MADURAI, March 1,
2013 | The Hindu
: India should press for an independent enquiry
into the alleged human rights violations by Sri Lankan armed forces during the
war against Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, at the United Nations Human
Rights Council meeting in Geneva next month, said G. Ramakrishnan, State
secretary of the Communist Party of India (Marxist).
Mr. Ramakrishnan told reporters here on Thursday
that around “40,000 innocent Tamils were killed” towards the end of the war.
Media report on the murder of the LTTE chief Prabhakaran’s 12-year-old son
Balachandran exposed the worst human rights violation by Sri Lanka, he alleged.
India should move a resolution in the UNHR
council meeting for an independent probe into such human rights violations in
the island nation.
Recalling the promises made by Sri Lankan
Government on devolution of powers to Sri Lankan Tamils, he said India should
press for providing equal rights and autonomy to Sri Lankan Tamils.
On the drought relief announced by the State
Government, Mr. Ramakrishnan said that the relief should not be confined only
to farmers who have lost at least 50 per cent of their crops, but also to lakh
of farmhands who have been rendered jobless, owing to the drought situation.
Besides, the Government should make efforts to mitigate
the impending drinking water crisis throughout the State.
The party has begun a nationwide campaign on the
“wrong economic policies” of the successive Governments in the Centre, led by
the Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party that affected the livelihood of the
common man. The Centre has planned for public private partnership in the areas
of health and education, which means the Government wanted to privatise these
services. The move to hike the price of diesel by Rs.11 a litre for public transport
sector would hit the common man. As a result of the new economic policies, the
gross domestic product had touched its lowest of 5 per cent in the last 10
years. Similarly, the food inflation had gone up from 7 per cent to 10.56 per
cent between January 2012 and December 2012, he said.
Likewise, the policies reduced employment growth
from 2.7 per cent in 2000 -2005 to 0.8 per cent in 2005-2010, he added.