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, April 1, 2020
Power to pardon another tool against Tamils in Sri Lanka - Adayaalam
The power to pardon as used in Sri Lanka is just another way the State
arbitrarily discriminates against Tamils, a Jaffna-based think-tank has
said. In a statement condemning the release of a Sri Lankan soldier
Sunil Ratnayake, convicted of massacring Tamils, the Adayaalam Centre
for Policy Research said the route to justice must be an international
process.
“The conviction of Ratnayake was a rare exception to the rule of
impunity for crimes committed by State forces in Sri Lanka and his
pardon is a reminder that even those rare exceptions are not permitted
by the ethnocratic state,” the organisation said.
“At the time of the massacre, Ratnayake was a member of the
reconnaissance unit attached to the Gajaba regiment of the Sri Lankan
Armed Forces. Both President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and the Defence
Secretary Kamal Gunaratne were initial members of the Gajaba regiment.
Reconnaissance units of the Sri Lankan Army were well known for their
atrocities and the Mirusuvil massacre was a textbook example.”
“The prosecution of Sunil Ratnayake managed to miraculously wade
through the many pitfalls of the system of administration of justice in
Sri Lanka including: a) the political unwillingness of successive
Governments of Sri Lanka to prosecute soldiers for crimes committed
against the Tamil people; b) the lack of independence of the Attorney
General's Department; and c) the lack of willingness to investigate
crimes against Tamil civilians by the police. Many other cases failed
because of the combination of these factors including the Kumarapuram
massacre, the Visvamadu gang rape case, the Trinco Five massacre and
many others where there was no prosecution even. Mirusuvil was a rare
exception to this series of acquittals and even then Ratnayake’s trial
took 13 years to conclude. Ratnayake’s conviction was due in large part
to the clear and credible testimony of an eyewitness to the massacre who
spontaneously identified the guilty soldiers shortly after the crime.
The conviction was unanimously upheld by the Supreme Court in April 2019
and was a long overdue moment of justice for the four families of those
killed in the massacre. It is this rare exception that President
Gotabaya Rajapaksa has chosen to erase through this pardon.”
“The power to pardon as used in Sri Lanka is just another way the State
arbitrarily discriminates against Tamils. President Rajapaksa reportedly
has relied on Article 34(1) of the Constitution to issue the pardon but
has failed to produce the necessary reports and advice from relevant
ministries required by the provision. Instead, Rajapaksa continues a
long line of arbitrary and politicized presidential pardons that
reinforce the selective application of the rule of law depending on
one's ethnic identity in Sri Lanka. Sri Lankan Presidents have time and
again refused pleas for clemency from families of Tamil convicts under
the Prevention of Terrorism Act including most recently President
Sirisena's refusal to consider Satchithanandan Anathasuthakaran's plea
for clemency after his wife passed away and his daughter pleaded for her
father, who had been paroled to attend the funeral, to be released.”
“Ratnayake’s pardon comes at a time when the world is overwhelmed by the
COVID-19 pandemic. This is no coincidence. The Sri Lankan Government
has disproportionately militarised its response to the crisis and it is
no wonder they would engage in other actions to be seen to be protecting
the military in parallel. The COVID-19 Task Force, which should be led
by public health experts, is instead headed by the country's Army
Commander Shavendra Silva, a credibly accused war criminal who is named
in UN reports and is banned from entry to the United States. Almost all
other countries have entrusted leadership of their response to public
health professionals, who as the situation escalates may deploy military
as necessary, but not be lead by them. But in Sri Lanka, there are new
reports every day as this pandemic continues of ex-military personnel
being appointed to important positions in the response against the
virus. The pardon of Ratnayake in the context of this highly militarised
environment combined with the unconditional respect and admiration that
the military enjoys from the majority Sinhala Buddhist community in Sri
Lanka is simply President Rajapaksa consolidating an elected military
dictatorship in Sri Lanka.”
“For over a decade, Tamil victims of the Sri Lankan state’s crimes
during and after the armed conflict have had their calls for justice
fall on deaf ears, and endured the pain of seeing the perpetrators of
atrocities valorised and promoted by the Sri Lankan government.
Throughout this time, the Tamil community has repeatedly pointed to the
deep and structural unwillingness within the Sri Lankan state to fairly
and credibly prosecute atrocity crimes committed by the military. Over
the last year alone, an accused war criminal has been made commander of
the Army, the government has withdrawn from the co-sponsorship of the UN
Human Rights Council Resolution 30/1 process, and now the President has
pardoned one of the only soldiers ever convicted for crimes against
Tamils. We urge the international community to at least now set in
motion the process for international criminal justice – victims have
waited long enough.”
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