Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Sri Lanka: killing for peace

There has been an ongoing conflict on the island nation of Sri Lanka for decades. Scores of people have died amidst on again off again wars and peace accords. The worst part is that it's hard to determine who the "good guys" are. The LTTE "Tigers" are officially labeled a terrorist organization but the government of Sri Lanka has also committed many atrocities against it's people. Human rights violations, abductions, and torture are just some of the things that are going on every day in this island nation.

"Reporter Sandra Jordan and director Siobhan Sinnerton travel to northern Sri Lanka and uncover the government's heavy-handed tactics in the latest stage of the country's 30-year civil war. As the first foreign journalists to visit the city of Jaffna, Jordan and Sinnerton discover that the government has abandoned the ceasefire signed in 2002 in favour of a military campaign against the rebel Tamil Tigers - with many innocent civilians paying the price. The Sri Lankan Civil War is an ongoing conflict on the island-nation of Sri Lanka. Since the year 1983, there has been on-and-off civil war, predominantly between the government and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE, also known as the Tamil Tigers), a separatist militant organization who fight to create an independent state named Tamil Eelam in the North and East of the island. The origins of the Sri Lankan civil war lie in sharp disagreements over language, access to universities, and riots between Sri Lanka's majority Sinhalese, mostly Buddhist, and minority Tamil, mostly Hindu, community. These gradually but continuously escalated from the 1920s until the outbreak of civil war in 1983."

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