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
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, August 25, 2016
Lankan Government shows progress in reviewing terror cases against Tamils

D.M.Swaminathan, Sri Lankan minister for Prison Reforms and Resettlement. | Express Photo Service
COLOMBO: The Sri Lankan Minister of Resettlement and Prison Reforms,
D.M.Swaminathan, has reported steady progress government is making in
reviewing and following up cases of Tamils detained under the Prevention
of Terrorism Act (PTA).
Answering a question put by R.Sampanthan, Leader of the Opposition and
the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) in parliament on Tuesday, Swaminathan
said that the Attorney General is to submit a review of 78 PTA case
trials by September 15.
The review will consider the number of detainees who can be subjected to
lesser sentences and the number of those who could be sent for
rehabilitation.
He said that the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) will soon be replaced
by the “Counter Terrorism Act”, and that trials currently pending under
the PTA, will come under the Counter Terrorism Act (CTA) when CTA comes
into being.
Swaminathan informed the House that 112 files of PTA cases were sent to
the Attorney General’s Department for advice and out of these 108 were
concluded by end of 2015.
He further said that in 2016, 16 cases under the PTA were received by
the Attorney General’s Department for advice. During this year, nine
suspects detained under the PTA have been recommended for
rehabilitation, 27 have been discharged from proceedings, and seven
indictments have been forwarded to the High Court.
The Minister said that commencing from November 11, 2015, 39 suspects
who were in remand for offences under the PTA, have been enlarged on
bail with the sanction of the Attorney General.
Minister Swaminathan pointed out that further steps are being taken by
the Attorney General’s Department to review and reconsider cases under
the PTA and added that three such cases were concluded this month by
reducing the charges to facilitate expeditious conclusion of trials.
The continued detention of Tamils under the PTA has become a major
political issue for the Tamil political parties and a highly emotional
issue for the Tamils population. The Tamils describe them as “political
prisoners” but the Sri Lankan state and the Sinhalese polity consider
them as “terrorists”. While the Tamils are incensed that they should
remain in detention ,often without being charged, even years after the
end of the separatist war, the majority community feel that they could
still pose a danger to the country. The Tamils’ argument that they
should be given a general amnesty as the Sinhalese insurgents ,the
Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) was given in 1971 and in the late 1989,
is rejected by the majority community as well as the government.
The Tamils detainees have go on fast more than once to press their case
of outright release or rehabilitation for a year to be followed by
release. They pointed that under the Mahinda Rajapaksa government,
12,000 alleged LTTE cadres underwent “rehabilitation” in Sri Lankan army
run camps for a yearand then released.

