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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, May 1, 2018
ITJP launches report implicating Sri Lanka forces with torture in UK parliament
30Apr 2018
The International Truth and Justice Project (ITJP) launched its latest
report “Sri Lanka’s Special Task Force," at the Houses of Parliament
last week.
The full report and summary, which outlines further evidence of torture
carried out by Sri Lanka's Special Task Force STF, can be found here and here.
The panel event hosted by the chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group
for Tamils MP Paul Scully comprised Frances Harrison and Nina Tavakoli
of the ITJP, Dr Rachel Seoighe, Ann Hannah of Freedom From Torture and
Dr Sutha Nadarajah of SOAS University.
Opening the discussion, Dr Suthaharan Nadarajah highlighted a systemic
failure to accept ongoing torture in Sri Lanka by international
institutions.
“It is in this context of habitual denial that reports from groups like
the ITJP and Freedom From Torture are so important in combatting this
narrative of denial.”
Speaking at the event former BBC South Asia Correspondent Frances
Harrison, said the evidence was not clear that military intelligence was
involved in abduction and torture of Tamils in Sri Lanka. Dispelling
the argument that it was a small handful of individuals responsible for
torture and abduction, Ms Harrison reiterated that torture and
abductions were systemic in Sri Lanka, adding,
“There is now an acceptance that military intelligence was involved in
abductions. The STF were, the TID and the CID. Its humanely not possible
for a small group of perpetrators to have done so many abductions over
so many years.
Adding to the discussion Barrister Nina Tavakoli of the Red Lion
Chambers, highlighted that the majority of victims she had interviewed
were young men who would have been children at the end of the war in
2009. Ms Tavakoli added that in many cases the victims worked in human
rights, worked with political parties or attended Tamil memorialisation
events.
“The argument that they are LTTE cadres goes away, any national security
threat argument goes away. Throughout the torture racist language is
used. There is no doubt these individuals are being targeted because
they are Tamil” she said.
Ms Tavakoli added that even when victims flee Sri Lanka and seek refuge
in another country like the UK, they are still surveilled and their
family in Sri Lanka is often detained and assaulted.
The Advocacy and Policy Director for Freedom From Torture Ann Hannah
said, stressed concern at the international community’s silence with
regards to accountability in Sri Lanka.
Warning that the continued impunity was leading to increasing torture in Sri Lanka, Ms Hannah said,
“We are seeing increasing numbers of torture since 2016. It is
absolutely devastating for the survivors that we work with. We are
concerned about the way that the current lack of impunity plays into
abuses.”
Lamenting on going denial of torture in Sri Lanka, Ms Hannah added,
“None of us here would be naïve enough to believe that when a conflict
as complex as what happened in Sri Lanka ends, the structures that
carried out torture are dismantled overnight.”
Ms Hannah further noted that the British government had been involved in
training Sri Lanka’s Special Task Force that was responsible for
torture, and called for greater transparency with regards the level of
training provided.
She added that the victims primary incentive for sharing their story was
to secure accountability as the only way to prevent abuses from
happening again.
“Sri Lanka is not on the top of the news cycle at the moment. However
accountability in Sri Lanka is important to those conflicts which are at
the top of the news cycle,” she concluded.
Dr Rachel Seoighe, author of War, Denial and Nation-Building in Sri
Lanka: After the End, highlighted that even institutions set up by Sri
Lanka under the premise of reconciliation can be a “means of denial.”
“Even those that appear to be addressing the issue. They absorb the
outcry, launch an investigation and deliver nothing. The Sirisena
government is trying to but time by promising progress and not
delivering. In this way time facilitates denial.
Dr Seoighe further stressed concern about the UK’s involvement in training the tortuer complicit Sri Lanka STF forces, adding,
“This is a police force that has engaged in violations against Tamils
including setting them alight by the road. The UK government speaking a
language of reform and reconciliation becomes a way of facilitating
denial.”
The event ended with a question and answer question session covering
topics relating to ensuring accountability, ongoing miltiarisation of
the North-East fo Sri Lanka and British engagement with Sri Lanka.
