Search
Search titles only
By:
Search titles only
By:
Log in
Register
Search
Search titles only
By:
Search titles only
By:
Menu
Install the app
Install
Forums
New posts
All threads
Latest threads
New posts
Trending threads
Trending
Search forums
What's new
New posts
New ads
New profile posts
Latest activity
Free Ads
Latest reviews
Search ads
Members
Current visitors
New profile posts
Search profile posts
Contact us
Latest ads
Power Lifting Lever Belt
SkullVamp
Updated:
Jun 13, 2026
Ad icon
port.lk Domain for sale
Lankan-Tech
Updated:
Jun 13, 2026
Colombo
Kaduwela - Two Storey House for Sale
dilrasan
Updated:
Jun 11, 2026
Ad icon
Wechat qr verification
Pawan2005
Updated:
Jun 11, 2026
🚀 GOOGLE AI PRO 18 MONTHS ACTIVATION 🚀
sayuru bandara
Updated:
Jun 10, 2026
Electronics
Vehicles
Property
Search
Reply to thread
Forums
General
ElaKiri Talk!
Well Done Sir
Get the App
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Message
<blockquote data-quote="rapa" data-source="post: 589681" data-attributes="member: 212"><p>Anything is fair' when fighting LTTE - Gothabaya</p><p></p><p>[TamilNet, Tuesday, 12 June 2007, 15:14 GMT]</p><p>Sri Lanka's hardline Defence Secretary launched a bitter attack on the international community Tuesday, saying Sri Lanka was being bullied by Western states over human rights. "We have to defend ourselves. I'm talking about terrorists. Anything is fair," Gotabaya Rajapaksa told Reuters and the BBC. He said the United Nations agencies had been infiltrated and misled by the Liberation Tigers over 30 years.</p><p>Gotabaya, who is also President Mahinda Rajapaksa's brother, accused foreign powers of applying double standards when it comes to human rights violations, saying all measures were fair to defeat "terrorists".</p><p>Last week the Sri Lankan government evicted hundreds of Tamils from Colombo triggering a chorus of condemnation from Western states.</p><p>"This is discrimination and bullying by the international community," Rajapaksa told Reuters and the BBC in an interview Tuesday.</p><p>"Without understanding the problem, they are trying to bully us, and we won't be isolated. We have all the SAARC countries, the Asian countries," he added. "Britain or Western countries, EU countries, they can do whatever. We don't depend on them."</p><p>"They think that they we get aid. No, they are not giving anything."</p><p>Both Britain and the United States have suspended small amounts aid to Sri Lanka this year citing rights abuse concerns – though both countries have sharply raised their arms sales to the Sri Lankan military this year.</p><p>President Rajapakse last month shrugged off Britain's move to cut aid and vowing that his government would not be held hostage over aid.</p><p>And Japan, Sri Lanka's biggest donor by far, has refused to cut aid. Last week Japan's peace envoy, Yasushi Akashi, visiting Sri Lanka said human rights may sometimes have to suffer in the war against terror.</p><p>Although Prime Minister Ratnisri Wickremenayake apologised for last Wednesday's expulsions in which hundreds of Tamils were put on busses at gunpoint and sent to the North and East, Mr. Gotabaya defended the government's actions.</p><p>"It is a good example where the whole world was misled," he said. "Everyone knows the LTTE is infiltrating [the south] ... We can't arrest 300 people and detain them. What is the best option?"</p><p>"So you can tell them, if you don't have any legal business in Colombo ... we don't want to detain you, you go back to your homes. In fact this operation was much better. We could have put all of them in detention."</p><p>He dismissed criticism by international human rights groups and international ceasefire monitors of the SLMM that Sri Lankan security forces are engaged in human rights abuses, including killings and abductions of civilians.</p><p>"We have to defend ourselves. You can't risk the country ...," Rajapaksa said.</p><p>"What I am saying is, if there is a terrorist group, why can't you do anything? It's not against a community... I'm talking about terrorists. Anything is fair."</p><p>"When the U.S. does operations, they say covert operations. When something is (done) in Sri Lanka, they call it abductions," he added. "This is playing with the words."</p><p>Rajapaksa said British Foreign Office Minister Kim Howells, who visited the island on Monday, had been "completely misinformed".</p><p>"Howells didn't talk a single word against the LTTE, a single word against terrorism," Rajapaksa said. "They are threatening isolation, they are stopping aid.</p><p>"They want us to suffer," he added. "When America is attacked ... every country (calls it) war against terrorism, but why are the terrorists being treated in a different way in Sri Lanka? Is Britain talking about isolating America?"