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Lanka
UN envoy accuses Sri Lankan military of helping recruit child
soldiers
By K. Ratnayake
20 November 2006
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UN special representative Allen Rock has provoked a furore
in Sri Lankan ruling circles by alleging that the military has
assisted a paramilitary ally known as the Karuna group in recruiting
children to fight in the civil war against the Liberation Tigers
of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
The claims undermine one of the key elements of the governments
international propaganda campaign against the LTTE. For years,
successive Colombo governments have accused the LTTE of using
child soldiers. Now the armed forces are being charged with doing
the same.
The allegations are doubly embarrassing because the military,
despite mounting evidence to the contrary, continues to insist
that it does not collaborate with paramilitaries such as the Karuna
group. Karuna, or V. Muralitharan, split with the LTTE in 2004,
taking with him a substantial proportion of the LTTEs armed
fighters in the eastern Batticaloa-Amparai districts.
Rock, who is the special advisor to the UN Representative for
Children and Armed Conflict, conducted a 10-day fact finding mission
in Sri Lanka. After meeting President Mahinda Rajapakse last Monday,
he went public with his findings.
Rock told the media there was strong and credible
evidence that sections of the military have supported and participated
in the abduction of children for the Karuna faction. Sri
Lankan security forces rounded up children to be recruited by
the Karuna faction, he said.
Citing eyewitnesses, the UN envoy described an instance in
which the army had rounded up children and allowed the Karuna
group to choose new recruits. The Karuna faction is actively
abducting by force in the eastern districts in an accelerated
campaign to increase the size of their force, he said.
Rock reported that members of the Karuna group roamed the eastern
districts with impunity, openly carrying arms through military
checkpoints and engaging in violence and intimidation. In one
case, an abduction squad seized the father of a family, after
the mother escaped with their child.
The envoy found the police had not investigated abduction complaints.
UNICEF had recorded 164 cases involving the forcible recruitment
of children up to this October, but the actual figure could be
higher, he said. Rock also accused the LTTE of failing to keep
its promises to release child soldiers and warned that international
pressure would be brought to bear to make it comply.
Despite their limited character, Rocks accusations touched
a raw nerve in Colombo. President Rajapakse has been keen to keep
the major powers on side while openly flouting the 2002 ceasefire
and launching a series of military offensives against the LTTE.
Anxious to contain any international fallout, he promised that
Rocks allegations would be fully investigated and
those responsible held accountable.
The Sri Lankan military, however, immediately denounced Rocks
remarks, saying they deserve a deep sense of revulsion and
explanation in view of their serious nature and repercussions.
Its statement added: It is no secret that the [UN] Mission
by innuendo has gone the extra mile to blame the troops of the
Sri Lankan Security Forces who are deployed in government-controlled
areas of eastern Batticaloa to contain LTTE violence and defend
human rights in the region.
After the military had spoken, Rajapakse changed his tune and
issued a statement declaring: The Government regrets however
that certain conclusions that Ambassador Rock has made in public
have led to many distorted media reports, as opposed to the Governments
long-standing zero-tolerance policy on the recruitment of children
as combatants.
Government defence spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella held a press
conference on Thursday, defending the military and questioning
Rocks ability to collect credible information
after spending only a few hours on the spot in the east. Significantly,
however, Rambukwella, like other official spokesmen, did not deny
outright army involvement in child recruitment.
The Sinhala extremist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) also
denounced Rock. JVP MP and propaganda secretary Wimal Weerawansa
accused him of lacking evidence and coming to the country
to clear the bad reputation of the LTTE on recruiting children.
The party maintains close relations with the Karuna group and
has published articles and photographs of its training camps in
the JVP newspaper Lanka.
Rocks investigation comes on top of other evidence of
the armys ties to the Karuna group. Last week Helen Olasfdottir,
spokeswoman for the Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission (SLMM), confirmed
that its ceasefire monitors had previously observed supporters
of the Karuna group moving to and from SLA [Sri Lanka Army]
camps. In its report covering the period from May 29 to
August 31, the SLMM noted that the majority of the cases
reported [of child abduction] were not against the LTTE but against
the Karuna group.
The collaboration of the military with paramilitaries such
as the Karuna group is not simply a matter of abducting children.
Military intelligence has long used such outfits to carry out
its dirtiest work. Since Rajapakse came to power last November,
there has been an escalating covert war in the north and east
of the island, in which a number of prominent LTTE supporters
have been provocatively killed.
On November 10, pro-LTTE MP Nadaraja Raviraj was gunned down
in broad daylight in Colombo. The killer managed to get away on
a waiting motor bike and to evade security forces even though
the area was close to military bases and police stations. The
capital is under heavy security with roadblocks and checkpoints
following the eruption of open fighting between the army and the
LTTE in July.
The LTTE has repeatedly demanded that the army disarm paramilitaries
operating in government-controlled territory, as required under
the 2002 ceasefire. At peace talks in Geneva in February, the
government promised to implement the ceasefire, but the military
has failed to do so. Its excuses are nothing but thinly veiled
lies: either that the Karuna group does not operate inside government
territory, or that the army is unable to disarm it.
In fact, sections of the military top brass saw the Karuna
breakaway as an opportunity to go on the offensive against a weakened
LTTE, in the east of the island in particular. Evidence emerged
in 2004 that military intelligence had a series of discussions
with Karuna in a safe house in Colombo. Little effort has been
made to disguise the close collaboration of the army with the
Karuna group.
In its current offensives in the east, the military and the
paramilitaries have worked closely together in attacking the LTTE.
There is every reason to believe that the army would assist in
abducting children for the Karuna group to provide cannon fodder
for these operations.
See Also:
Sri Lankan military bombards refugee
camp, killing dozens
[10 November 2006]
Protest against killing and abductions
in Sri Lanka
[7 November 2006]
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