Government to decide on CHOGM; disturbing Channel 4 video causes concern

As the government maintained Saturdayv it is yet to take a decision on Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's participation at the upcoming Commonwealth summit in Colombo, a new and disturbing Channel 4 video on the alleged arrest, sexual assault and killing of a pro-LTTE Sri Lankan news reader is causing concern.
Union Finance Minister P. Chidambaram Saturday met DMK chief M.Karunanidhi in Chennai. Speaking to reporters later, he said a decision is yet to be taken on the prime minister attending the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Colombo Nov 15-17.
The finance minister termed reports of Manmohan Singh's likely participation in CHOGM as incorrect.
Chidambaram also condemned the alleged rape and murder of Sri Lankan woman Isaipriya and urged the Sri Lanka government to take action against those who are responsible for it.
In New Delhi, Communist Party of India (CPI) leader D. Raja also said that India should boycott the CHOGM meeting in the light of the Channel 4 video which he termed as another evidence of human rights violations and war crimes by Sri Lanka.
The Channel 4 video shows a partially clad pro-Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) news broadcaster Isaipriya alias Shobha being dragged away by Sri Lankan soldiers. The video was purportedly shot towards the end of the war on the island in 2009 when the LTTE was defeated. She is asked in Tamil if she is LTTE chief Prabhakaran's daughter, to which she replies in the negative.
Later on, the video shows her dead and the unclad upper portion of her body is fuzzed out. The Channel 4 report says she was sexually assaulted and killed.
Speaking to BBC Tamil Service's Jayaprakash Nallusami, the military spokesman, says that only specialized investigations can ascertain whether the woman in the video is actually Isaipriya or whether the video is a mere episode of 'acting'.
With Tamil parties demanding that India boycott CHOGM, the Channel 4 video, to be broadcast Sunday night on the channel, would act as added incentive to them to raise the decibel level against the prime minister's participation, it is learnt.
Canada, which has a sizeable Sri Lankan Tamil diaspora, is boycotting the Commonwealth summit over the alleged human rights violations and war crimes. It is the second largest contributor to the Commonwealth fund.
The new chief minister of Sri Lanka's Tamil-majority Northern Province C.V. Wigneswaran has invited Manmohan Singh to visit Jaffna, the capital of the Tamil majority province. Sri Lanka held elections to the Northern province for the first time last month in which the Tamil National Alliance emerged victorious.
–Indo-Asian News Service
Category :India
More News

Jaishankar Lodges Strong Protest With Rubio After US Navy Strike Kills Three Indian Seafarers

Ahmedabad Plane Crash Anniversary: Families Gather at Crash Site to Honour Victims

J&K Court Summons Hizbul Chief Syed Salahuddin, 3 Others to Appear on July 14

India Tightens Fuel Sale Rules, Restricts Bulk Purchase of Petrol and Diesel for 90 Days

Use of Children by Pro-Khalistan Elements Emerges as New Security Challenge

Government Waives Excise Duty on Higher Ethanol-Blended Petrol to Boost Biofuel Push
Trending News

Messi Breaks New Ground: Historic Hat-Trick in 200th International Match
Donald Trump Jokes ‘I’m the Boss’ at G7 Summit, Lightens Mood Amid Global Tensions
Lionel Messi Marks Historic Sixth World Cup Appearance With Hat-Trick as Argentina Cruise Past Algeria
Shakira Celebrates 100th Concert in Los Angeles as Sofia Vergara Dances to ‘Hips Don’t Lie’
TV Actress Sanchita Ugale, Known for 'Kumkum Bhagya', Passes Away at 22
UN Welcomes US-Iran Truce as Guterres Backs Ceasefire and Fresh Diplomatic Talks
Iran Announces Immediate End to War, Says US Naval Blockade Will Be Lifted From Tonight
Trump Announces US-Iran Deal to Reopen Strait of Hormuz, End Naval Blockade Amid Energy Market Fears
Keeping Their Promise Vijay, Rashmika Reward Government Students From Actor's Ancestral Roots
Scotland Beat Haiti 1-0 to Register First World Cup Win Since 1990
Top News