The International Truth and Justice Project (ITJP) launched its latest
report “Sri Lanka’s Special Task Force," at the Houses of Parliament
last week.
The full report and summary, which outlines further evidence of torture
carried out by Sri Lanka's Special Task Force STF, can be found here and here.
The panel event hosted by the chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group
for Tamils MP Paul Scully comprised Frances Harrison and Nina Tavakoli
of the ITJP, Dr Rachel Seoighe, Ann Hannah of Freedom From Torture and
Dr Sutha Nadarajah of SOAS University.
Opening the discussion, Dr Suthaharan Nadarajah highlighted a systemic
failure to accept ongoing torture in Sri Lanka by international
institutions.
“It is in this context of habitual denial that reports from groups like
the ITJP and Freedom From Torture are so important in combatting this
narrative of denial.”
Speaking at the event former BBC South Asia Correspondent Frances
Harrison, said the evidence was not clear that military intelligence was
involved in abduction and torture of Tamils in Sri Lanka. Dispelling
the argument that it was a small handful of individuals responsible for
torture and abduction, Ms Harrison reiterated that torture and
abductions were systemic in Sri Lanka, adding,
“There is now an acceptance that military intelligence was involved in
abductions. The STF were, the TID and the CID. Its humanely not possible
for a small group of perpetrators to have done so many abductions over
so many years.
Adding to the discussion Barrister Nina Tavakoli of the Red Lion
Chambers, highlighted that the majority of victims she had interviewed
were young men who would have been children at the end of the war in
2009. Ms Tavakoli added that in many cases the victims worked in human
rights, worked with political parties or attended Tamil memorialisation
events.
“The argument that they are LTTE cadres goes away, any national security
threat argument goes away. Throughout the torture racist language is
used. There is no doubt these individuals are being targeted because
they are Tamil” she said.
Ms Tavakoli added that even when victims flee Sri Lanka and seek refuge
in another country like the UK, they are still surveilled and their
family in Sri Lanka is often detained and assaulted.
The Advocacy and Policy Director for Freedom From Torture Ann Hannah
said, stressed concern at the international community’s silence with
regards to accountability in Sri Lanka.
Warning that the continued impunity was leading to increasing torture in Sri Lanka, Ms Hannah said,
“We are seeing increasing numbers of torture since 2016. It is
absolutely devastating for the survivors that we work with. We are
concerned about the way that the current lack of impunity plays into
abuses.”
Lamenting on going denial of torture in Sri Lanka, Ms Hannah added,
“None of us here would be naïve enough to believe that when a conflict
as complex as what happened in Sri Lanka ends, the structures that
carried out torture are dismantled overnight.”
Ms Hannah further noted that the British government had been involved in
training Sri Lanka’s Special Task Force that was responsible for
torture, and called for greater transparency with regards the level of
training provided.
She added that the victims primary incentive for sharing their story was
to secure accountability as the only way to prevent abuses from
happening again.
“Sri Lanka is not on the top of the news cycle at the moment. However
accountability in Sri Lanka is important to those conflicts which are at
the top of the news cycle,” she concluded.
Dr Rachel Seoighe, author of War, Denial and Nation-Building in Sri
Lanka: After the End, highlighted that even institutions set up by Sri
Lanka under the premise of reconciliation can be a “means of denial.”
“Even those that appear to be addressing the issue. They absorb the
outcry, launch an investigation and deliver nothing. The Sirisena
government is trying to but time by promising progress and not
delivering. In this way time facilitates denial.
Dr Seoighe further stressed concern about the UK’s involvement in training the tortuer complicit Sri Lanka STF forces, adding,
“This is a police force that has engaged in violations against Tamils
including setting them alight by the road. The UK government speaking a
language of reform and reconciliation becomes a way of facilitating
denial.”
The event ended with a question and answer question session covering
topics relating to ensuring accountability, ongoing miltiarisation of
the North-East fo Sri Lanka and British engagement with Sri Lanka.