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WSWS : News
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: Sri
Lanka
Sri Lankan government manipulates inquiry into massacre of
aid workers
By Nanda Wickramasinghe
29 September 2006
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The twists and turns of the official inquiry into the killing
of 17 aid workers attached to the French-based Action Contre la
Faim (ACF) last month point to a cover-up by the Sri Lankan government.
The security forces are directly implicated in the murders.
The workers were murdered at the ACF office in the eastern
town of Muttur on August 4 and found the following day. Fifteen
of them, lined up in a row, had been shot execution-style in the
head. Two others had been killed while trying to flee. Most were
young and all were Tamils, with the exception of one Muslim.
The killings took place following fierce fighting for control
of Muttur between the military and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam (LTTE). The LTTE took over parts of the town on August 1
in response to a major government offensive to seize the Mavilaru
irrigation sluice gate further south. An estimated 40,000 residents,
mostly Muslims, fled after the military began shelling the town.
The LTTE later withdrew.
From the outset, the government denied the military was involved.
Defence spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella declared on August 7 that
the government had evidence to prove that the LTTE was responsible,
but has never substantiated the claim.
The murders provoked considerable outrage and calls from ACF
and other bodies for an international inquiry. President Mahinda
Rajapakse agreed to an independent international commission into
disappearances and extra-judicial killings, but no
steps have been taken to establish such a body. Instead, the ACF
murders were left in the hands of a judicial inquiry headed by
a magistrate.
The Sri Lankan Monitoring Mission (SLMM), which oversees the
2002 ceasefire, conducted its own inquiries. On August 30, SLMM
head Ulf Henricsson issued a statement formally finding that the
military was responsible for the killings. SLMM personnel interviewed
hospital staff, police and the families of the victims, as well
as other witnesses. There cannot be any other armed groups
than the security forces who could actually have been behind the
act, the statement concluded.
The government immediately denounced the SLMM. Spokesman Rambukwella
declared the statement to be totally baseless, pathetic
and biased. But the only refutation that he offered
was the inconclusive results of the official autopsy suggesting
that the aid workers might have been killed as early as August
3that is, when the LTTE was still in Muttur. In breach of
normal procedure, the autopsy was carried out by a junior medical
officer (JMO) from Anuradhapura, rather than staff at the Trincomalee
Hospital where the bodies were taken.
The government called in Australian forensic experts to carry
out a further autopsy. Only two of the bodies have been exhumed.
Red tape and bureaucratic haggling over the modalities
of the investigation meant the Australians were unable to examine
these bodies. They left last week without carrying out any forensic
work.
On September 5, the preliminary judicial inquiry was shifted
from the courts in Kantalai, near Muttur, to Anuradhapura, more
than 100 kilometres away. Justice Ministry Secretary Suhada Gamlath
ordered the transfer in breach of basic legal procedure. According
to Sri Lankan law, any initial inquiry has to be conducted in
the same judicial area where the crime took place. Kantalai was
originally chosen because the fighting had devastated Muttur.
K. Ratnavale, the lawyer appearing for the victims families,
told the World Socialist Web Site (WSWS) the decision amounted
to blatant political interference with the independent functioning
of the judiciary. He said the ministry secretary had no authority
to transfer the case, which was a matter for the Judicial Services
Commission.
The decision was not simply a bureaucratic or legal issue.
Anuradhapura is Sinhala majority town that has long been used
as a staging area for the military in the war against the LTTE.
The aim of the transfer is to intimidate Tamil witnesses, including
relatives of the victims, from attending the proceedings. Those
who do attend could be subject to protests and threats by the
military and their supporters among the Sinhala extremist groups.
Legal commentator Kishali Pinto Jayawardena wrote in the Sunday
Times on September 10: The fact that the transfer was
by political order (i.e., Justice Secretary) shows the manner
in which the court proceedings are sought to be subverted and
very blatantly at that. Anuradhapura is situated in the North
Central Province (a predominantly Sinhala area) where the perception
as well as the reality being that, given the extraordinary sensitivity
of this case, witnesses will be reluctant to attend as opposed
to the matter being continued in Trincomalee [district].
The case resumed on September 20 at the Anuradhapura court
under magistrate W. Jinadasa, who is an ethnic Sinhalese. None
of the witnesses and relatives turned up at the court. The magistrate
announced that the case was being transferred once againback
to Kantalai, but under his jurisdiction. The only matter to be
decided was the exhumation of the bodies. The police insisted
that the relatives of only two of victims had given their consent.
Attorney Ratnavale, however, told the court that all the relatives
had given their consent, compelling the judge to order the exhumation
of all remaining bodies.
The army, police and Sinhala chauvinist parties such as the
Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) have a long history of hostility
to international aid organisations such as the ACF operating in
the war zones of the North and East of the island. The officials
and local workers employed by these organisations are routinely
branded as LTTE stooges and subject to abuse and threats.
In May, hand grenades were lobbed near the offices of three
international aid agencies in Muttur, injuring one foreign worker
and several civilians. The agencies had been assisting the victims
of the devastating tsunami that destroyed towns and villages along
Sri Lankas eastern and southern coasts in December 2004.
The government promised an inquiry but none took place. The three
agencies have since left the country.
The brutal killing of the ACF workers is just one of the crimes
in which the Sri Lankan military is implicated. Since President
Rajapakse came to power last November, the military and its allied
Tamil paramilitaries have been accused of a series of murders
and disappearances, none of which have been seriously
investigated. Amnesty International and other human rights organisations
have referred to a culture of impunity, in which the security
forces get away with one crime after another.
On August 7, Socialist Equality Party (SEP) supporter Sivapragasam
Mariyadas was shot and killed by unknown gunmen at his home in
Mullipothana, about 30 kilometres from Muttur. Circumstantial
evidence points to the involvement of the military. At the time,
the town was under tight security, making it difficult for anyone
other than the security forces or their close allies to move about.
No serious police inquiry has been carried out. The SEP and the
WSWS are conducting an international campaign to demand a full
investigation of the crime and the prosecution of Mariyadass
killers. (See: Sri Lankan SEP demands
full investigation into murder of Sivapragasam Mariyadas)
See Also:
Support grows for inquiry into murder
of SEP supporter in Sri Lanka
[28 September 2006]
SEP writes to Sri Lankan attorney general
to demand inquiry into supporter's murder
[25 September 2006]
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