</p><p>Rajapaksa also said U.N. agencies in Sri Lanka, which have also urged the government to halt rights abuses, had been misled by local staff sympathetic to the LTTE.</p><p>"For 30 years or so, this LTTE planned this, they infiltrated the U.N.," Rajapaksa said. "The problem is the U.N. organisations, they took a lot of locals (on)."</p><p>"There are a lot of things happening in the UN," he said.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="rapa, post: 589681, member: 212"] Anything is fair' when fighting LTTE - Gothabaya [TamilNet, Tuesday, 12 June 2007, 15:14 GMT] Sri Lanka's hardline Defence Secretary launched a bitter attack on the international community Tuesday, saying Sri Lanka was being bullied by Western states over human rights. "We have to defend ourselves. I'm talking about terrorists. Anything is fair," Gotabaya Rajapaksa told Reuters and the BBC. He said the United Nations agencies had been infiltrated and misled by the Liberation Tigers over 30 years. Gotabaya, who is also President Mahinda Rajapaksa's brother, accused foreign powers of applying double standards when it comes to human rights violations, saying all measures were fair to defeat "terrorists". Last week the Sri Lankan government evicted hundreds of Tamils from Colombo triggering a chorus of condemnation from Western states. "This is discrimination and bullying by the international community," Rajapaksa told Reuters and the BBC in an interview Tuesday. "Without understanding the problem, they are trying to bully us, and we won't be isolated. We have all the SAARC countries, the Asian countries," he added. "Britain or Western countries, EU countries, they can do whatever. We don't depend on them." "They think that they we get aid. No, they are not giving anything." Both Britain and the United States have suspended small amounts aid to Sri Lanka this year citing rights abuse concerns – though both countries have sharply raised their arms sales to the Sri Lankan military this year. President Rajapakse last month shrugged off Britain's move to cut aid and vowing that his government would not be held hostage over aid. And Japan, Sri Lanka's biggest donor by far, has refused to cut aid. Last week Japan's peace envoy, Yasushi Akashi, visiting Sri Lanka said human rights may sometimes have to suffer in the war against terror. Although Prime Minister Ratnisri Wickremenayake apologised for last Wednesday's expulsions in which hundreds of Tamils were put on busses at gunpoint and sent to the North and East, Mr. Gotabaya defended the government's actions. "It is a good example where the whole world was misled," he said. "Everyone knows the LTTE is infiltrating [the south] ... We can't arrest 300 people and detain them. What is the best option?" "So you can tell them, if you don't have any legal business in Colombo ... we don't want to detain you, you go back to your homes. In fact this operation was much better. We could have put all of them in detention." He dismissed criticism by international human rights groups and international ceasefire monitors of the SLMM that Sri Lankan security forces are engaged in human rights abuses, including killings and abductions of civilians. "We have to defend ourselves. You can't risk the country ...," Rajapaksa said. "What I am saying is, if there is a terrorist group, why can't you do anything? It's not against a community... I'm talking about terrorists. Anything is fair." "When the U.S. does operations, they say covert operations. When something is (done) in Sri Lanka, they call it abductions," he added. "This is playing with the words." Rajapaksa said British Foreign Office Minister Kim Howells, who visited the island on Monday, had been "completely misinformed". "Howells didn't talk a single word against the LTTE, a single word against terrorism," Rajapaksa said. "They are threatening isolation, they are stopping aid. "They want us to suffer," he added. "When America is attacked ... every country (calls it) war against terrorism, but why are the terrorists being treated in a different way in Sri Lanka? Is Britain talking about isolating America?" Rajapaksa also said U.N. agencies in Sri Lanka, which have also urged the government to halt rights abuses, had been misled by local staff sympathetic to the LTTE. "For 30 years or so, this LTTE planned this, they infiltrated the U.N.," Rajapaksa said. "The problem is the U.N. organisations, they took a lot of locals (on)." "There are a lot of things happening in the UN," he said. [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Verification
Dawasata paya keeyak thibeda?
Post reply
Top
Bottom