic Republic,
Khodi,
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad,
Mir Hussein Mousavi,
Mohamed Khatami,
Nationalism,
Revolutionary Guards

* * * * *
25 June – 1 July 2009
Issue No. 953
Source: Al-Ahram Weekly Online
Western coverage of the political turmoil in Iran in the aftermath of the 12 June presidential election has for the most part presented a uniform image of the conflict: thousands of young, liberal, and defiant supporters of presidential challenger Mir-Hussein Mousavi have been protesting against what they see as massive fraud, a “coup” to re-elect Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. The government, fearful of a popular uprising, has responded with massive use of force, killing and injuring protesters, arresting activists and politicians, and imposing an information blockade.
Analysts repeatedly ask themselves and others, “Is this a revolution?” And, more expectantly, “Are we witnessing the end of the Islamic Republic?” Whatever we are to make of the question of fraud (there apparently were some irregularities, but no evidence of widespread fraud), Ahmadinejad retains a huge popular base that is not prepared to forfeit its position. Rather than viewing the events of the past 12 days as signs of a revolution-in-the-making, we should be (more…)