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, October 31, 2012
One
every five days: Ruki Fernando on disappearances in Sri Lanka
25 October
2012
At
2.31pm on 21 August 2012, a 32-year-old woman sent a text message to her
relatives saying she had been taken to the Criminal Investigation Department in
Vavuniya in the north of Sri Lanka. No one has heard from her since.
Businessman
Ramasamy Prabakaran filed a claim against the authorities after he was detained,
tortured and subsequently found innocent in court. Two days before the hearing
this February, he was abducted by armed men in Colombo, the capital.
Lalith Weeraraj and Kugan Muruganantham, activists
who supported families of Sri Lanka’s disappeared, became victims themselves on
9 December 2011, on the eve of the commemoration of Human Rights Day. Over 1,000
people protested against their abduction.Prageeth Ekneligoda, a journalist and
cartoonist critical of the present government, has not been seen since 24
January 2010. He disappeared two days before the Sri Lankan presidential
election.
Dozens
of people, including Catholic priest Francis Joseph, witnessed Sinnathurai
Sasitharan, a prominent leader of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam,
surrender to the army during the final stages of the civil war in 2009. All of
them are now missing. For decades, Sri Lankans of all stripes have suffered
enforced disappearances. In the 1970s and 1980s, tens of thousands of young
people from the majority Sinhalese community were disappeared. Since then, most
victims have been minorities, with Tamils constituting the main target.
During
the last months of the war and its immediate aftermath, thousands of Tamils are
thought to have disappeared, some, according to eyewitnesses, after surrendering
to, or being arrested by, the armed forces. The Lessons Learnt and
Reconciliation Commission (LLRC), which was set up by the Sri Lankan government
in 2010, received information about 3,596 disappearance complaints. It concluded
that a further, specialised investigation into disappearances was needed. The
end of the war has not brought an end to these abuses. Based on reported cases
(including attempted abductions), someone is disappeared every five days in Sri
Lanka. Over 50 people have been taken from their loved ones in the first six
months of this year.
The
rationale behind these attacks – both during the conflict and now – appears to
be silencing dissent, whether this dissent comes from armed groups, journalists,
aid workers, human rights defenders, members of the clergy or anyone else. The
UN Working Group on Enforced and Involuntary Disappearances has submitted 12,460
cases to Sri Lanka, of which 5,671 remain outstanding. Only Iraq has a worse
record.
Together
with friends and colleagues, I have accompanied those left behind – mostly wives
and mothers – in the search for their loved ones and for the truth, documenting
their stories, and supporting their complaints to local bodies. We witnessed the
callous treatment they received from the police and Human Rights Commission of
Sri Lanka, and the general unwillingness to search for the disappeared or to
hold perpetrators accountable. “You wouldn’t talk like that if it was your
daughter,” one mother said to the LLRC last November.
In
November 2011, the head of the Sri Lankan delegation to the UN Committee Against
Torture declared confidently that the disappeared journalist Prageeth Ekneligoda
was living overseas. Upon returning to Sri Lanka, he admitted in court that he
was not actually aware of Ekneligoda’s whereabouts. Earlier this year, when
specific information about the location of two disappeared activists was
provided to the national Human Rights Commission, it refused to undertake an
immediate investigation, despite a clear mandate to do so.
Even
worse, some of the families of those missing have been intimidated and
ridiculed. So too have many people who have supported them in their quest for
truth and justice, including human rights defenders, journalists, politicians,
religious leaders and lawyers. Many have been labelled “traitors” or “terrorist
sympathisers”. Commemorations and campaigns for those who have disappeared have
been banned, disrupted and restricted. Organisers and participants have been
threatened and harassed.
The
failure of domestic mechanisms to act has compelled many families to seek
international assistance for their loved ones. While the support and concern
from human rights groups has been welcomed, many are frustrated that the
international community has not been able to provide tangible help. There is
also disappointment at the unwillingness to put real pressure on those involved.
For me, the main glimmer of hope was the courage of the families of the
disappeared, who refuse to accept defeat. However powerless I felt, I am
honoured to have been part of their struggle.
It
is now three and a half years since the end of Sri Lanka’s long-running civil
war. But until the families of the disappeared receive the support and
compassion they deserve from the government and society at large, until their
quest for truth, justice and accountability is over, until democracy and the
rule of law are restored, a sustainable peace will remain elusive.
In
line with the provisions of the International Convention for the Protection of
All Persons from Enforced Disappearance, families should receive financial and
legal support; access to counselling; prompt assistance with the issuing of
relevant documentation, including death certificates; and full cooperation by
national authorities to investigate cases. They should be free to hold memorials
and to protest peacefully if adequate action is not taken. Reform of legal and
other institutions, notably the Human Rights Commission, is also needed.
At
the international level, pressure should be put on the Sri Lankan government to
ratify the Convention and to allow the UN Working Group on Enforced and
Involuntary Disappearances to visit the country. The Group has had an invitation
pending for six years. This could help shed light on the fate of the disappeared
and would also serve as a sign of political commitment by the government to
address and prevent enforced disappearance. The engagement of countries in
Central and South America that have experienced and found ways of dealing with
mass disappearances is also crucial.
But
what is needed above all is for all Sri Lankans to wholeheartedly join the
families of the disappeared in their search for truth, justice and
accountability.
Ruki
Fernando is a Sri Lankan human rights activist who has worked closely with
families of the country’s disappeared on documentation, local campaigns and
international advocacy.