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, May 31, 2017
We will die for our children – 100th day of protest tomorrow in Kilinochchi
Tomorrow, May 30th, marks 100 days since the families of the disappeared started protesting in Kilinochchi.
29 May 2017
For 100 days, protestors, mainly women, have continued to sit in heat
and dust along the A9 in Kilinochchi Town – just steps away from the Sri
Lankan Army’s 57 Division Headquarters. Protestors’ relatives were
forcibly disappeared during or after the war including through
abduction, when being handed over to government authorities or while in
government custody for rehabilitation. In addition to the overarching
demand for the truth about the whereabouts of their loved ones, the two
specific demands families have been articulating which are for the
government to:
1. Release the name list of those forcibly disappeared; and
2. Release the name list of those being held in secret detention centers and permit family members to visit such centers.
“Our intention is to have our loved ones back, to live again with our
children and siblings, that is our intention. One of the elderly women
here repeatedly says – before I die I want to live at least one day with
my child. The government needs to understand this,” a protestor told
Tamil Guardian. Several protestors conveyed the desperate need for
closure – including full information on their child’s death if it is the
case that they are deceased.
Name(s): Muralitharan Nadesu; Kirishnakmari Muralitharan; Sariyan Muralitharan & Apitha Muralitharan
Date of Disappearance: May 18, 2009
“We gave our children to you [government authorities] with trust…
children, father and mother… he [the father] was the only person who was
a part of the LTTE…”
“I will light myself on fire…how can I live thinking of these young
children... I’m there grandma. When they were born would they have
thought that they would be living as they are now? They may have been
abused …would they have eaten any food that they liked?”
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Over the past 99 days, there has been no government response to the
protest – no senior level government official has even addressed the
issue. The group has even made lobbying efforts such as requesting that
the European Parliament not restore GSP+ status until a list of
surrendees/detainees is released
Name(s): Thavakumar Thirugnansampanthamoorthy
Date of Disappearance: April 22, 2009
“They [the army] took us like a herd of cows and kept us without
food, I had fainted many times….Some people were selling king coconut
and so my son went and bought one and then when he went to get it cut he
stepped on a land mine. The army took him to the hospital and they
forbid me from going with him. He is my only child.”
“My son is a compassionate person. When people were gravely injured
in the Mathalan hospital, the TRO was giving food but many of them left
in fear. My son knows how to drive and so him and his uncle would go and
deliver food to the hospital. When he returned back I would question
him and ask him how he had the audacity to go, what if you got stuck in a
cell attack, what would I do? I would ask. He held me and said, is my
life the only life? Come see the other people in the hospital and what
condition they are living in...”
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Nonetheless, with the support of the neighboring Murugan temple and
local community members, the protestors have persevered in their
campaign. However, many of the participants are experiencing diminishing
physical and mental health conditions. Several women are unable to
sleep and eat; while fainting and being admitted to the hospital is a
common occurrence.
Name(s): Abirami Premnath
Date of Disappearance: 2009
“My daughter reached Zone 4 [Menik Farm IDP Camp]… people there told
us that she was there but by the time we reached there she was gone.
People said that she had been loaded onto a bus.”
“She had gotten accepted into university [for music]…she could sing
well and she was sharp… We want our child, we are living in the belief
that they are alive.”
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As mothers prepare for a major demonstration tomorrow marking 100 days
of the protest, there are reports that police have applied to the
Kilinochchi Magistrate for an order staying any big demonstrations. Many
of the protestors emphasized to Tamil Guardian that this protest is the
end of the rope for them. “We are all prepared to drink poison and die…
we will die for our children.