
(Art work by Shan Sundaram)
 By Subry Govender
 The South African Tamil Federation (SATF) has supported moves by the
 United States, United Kingdom  and other countries to call for an
 international and independent commission of inquiry into the
 allegations of human rights violations of Tamils in Sri Lanka.
 The SATF's support is contained in a letter submitted on Monday this
 week to the United Nations Human Rights Council session which is
 currently being held in Geneva, Switzerland.
 A resolution for an international and independent inquiry is most
 likely to be adopted at the UNHCR session on Friday this week.
 South Africa has not yet announced what its position will be on the
 resolution but according to recent pronouncements by the Department of
 International Relations, the country's delegate at the UNHCR will most
 likely either abstain or vote for the resolution. South Africa will
 not vote against the resolution.
 The plight of Tamils in Sri Lanka has become a major issue at the
 UNHCR session in Geneva following claims that between 70 000 and 100
 000 Tamils were slaughtered during the last days of the civil war in
 2009 by Government soldiers.
                            

                                 (Art work by Shan Sundaram)
 Tamil leaders in the North and East of Sri Lanka and in the Tamil
 diaspora in England, United States, Canada, Australia and other
 countries have also claimed that since the defeat of the Liberation
 Tigers of Tamil Eelam(LTTE) in 2009, the violation of human rights
 through land invasions of Tamil areas in the North and East,
 desecration of religious sites, arrest and torture of civilians and
 the rapes of women have continued unabated.
 The situation of Tamils in Sri Lanka had also become a major issue
 during the Commonwealth Conference held in Colombo, capital of Sri
 Lanka, late last year. During the conference, President Jacob Zuma was
 quoted as saying that South Africa would help Sri Lanka to set up a
 South African-style Truth and Reconciliation Commission(TRC) to
 promote peace, unity and justice.
 During his state of the nation address recently, Zuma also announced
 the appointment of ANC Deputy President, Cyril Ramaphosa, as a Special
 Envoy to Sri Lanka in order to help in promoting a political solution.
 The SATF said in the letter to the UNHCR that it supported, in
 addition to the independent inquiry, the holding of an
 internationally-supervised referendum among Sri Lankan Tamils inside
 and outside the country so that Tamils could decide their own
 political future.
 The SATF, among other points of concern, said:
 "There can be no reconciliation without the full investigation into
 the atrocities and senseless killings executed by the Sri Lankan
 Government soldiers. Those responsible must be called to account by an
 international and independent commission of inquiry.
 "Successive governments in Sri Lanka and the current Rajapakse regime
 do not recognise the
 Tamil people's rights to freedom but treat the Tamils as second and
 third class citizens.
 "The South African Tamil Federation calls for United Nations Secretary
 General, Ban Ki-Moon's
 independent panel of expert's findings into gross human rights
 violations in Sri Lanka to be
 recognized and addressed by the Sri Lankan Government as a matter of urgency.
 "The South African Tamil Federation calls on the South African
 Government, its' neighbours and all world leaders to hold the moral
 high ground and vote in favour of the UNHRC resolutions.
 "In finding a lasting political solution, one needs to first
 acknowledge the origins of the struggle of the Tamil people in Sri
 Lanka and address the discrimination and systematic oppression by
 their own Government - the Government of Sri Lanka." ends - ms/dbn
 
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