A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, November 1, 2015

Police yesterday justified the use of force on Thursday to disperse a
group of protesting students of Higher National Diploma in Accountancy
(HNDA). Nine students including girls suffered head injuries at the
hands of the riot police.
Nine students were injured. Police said some of their men, too, had
suffered injuries. Thirty nine students were arrested. Thirty one of the
arrested protesters were bailed out yesterday as police did not raise
objections; others are being treated at the National Hospital.
At a media conference held yesterday at Colombo DIG office, Pettah,
Police Spokesman ASP Ruwan Gunaseaka, SSP Champika Siriwardene (Colombo
Central), DIG Gamini Mathurata and Senior DIG Pujith Jayasundara
emphasised that they had enforced the law to the useful degree to
disperse a crowd of nearly 1,300 student protesters as they could not
allow the protesters to enter the University Grant Commission (UGC), a
government property, forcefully and therefore they used water cannon,
tear gas to disperse them.
SDIG Jayasundara said that there had been in the crowd an outsider, who
was among the 39 arrested, "Even though he is not a student, we did not
even object to him being bailed out as police did not want to harass
anyone," the Senior DIG said.
Asked why the police had used batons to disperse the crowd and assaulted
female students, SDIG Jayasundara said that the protesters had tried to
enter the UGC by toppling the barricades placed there and the police
had used required force to disperse them because the tear gas and water
cannon failed to stop them.
ASP Gunasekara said the law did not bar them from using the batons to
disperse crowd under circumstances of that nature; the protesters had
blocked the main road by sitting in front of the UGC refusing to go
away, he said.
If the police had violated students’ human rights, they could go to the
Supreme Court, Human Rights Commission and Police Commission to seek
justice, Gunasekara said.
Jayasundera said it was the duty of police to protect others’ rights,
government properties and every individual and, therefore, the police
had been compelled to disperse the student protesters to clear roads for
patients, doctors, schoolchildren and ambulances to reach their
destinations.
SDIG Jayasundara said that he had tried his best to help students meet
some officers of the UGC, but to his dismay there had not been anyone to
listen to them and that was where everything went wrong..
