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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, September 6, 2015
158 Handed Over to the Army: Missing, Missing, Missing for 25 Years ….
By Dr T Jayasingam, (Officer in charge of the Vantharumoolai refugee camp, 1990).-05/09/2015
Unfortunately, I was the lead officer of the camp at that time and stay
witness to this, to date. I have made my comments to various national
and international persons regarding these facts. I presented myself to
the Presidential Commission on Missing Persons in 2004. I gave them the
names of all the army officers who came for the operation that day and
also gave the name of the Army Major General who came three days after
on 8thSeptember to the camp. I am not aware whether there had been any
inquiries to this day.
Two colleagues who were managing the camp with me, Prof. Mano Sabaratnam
and D. Sivalingam, are no more. I went again to the Presidential
Commission in 2014, at the request of relatives of the people who went
missing. I gave them a letter stating that I had given all what I had,
the documents, and all what I knew, which is already in the report of
the previous Commission, published in 2007. I told the commissioners
that I want to know what happened to all those? There was no answer. I
told them the next time when another commission comes looking for these
facts, I won’t be there and you won’t be there and we will be talking of
stories of 1990. Perhaps all relevant parties may have died when the
next commission comes around.
I have people asking me whether they are alive or not, to which I have
no answer. I have people telling me that they are in place X, place XX
etc. and I have no confirmation. I am traumatized as any person who went
through the ordeals of the war. I wake up at night at times when the
missing persons’ memory and the camp comes back to haunt me in dreams….
I am not sure whether this will end, but I wish this will never be repeated.
I am not sure what happened to them? But surely, there must be many
soldiers who would know what happened to them. I am sure the Major
General who visited our camp on 8th September 1990, and who went on to
become the Army Commander would be aware of the case and its follow ups.
Will anyone have the face to say to the world that this is what
happened? It is not about a war crime, it is about humanity. It is about
the truth. Does anyone have the courage to face the truth and say ‘this
is the ‘truth’. Many do not understand what the families of missing
people want? They want an answer. Not compensation, not punishment, but
an answer. Could those who took them away from a refugee camp give that?
Does anyone realize that there are children who do not know their
fathers and are waiting for them all these years? I attended a wedding
recently where the fathers of both the groom and the bride were those
who went missing on September 05, 1990. As parents can we imagine what
would have gone through in their minds on one of the happiest days of
their lives?
My hope is that President Maithripala Sirisena, who pledged that there
would be justice and good governance would end this saga of missing
people, especially when the full list of the missing persons is known.
My hope is also that after 25 years some who have knowledge of this
would summon enough courage to speak up and get it out of their chest
for their own peace of mind. I am sure this unfortunate event would
haunt them too.
It is not only the people who went missing, it is a combination of
humanity, good governance, rule of law and truth that went missing. It
is time to recover these missing elements or we will risk losing the
trust of people forever. Reconciliation cannot take place when truth is
suppressed.
It is my wish that before my lifespan is over I would have the
satisfaction of having received an answer on behalf of the 158 families
who were with me that fateful day in the refugee camp in Vantharumoolai.
It was the largest refugee camp in Sri Lanka at that time and housed
around 10,000 families with around 40,000 people within the four walls
of the premises. There were 28 births in the camp and 15 deaths and all
buried mostly within. There were shops and markets in the camp, post and
water supply. ICRC and MSF were caretakers. The Grama Sevakas worked
for the management of the refugee camp administration. It was a mini
government within, people feeling secure though worried and desperate
seeing smoke at distances, the burning of ……, hearing bullets that
travel the sky day and night, yet willing to stay under trees and in
open hoping for the day to return home. Following this event on 5th
September 1990 and another incident shortly thereafter where 18 more
were taken away, the population dissipated slowly from the camp which
was closed on 30th September 1990. I was the last person to leave the
premises on that day, haunted with heavy heart and memories of the
missing 158+ which remains to date.
– The Island