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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, January 27, 2017
Sri Lankan PM says missing persons may have left the country illegally
COLOMBO: Sri Lankan prime minister Ranil Wickremesinghe told parliament
that as per police records, there is no information relating to persons
who had allegedly disappeared during the ethnic conflict.
However, they may have left the country illegally through unconventional channels, he added.
Wickremesinghe was replying to a question raised by Anura Kumara
Dissanayake, leader of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) in parliament
on Wednesday.
The PM’s statement assumes importance in the context of a “fast unto
death” in Vavuniya by the kins of some Tamils who had allegedly
disappeared during the conflict, some after having surrendered to the
Security Forces at the end of the war.
As per a promise to the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in September
2015, the government decided to set up an Office of Missing Persons
(OMP), but due to objections in regard to some clauses in the act, the
actual setting up of the OMP has been delayed, the Prime Minister said.
Necessary changes would be made and presented to parliament soon, he
assured.
The government has already offered to give the families of the
disappeared “Certificates of Absence” so that they could get some
compensation. But this has been rejected by the families who insist that
government must investigate and tell them where their disappeared
relations are and whether they are dead or alive.
Meanwhile, cabinet spokesman Rajitha Senaratne categorically stated that
it is neither possible to trace the missing nor can the government
consider them dead and give the next of kin their death certificates. He
cited the case of a lady, reportedly missing from 1988, returning home
this year.
“What would have happened if we had given a death certificate in her case?” Senaratne asked.
When Mahinda Rajapaksa was president, he too said that many of the
disappeared could be living abroad (mostly in the West) as refugees, and
regretted that the governments in these countries were not cooperating
in tracing them.
Not Just a Tamil Problem
The problem of the disappeared is not restricted to the minority Tamils.
Sinhalese too had disappeared mysteriously during the 1971 and 1988
insurgencies in the South and during the nine-year presidency of Mahinda
Rajapaksa.
During the country’s civil war, both the Government and the Tamil Tiger rebels were accused of killing and abducting critics.
Dozens of journalists, both Tamil and Sinhalese, had disappeared during
Rajapaksa’s presidency. Some were killed or had fled the country,
reports Krishan Francis of Associated Press.
Two years into Sirisena’s presidency, there is little sign that the
suspects, mostly military soldiers, will be punished, he notes.
Sandya Ekneligoda, who has fought for seven years to discover what
happened to her abducted journalist husband Prageeth Ekneligoda, told
AP: “From day one I had the conviction that Prageeth had no enemies and
that this (the abductions) is a work of Mahinda. Mahinda and Gotabaya
should be responsible.”
The reference was to the former president and his brother and powerful defence secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa.
Sandya said that investigators told her that her husband was probably
dead. They had found that he had been taken by his abductors to an Army
camp and the last available information is that he was transported to
the east coast.

