Tag No Fire Zone

No Fire Zone Video Authentic, Sri Lanka Refuses to Accept It.

The release of the War Crime Documentary on Sri Lanka,No Fire Zone' has not evoked any comments from the sri Lanka Government for quite some time.

I have posted in a Blog of mine at that time,may be Fifteen days ago that Sri Lanka had not commented yet.

But now The Government official declares that the there is a concerted attempt by the International Community to defame Sri Lanka.

There is also a Link in the Wiki that the earlier film Killing fields of Sri Lanka is doctored.

The Analyst says that the blood is not real, is faked and manipulated.

Now my points are.

1.If the Killing Fields of Sri Lanka are false.then why no claim was made disproving it then?

The first part is what is expected, but where is the effort to disprove the Video?

2.Now look at he analysis of the Video, No Fire Zone.
Why no rebuttal?

3.What does the International Community gain by taking on a small Nation as Sri Lanka?

4.Sri Lanka declared, at the time of the killing of Prbhakaran that the "LTTE's back was boken and it was finished'

After the release of this No Fire Zone; LTTE has become active and is able to control World Opinion?

If it were to be so, it should have made Rajapakshe atand on Trail for War Crimes in the International Court by now!..
The professor identified what he thinks is the first of the shots to be fired at the boy: “There is a speckling (on the skin) from propellant tattooing, indicating that the distance of the muzzle of the weapon to this boy’s chest was two to three feet or less. He could have reached out with his hand and touched the gun that killed him.”

The professor said the angle of the shots suggested that after that bullet was fired, the boy fell backwards and was then shot four more times. Unlike the men around him, there was no indication that the boy had been blindfolded or bound, so it was possible that the boy may have been made to watch the execution of his guards before the gun was turned on him.

The new photographs released today give us a chilling insight into what happened before that. They appear to demonstrate that the situation was calm and orderly. Balachandran was given a snack and some water. There was time to take photographs while he was held in the bunker and again afterwards. The forensic analysis report on the photographs concludes that there is “no evidence to indicate fabrication, manipulation or the use of effects to create the images” and concludes that the photographs “appear to be an accurate representation of the events depicted.”

From the separate video sequence recorded later (which has also been authenticated by both digital video analysis), it is clear that there were several military personnel in the area.

‘No Fire Zone Killing Fields Of Sri Lanka’ New Film Trailer

The film starts in September 2008. An air of deep foreboding hung over Kilinochchi– the de facto capital of the Tamil homelands of Northern Sri Lanka. The armed forces of the ultra-nationalist Sinhalese government of Sri Lanka were on the move, and the brutal secessionist army of the Tamil Tigers was on the retreat. After a twenty-six year revolt – the scene was set for the final awful endgame.

We have looked at and translated hours of raw footage which captures the day-to-day life of the people who lived and in many cases died – during the 138 days of hell which form the central narrative of our film. This footage is an incredibly intimate account of human suffering.

But the film is also built around compelling personal stories. There is Vany - a young British Tamil who was visiting relatives in Sri Lanka who became trapped along with hundreds of thousands of other men, women and children, desperately fleeing the government onslaught. She had trained as a medical technician in the UK, now she found herself helping in a makeshift hospital while doctors tried to treat hundreds of desperately injured people, in some cases performing major surgery without general anaesthetic.

Other people who tell their stories include two of the last UN workers – Peter Mackay and Benjamin Dix – forced to leave on the orders of the UN which, they feel, was betraying its fundamental duty to protect.

Inevitably too, this film is the personal story of some who didn’t make it.

‘No Fire Zone’ also brings the story up to date. The Sri Lankan government still denies this all happened in what thy describe as an “humanitarian rescue”. The repression and ethnic restructuring of the Tamil homelands in the north of Sri Lanka continues – journalists and government critics are still disappearing. The government will tolerate no opposition and have even turned on their own judiciary, impeaching the Chief Justice of the country when she found they had acted unconstitutionally.

Without truth there can be no justice in Sri Lanka. And without justice there can be no peace. We hope our film can be part of that truth-telling.