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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Back to 500BC.
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, April 8, 2019
Forty seven potential hangman interviewed
Sri Lanka on Wednesday began interviewing 47 applicants for two
positions as hangmen, officials said, as Amnesty International urged
Colombo not to bring back capital punishment.
President Maithripala Sirisena announced in February that Sri Lanka
would end a 43-year moratorium on executions this month in a
Philippines-inspired war on drugs.
An official said that 47 male applicants would be interviewed on
Wednesday and Thursday, after the government advertised the vacancies in
February.
But the successful candidates may face a delay in carrying out their new role.
"Since there is no living person in Sri Lanka who has carried out an
execution, we need to send the new recruits abroad for training," the
official, who asked to remain anonymous, told AFP, adding that Colombo
was also yet to identify a country to provide training.
"The rope (used for hangings) has not been used at all since it was
imported (in 2015), it will have to be tested and certified."
Rights group Amnesty International meanwhile said resuming hangings
would not end drug-related crime and that innocent people could be
executed due to flaws in Sri Lanka’s criminal justice system.
Sirisena has said that he was inspired by the anti-drug war in the
Philippines and was keen to replicate the success of his counterpart
Rodrigo Duterte. Sirisena has since deployed security forces in his
battle against drugs.
In a nationally televised event in Colombo, Sirisena pledged to end the spread of narcotics within two years.
Restoring capital punishment is a centrepiece of his anti-drugs policy.
Criminals in Sri Lanka are regularly given death sentences for murder,
rape and drug-related crimes but until now their punishments have been
commuted by the president to life in jail.
Sri Lanka’s last judicial hanging was in 1976, but an executioner was in
post until his retirement in 2014. Three replacements since have quit
after short stints at the unused gallows.
On Monday, Sirisena witnessed the destruction of nearly 800 kilos (1,280 pounds) of cocaine seized between 2016 and 2018.
In February, police seized nearly 300 kilos of heroin worth $17 million,
the island’s biggest haul, at a Colombo shopping mall. In 2013, police
seized 260 kilos of heroin brought into the country hidden inside
tractors imported from Pakistan.
Sri Lanka’s biggest drug haul, by weight, was in December 2016 when
police seized 800 kilos of cocaine. Six months earlier, authorities
discovered 301 kilos of cocaine inside a shipping container.
Authorities believe the Indian Ocean island is also being used as a trafficking transit point.