| TamilNet.com! With a little help from his 
friends!
 
 
  Whilst 
there has been dismay amongst the Tamils over the international community’s 
reluctance to condemn unabashed abuses by Sri Lanka’s security’s forces, one man 
has decided to take matters into his own hands. Thaya Idaikadar is now in 
his second day of a hunger strike outside Britain’s Parliament. He hopes to draw 
world attention to the plight of his fellow Tamils amid the deteriorating 
security situation in Sri Lanka. In 
particular, Idaikadar, a British citizen, is demanding his adopted country takes 
a lead in pressing Sri Lanka’s government to curb violence by the 
Sinhala-dominated military against civilians in the island’s Northeast. “I have been driven to take this desperate 
measure because of the continuing violence against Tamil civilians by the Sri 
Lankan military. So many ordinary people have been murdered by state security 
forces,” he said.  “There is absolute impunity in Sri Lanka and 
total silence from the international community, including Britain, my home,” he 
said in a statement emailed to media by supporters.  “The international community must insist Sri 
Lanka acts like a responsible state and end the flagrant abuse of human rights. 
Britain must take a lead in this.”  A hunger strike outside Westminster’s most famous 
House might seem somewhat eccentric. But the 
solitary protest by the 55-year old accountant has triggered a veritable flood 
of support from his community. Hundreds of well-wishers have travelled from the 
London suburbs where the Diaspora is concentrated to stand – quite literally – 
by him.  A Tamil parliamentarian from Sri Lanka visiting 
London came to extend her support. Ms Padmini 
Sithamparanathan, Jaffna MP of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), said the 
Tamils of the Northeast, living under military occupation, were relying on the 
efforts of the Diaspora to alleviate their plight.  Idaikadar, who was recently re-elected Harrow 
Councillor, is also chair of the newly-formed All party Tamil Councillors and 
Associates, an organisation that unites Tamil councillors and candidates. Many 
of the seven fellow Tamil councillors who won seats in the UK’s recent local 
government elections have also visited him.  A councillor of the Labour party – Britain’s 
ruling party, Idaikadar is known for his involvement with numerous community 
projects, tsunami rehabilitation and South Asian Earthquake relief activities.
 Meanwhile images of Idaikadar’s portly figure 
seated silently on a folding chair in front of a large sign protesting ‘Stop 
Genocide of Tamils’ and surrounded by supporters echoing his demand have been 
flashed around the world by Tamil television stations.  Idaikadar, who began his hunger strike at midday 
Friday, expects to continue for 101 hours. As a diabetic person, his family’s 
main worry is fluctuating blood sugar level. 
However, a team of physicians from Tamils Health Organisation (THO) headed by 
Dr. Puvi, have stepped forward to keep Idaikadar’s health under observation, 
with blood tests every two hours.  A shifting group of 150 supporters are staying 
with Idaikadar through the night – even when the occupants of the besieged House 
have retired for their night.  But even without his well-wishers, Idaikadar 
won’t be short of company: in another part of the green outside Parliament, sits 
the perplexed figure of Brian Haw, who is staging Britain's most prominent 
protest against the war in Iraq. Haw, who has 
maintained a vigil outside the Houses of Parliament for more than five years, is 
the focus of renewed efforts by the authorities to end his protest - efforts 
that British press reports say are increasingly farcical. Courtesy: Tamilnet.com; June 4, 2006. |