Tuesday, August 12, 2014

DON'T FORGET THE VIOLATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS OF TAMILS IN SRI LANKA

PLIGHT OF TAMILS IN SRI LANKA SHOULD NOT BE OVERLOOKED At a time when the world's TV stations rightly focus attention on the genocides taking place in Gaza, Ukraine, Syria, Libya, and Iraq, let's not forget the human rights violations of Tamils in Sri Lanka. We are trying to focus attention every day on the sufferings of the Tamil people in the north and east of the island country, but yet our own national cricket team, Proteas, undertook a tour to Sri Lanka recently without condemning the violation of the Tamil people's human rights. While the South Africans were playing cricket, the Tamil people's land in the north and east have been invaded and colonised by the Sri Lankan military and the ruling Singalese people; harrassment and detention of Tamil leaders and activists have taken place; Tamil women have been molested and rapes; Tamil Muslims were attacked, driven out of their business and robbed in Colombi, the capital of Sri Lanka -
in fact the violation of human rights have been endless. In order to highlight all these repression, Mr Edward Mortimer, a former Director of Communications for UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan and now chairperson of the Sri Lanka Campaign for Peace and Justice, has written the following article, depicting what is really taking place.
(Edward Mortimer - Former UN Official) Hidden from view, Sri Lanka is trampling over the rights of its Tamil population The government has been trying its best to silence the country's remaining Tamils without drawing the world's attention BY EDWARD MORTIMER Edward Mortimer is a former Director of Communications for UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, now chairs the Sri Lanka Campaign for Peace and Justice With all the horrors taking place in Gaza, Ukraine, Iraq, and Syria, Sri Lanka has understandably fallen off the international radar. However, what you must know is that this suits Sri Lanka’s President, Mahinda Rajapaksa, just fine. Yet the brutal methods he has used to defeat the Tamil Tigers — which ignore the cost of civilian casualties and frequently trample on human rights — are very similar to the ones used by those currently fighting in the spotlight. They are even being admired from afar: within the last two months army and police officers in Nigeria and Pakistan have expressed interest in learning from Sri Lanka’s example. When the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting was held in Sri Lanka last November, it brought much unwelcome publicity, and led to an international investigation of war crimes being set up by the UN Human Rights Council. That decision was obviously a victory for the government’s critics. Yet the government behaved almost as if that was what it wanted, making a series of overt and heavy-handed attempts to silence dissent at home even while the Council was in session in Geneva.
READ MORE: The UK needs to stop selling arms to Israel and open its eyes to the suffering caused by inaction In particular, at least 60 Tamils, mainly women, were arrested in and around the northern town of Kilinochchi, which had been the Tigers’ de facto capital during the war. Two well-known Catholic activists, Ruki Fernando and Father Praveen Mahesan, went to investigate these arrests, and were themselves arrested as part of a massive security clampdown. This led to a significant but brief international outcry: brief because Fernando and Mahesan were released unharmed after two days, followed by many (but not all) of the other detainees. Two days later, however, both were banned from leaving the country or speaking to the media. They were also forced to hand over their mobile phones and personal computers, and Fernando was roughly confronted by armed police in a Colombo street. This time there was no international outcry, indeed no publicity at all, because friends of the pair were afraid any public move might put them in greater danger. Nor has there been any sustained campaign on behalf of the other Tamil detainees. World News in Pictures One of these detainees is Mrs Jeyakumari Balendran. She gained prominence after demanding information about her son — one of many Tamils who have “disappeared” since the end of the war. He is presumed to be in government custody, or dead. Eyewitnesses say Balendran was slapped and beaten during her arrest, while her 13-year-old daughter was taken away and placed in an orphanage. Balendran and at least 20 other women are still held in Boosa detention centre, a place notorious for torture. (Under the terms of Sri Lanka’s Prevention of Terrorism act, suspects can be detained without evidence for up to 18 months.) Yet the world has been given the impression that things are not as bad as was feared, and has turned its attention to more dramatic crises elsewhere.
The government claimed all these arrests were in response to an attempt to revive the Tigers and re-start the war, led by a man known as “Gobi”, whom Balendran was allegedly sheltering in her house, and who was later tracked down and killed. But it has yet to produce any evidence for this, and it has put out so many different versions of the story that some observers question whether “Gobi” even existed. In a paper released on Saturday Fred Carver, Director of the Sri Lanka Campaign for Peace and Justice, argues that these actions cannot have been separate initiatives, but together form a strategy aimed at intimidating anyone who might give evidence to the international investigation. Just last week a gathering of family members of the disappeared in Colombo was disrupted by a mob of government supporters. The police seemed unwilling to prevent the mob, led by Buddhist monks, from dispersing the meeting, even though several American and European embassy staff were present. It may have gone unnoticed by the rest of the world, but within Sri Lanka the message has been received clearly and chillingly: while a fuss may be made about a well-connected Sinhalese activist, the government can do what it likes to the Tamil population in the north and no one will lift a finger. Edward Mortimer is a former Director of Communications for UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, now chairs the Sri Lanka Campaign for Peace and Justice

1 comment:

  1. Hi Subry!: Fully endorse the comments in the article about the genocide of Tamils. If there was some western interest, that would have been headlines in the media! The same people who trundle human rights remained totally silent when the Tigers (whom I admired!) were being massacred, even after their leader was ruthlessly murdered! I still regard the genocide as a terrible, neglected chapter amongst us so-called humans! My own ancestors (Griqua/KhoiSan) were similarly ruthlessly decimated (women raped, men and children murdered and their lands confiscated!) Those who have not such experiences cannot ever empathise or relate. Even worse is, most of those who did not only have short memories, but turn out to be worse than their former murderers / oppressors! Man is indeed a strange being...if at all!

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