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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, July 4, 2012
Sri
Lanka Navy / File Photo
Former
Sri Lankan naval officer ‘complicit’ in war crimes: Canadian Immigration and
Refugee Board
National Post
Stewart
Bell Jul 2, 2012
One of Sri Lanka’s top naval officers has fled to
Canada but federal officials are refusing to accept his refugee claim on the
grounds he was complicit in war crimes during the troubled island’s long civil
war against Tamil rebels.
Nadarajah Kuruparan was Commodore of the Sri
Lanka Navy, third in rank behind the Admiral, when he retired in June 2009 —
just weeks after his forces helped defeat the separatist Tamil Tigers in a
conflict that left untold civilians dead.
On
Aug. 4, 2009, he arrived at the Canadian border with his wife and two children
and made a refugee claim, a development that has only now emerged with the
release of a court ruling on his case. He has apparently lived in Toronto since
then.
One
of only five ethnic Tamil officers in the navy, he said he feared the
government, pro-government militias and rebels but the Immigration and Refugee
Board ruled he was not a genuine refugee because he was complicit in crimes
against humanity.
His
appeal to the Federal Court of Canada was dismissed on June 13, and he and his
family now face deportation to Sri Lanka. The court ruling was significant
because it upheld the finding that the Sri Lankan military committed
atrocities.
It
means the Sri Lankan military apparatus have committed war crimes and it should
be investigated
“The
extensive sources of evidence and the reporting contained therein, including
references to tens of thousands of disappearances and the institutionalization
of torture, supports a finding that the navy and security forces’ acts were part
of a widespread or systematic attack on Sri Lanka,” Justice John O’Keefe wrote
in his 50-page decision.
Since
the end of Sri Lanka’s civil war, evidence has emerged suggesting the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam rebels recruited young children and used civilians as
human shields. Government forces, meanwhile, have been accused of shelling
civilians and executing captives.
Western
governments, the United Nations and human rights groups have been pushing for an
independent investigation into the war crimes allegations. Sri Lanka has refused
to co-operate with such a probe and defended its wartime actions.
David
Poopalapillai, the Canadian Tamil Congress spokesman, said the court ruling gave
credibility to the war crimes allegations.
“Now
our judicial system, one of the finest in the world, is echoing this same thing.
It means the Sri Lankan military apparatus have committed war crimes and it
should be investigated,” he said.
While
ethnic Tamil civilians and former rebels commonly seek refuge in countries like
Canada, it is unusual for Sri Lankan military officials to do so. Mr.
Poopalapillai said only a handful have turned up in the United Kingdom and
United States, but none as high-ranking as Mr. Kuruparan.
According
to the court ruling, the commodore joined the navy in 1981 but he said as a
Tamil he faced challenges. He was approached repeatedly and asked to help the
rebels, he said, and while he refused, the navy still suspected he was a
sympathizer.
A
month after he retired, he said his wife was abducted by the Karuna Group, a
pro-government Tamil militia. He said the group demanded a large sum of money
and threatened to kill the entire family if it didn’t get paid.
The
Kuruparans travelled to the U.S. and asked for asylum at the Canadian border.
But the IRB found that while he had never personally committed a war crime, Mr.
Kuruparan “participated in facilitating the navy’s operations, which included
the darker aspects of those operations.”
Although
aware of the atrocities committed by the Sri Lankan forces as early as 1985, he
made no attempt to leave, even when travelling abroad, the IRB found. The board
found he “had been complicit in the crimes against humanity because he had a
long service with the navy, an organization that was known to regularly and
systematically commit human rights abuses against the LTTE, the Tamil population
and individuals suspected or perceived to be LTTE collaborators or
sympathizers.”
National
Post