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http://www.reuters.com/article...dUSBRE96O1H020130725

 

 

 

 

(Reuters) - The United States has quietly been testing the Syrian opposition's ability to deliver food rations, medical kits and money to rebel-held areas as Washington prepares to send arms to the rebel fighters.

U.S. officials meet weekly in Turkey with Syrian opposition leaders to work out how best to keep supply lines open to rebel fighters and war-ravaged towns and districts.

One of the Syrian opposition's best-known female leaders, Suhair al-Atassi, attends the meetings as coordinator of the "non-lethal" aid that includes equipment for rebel fighters and local councils, as opposed to humanitarian aid for the displaced.

Supplies are handed to officers of the moderate Free Syrian Army (FSA) at clandestine locations that cannot be divulged for security reasons.

"I sign the paperwork, and shake the hands of the FSA official," said a U.S. State Department official involved in the effort. "I wish them well and walk away."

The rebels take aid for their own units and also distribute some of it to schools, clinics and local councils.

The United States has committed $250 million in non-lethal aid to Syria in addition to the $815 million in humanitarian assistance in support of the rebels fighting President Bashar al-Assad's forces.

Recently, Washington began scaling up its assistance to bigger items like trucks, radios, large generators and sophisticated medical equipment.

Some of it is not only aimed at helping fighters but also at supporting civilian authorities in towns that have rejected Assad's rule.

"We are just now starting to send large equipment over the border for local councils and cities in liberated areas," the U.S. official said.

Syria's civil war has killed more than 100,000 people and forced millions to flee their homes. The involvement of Iran and its Lebanese ally Hezbollah in the conflict has shifted the balance of power on the battlefield in favor of Assad, increasing frustration among rebels over delays in the United States sending weapons to them.

With no U.S. diplomatic presence on the ground, Syria presents a unique challenge for aid coordinators.

U.S. officials say they rely on a network of some 75 young Syrians who collect information in rebel-held areas and report back to Atassi's unit. The information is often corroborated with U.N. groups.

SUPPLYING WEAPONS

The U.S. Congress cleared the way earlier this month for Washington to give the rebels not just non-lethal and humanitarian aid but also weapons. Lawmakers have only approved limited funding for the arms operation, as they fear that U.S. weapons and ammunition could end up in the hands of hardline Islamist militant groups.

"One of our main issues is to make sure that, whatever we do, that nothing gets in the hands of al Qaeda," said Dutch Ruppersberger, the top Democrat on the House of Representatives Intelligence Committee.

To keep track of the non-lethal aid already going into Syria, American officials ask the opposition to bring back photographic evidence of deliveries as proof that the goods made it into the right hands.

"If we are providing small amounts of cash to a local council to pay salaries we insist on signatures and photographs," said the official. "One of the ways to minimize the risk is we keep the amounts of cash small and would pay something like a stipend rather than a salary."

While it is not always easy to guarantee that supplies reach their intended recipients or that they don't eventually make their way to the black market, the Syrian opposition coordinators have begun to earn the trust of U.S. officials.

"They have so far passed the test," the official said.

France also sends supplies to the rebels, including envelopes stuffed with money handed over at the Turkish border.

(Reporting by Lesley Wroughton; Additional reporting by Patricia Zengerle; Editing by Alistair Bell and Eric Beech)

 

Canadian who pled guilty to aiding Tamil Tigers should be imprisoned for 15 years, U.S. prosecutors argue

Stewart Bell | 27/09/13 1:37 PM ET
More from Stewart Bell | @StewartBellNP

Suresh Sriskandarajah, also known as Waterloo Suresh, is hoping to be released with time served when he is sentenced on Oct. 28 but the U.S. Attorney’s office in Brooklyn is seeking significant prison time for the young engineer.
HandoutSuresh Sriskandarajah, also known as Waterloo Suresh, is hoping to be released with time served when he is sentenced on Oct. 28 but the U.S. Attorney’s office in Brooklyn is seeking significant prison time for the young engineer.
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TORONTOβ€”A Canadian who pleaded guilty to aiding Sri Lanka’s Tamil Tigers should be imprisoned for 15 years for his β€œgravely serious offense,” U.S. prosecutors argued in a sentencing memorandum filed in New York.

Suresh Sriskandarajah, also known as Waterloo Suresh, is hoping to be released with time served when he is sentenced on Oct. 28 but the U.S. Attorney’s office in Brooklyn is seeking significant prison time for the young engineer.

β€œThe defendant was an LTTE supporter who facilitated transactions for the LTTE in the purchase of military equipment,” according to the prosecutor’s memorandum, which uses the acronym for the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.

β€œSpecifically, the defendant, while residing in Canada, assisted in the research and procurement of aviation equipment, cell towers, submarine and warship design software, and communications equipment. In October 2005, the defendant sent three students he had recruited to Sri Lanka to conduct smuggling operations for the LTTE.”

Suresh was arrested by the RCMP in 2006 following a joint investigation with the FBI called Project O-Needle. He was extradited to New York last year and has since pleaded guilty to conspiring to provide material support to the Sri Lankan rebels between 2004 and 2006.

His co-accused Ramanan Mylvaganam was released with time served and has already returned to Canada. But the prosecution memorandum argues that Suresh’s case merits a lengthy sentence. β€œA significant term of incarceration will reflect the seriousness of the offense, promote respect for the law, and provide just punishment.”

The arrest of Suresh and several other Tamil-Canadians from the Toronto area followed an investigation into support networks that were assisting the Tamil Tigers, separatist rebels fighting for independence for Sri Lanka’s ethnic Tamil minority.

Handout
HandoutSuresh Sriskandarajah at his Wilfred Laurier MBA graduation in Waterloo with his mother, grandmother and great grandmother.

Many of the subjects of the probe were Canadians who were caught attempting to buy surface-to-air missiles and AK-47 assault rifles from an undercover informant. Suresh was not involved in the missile deal but had attempted to buy US$22,000 worth of submarine and warship design software.

The equipment was sought at the request of Pratheepan Thavarajah, whom U.S. prosecutors described as β€œa principal liaison between [rebel leader Velupillai] Prabhakaran and other LTTE leaders and supporters in North America, Europe and Asia who was actively involved in worldwide equipment procurement for the LTTE.”

Suresh and Mylvaganam told a British company they needed the software for a school project. Suresh also β€œassisted in the smuggling of scientific magazines into the LTTE-controlled areas of Sri Lanka, and helped purchase computer equipment, electronics components, and communications equipment for the

LTTE,” the memorandum said.

The Tamil Tigers relied heavily on an international support network for money and weapons. The main rebel front organization in Canada was the Toronto-based World Tamil Movement, which was raided and shut down by the RCMP.

The civil war ended in 2009, when government forces defeated the rebels and killed their leaders. Since then, there have been widespread calls for an international investigation into allegations that war crimes were committed during the final stage of the conflict.

National Post 

 

FM

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