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, April 30, 2017
Sri Lankan Tamil, Muslim political parties protest against the military
Sri
Lanka’s Tamil and Muslim political parties are demanding release of
land occupied by the military, justice to the missing and jobs for those
affected by the civil war
Sri
Lanka’s civil war (1983-2009), between the state and the LTTE, created
thousands of refugees and led to some 65,000 disappearances. Photo:
David Gray/AFP
Colombo: All the major towns in Sri Lanka’s war-ravaged northern
and eastern provinces on Thursday observed a shutdown after the Tamil
and Muslim political parties held a protest demanding the release of
military-occupied land. Offices, businesses, schools and public
transport came to a halt after the two provinces observed a shutdown.
“We hope the government would respond after looking at this protest
action. All Tamil and Muslim political parties in these areas are
observing the protest,” M.K. Shivajilingam, a hardline Tamil provincial
councillor from the Tamil-dominated northern province, said. In some
Muslim-dominated areas in the eastern province, life remained normal
with all services operating. The Tamil and Muslim people in the
northeast are demanding the government to release the lands that are
still occupied by the military, justice to the disappeared persons and
provide employment to the war-battered.
“People have been protesting now for over two months yet the government
has failed to address the issue,” Shivajilingam said. Some of the lands
held over three decades have been released since 2015. But Tamils
complain of slow progress. Commenting on the protest, government
spokesman and minister of health Rajitha Senaratne said the relatives of
the disappeared people in some cases had provided photographic evidence
that they had been seen under government care since the end of the
conflict in 2009. “We will investigate such cases but we are unable to
issue death certificates in respect of the disappeared as we have no
proof,” Senaratne said.
In August last year, Sri Lanka’s parliament has unanimously approved a
bill to set up an office to help find some 65,000 people reported
missing during the country’s civil war with the LTTE (1983-2009), and
clarify the circumstances under which they disappeared. Relatives of the
missing people had alleged that the Lankan state—particularly its army,
navy and police—were behind most of the disappearances. Many Lankan
soldiers and LTTE cadres who had surrendered before the government
troops were also among the missing.