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Lanka
Sri Lankan SEP holds meeting to demand inquiry into members
disappearance
By our correspondent
12 April 2007
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The Socialist Equality Party (SEP) held a public meeting in
Colombo on April 9 to demand that the Sri Lankan government urgently
investigate the disappearance of party member Nadarajah Wimaleswaran
and his friend Sivanathan Mathivathanan. About one hundred people,
including workers, intellectuals, students and housewives attended
the meeting in the Public Library Auditorium.
SEP Political Committee member K. Ratnayake, who chaired the
meeting, said that there had already been a stream of letters
from Sri Lanka and other countries including the US, Britain,
Canada, Australia, Turkey, Germany and Spain demanding an immediate
investigation. The Emergency Conference Against War, called by
the International Students for Social Equality and the Socialist
Equality Party on March 31-April 1 in Ann Arbor Michigan, also
passed a resolution.
Ratnayake explained: Wimaleswaran and Mathivathanan disappeared
on the evening of March 22 on the northern Jaffna islands. They
were last seen at around 6.30 p.m. on Punguduthivu island, riding
a motor bike towards a long causeway connecting it with Kayts
island, where they both live. The commander at the Punguduthivu
navy camp claimed the two men passed through the navy roadblock
on his side of the causeway. The commander of the Kayts navy camp,
in charge of the roadblock at the other end, denied any knowledge
of them.
Eyewitnesses saw Wimaleswaran and Mathivathanan being
body checked by navy personnel and questioned by two police officers
at the Kayts roadblock on their way towards Punguduthivu at about
5.30 p.m. There is a heavy navy presence throughout Kayts island.
It is impossible for a person to disappear without the navy knowing.
The SEP accuses the navy and police of complicity in this disappearance.
The government of President Mahinda Rajapakse, which has plunged
the country back to war, is responsible for these disappearances.
Ratnayake pointed out that the police and the military have
done nothing to locate Wimaleswaran and Mathivathanan despite
the SEPs formal complaints to the defence ministry, the
navy camps on Kayts and Punguduthivu and to the police in Jaffna.
A cover up was going on. Ratnayake recalled the killing of SEP
supporter Sivapragasam Mariyadas at Mullipothana in the Trincomalee
district on August 7 last year. The lack of any police inquiry
underscored the attitude of the Rajapakse government to the hundreds
of people who have disappeared or been killed over the past year.
Describing Wimaleswarans life, Ratnayake said: Wimaleswaran
came from a poor family in Kayts and lost his father in his early
childhood. When only 10 he had to shoulder the economic burdens
of the family and earnt money by fishing. He only attended school
up to eighth grade. This is the situation facing most youth under
conditions of civil war.
Wimaleswaran grew up in the midst of war. Some youth of his
generation joined the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam to fight
the Colombo government. Wimaleswaran met SEP members and was convinced
of the bankruptcy of the LTTEs political perspective. He
saw the necessity of an international socialist perspective to
solve the national question and the other burning issues facing
working people. He was in the forefront of defending the rights
of fishermen and others in Kayts.
Ratnayake emphasised the pressing importance of the meeting.
Nineteen days have gone since the disappearance of Wimaleswaran
and his friend. Their lives are in great danger. He called
on everyone at the meeting to help intensify the campaign to find
and release them.
SEP General Secretary Wije Dias told the meeting: This
disappearance is not an accident. It is the result of the brutal
civil war, which has been continued by successive governments
in Colombo for the last 25 years. As a result of this war, more
than 75,000 have been killed. Since January last year, following
the escalation of war under the Rajapakse government, more than
4,000 people have died and over 225,000 have been displaced. Over
the same period, hundreds were disappeared.
Explaining Wimaleswarans role on Kayts, Dias said: Behind
his popularity is the struggle in which he engaged as a member
of the SEP to give conscious expression for the aspirations of
tens of thousands who wish to end the war. At the same time, he
was a frontline fighter against the various harassments of the
navy, which has occupied the zone, to defend the rights of the
fishermen and their livelihoods.
As socialists, we acknowledge the value of the life of
every human being. At the same time we insist that the social
value of the life of a person who fights for socialism against
the brutal war and social inequality is infinite and immeasurable.
In that sense, the disappearance of a socialist such as Wimaleswaran
is infinite and immeasurable.
Explaining the global context of war in Sri Lanka, Dias demonstrated
the relationship between the Sri Lankan civil war and the Bush
administrations imperialist aggression. We have entered
an era of civil wars, imperialist wars and world war. The US invasions
of Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq in 2003 were acts of imperialism.
Over the past four years, as the US military has sought to establish
its control over the Iraqi population, we have seen unending death
and destruction. We have witnessed the levelling of entire cities.
This was only the beginning of the carnage. The war cannot end
by pressurising the Bush administration or any other person occupying
the White House. Such thoughts are an illusion.
Dias explained the SEP campaign was not only to press for an
investigation into the disappearance of Wimaleswaran and Mathivathanan.
It was also to educate working people on the necessity of building
an independent political movement based on a socialist perspective
to defend democratic rights and social conditions. Appealing to
those responsible for the war will not halt the disappearances.
Dias pointed out that the Civil Monitoring Committee (CMC)
formed by Mano Ganeshan, a parliamentarian of the Western Province
Peoples Front (WPPF), and Siritunga Jayasuriya, leader of
the United Socialist Party (USP), was holding a seminar on the
same day. While the CMC protested against the disappearances,
it allied itself with the right-wing United National Party (UNP).
UNP leader Ranil Wickremesinghe was the main speaker at the seminar.
His party is not only responsible for starting the communal
civil war against Tamils. The UNP is also responsible for the
disappearance of tens of thousands of Tamils and Sinhala rural
youth. Wickremesinghe was implicated in the torture chamber at
Batalanda (in the suburbs of Colombo). The USP is now whitewashing
Wickremesinghe and promoting his party as a defender of democracy,
Dias charged.
Dias also noted the role of Nava Sama Samaja Party (NSSP) leader
Wickramabahu Karunaratne who has organised the Committee for Investigation
of Disappearances. He sent a letter to the US ambassador, Robert
Blake, declaring: As your government is concerned about
threat to democracy and human rights violation here, we appeal
you to raise this issue [of disappearances] with the Sri Lankan
government. Karunaratne wrote this even as the Bush government
is carrying out carnage in Iraq and backing the Rajapakse governments
war in Sri Lanka.
In Sri Lanka, as in other countries, social inequality has
deepened, Dias explained. The profits of big companies and banks
have increased many-fold and the working class faces sharp attacks
on its living standards. Social inequality and democratic rights
are incompatible. The intensifying communal war backed by chauvinist
parties such as Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) and the Jathika
Hela Urumaya (JHU) is being used to divert mass anger and carry
out far reaching attacks democratic rights.
Only viable perspective for the working people is fight for
a Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka and Eelam as part of the Union
of Socialist Republics of South Asia and internationally, Dias
said. The demand for the immediate and unconditional withdrawal
of Sri Lankan forces from North and East is crucial to forging
unity among Tamils and Sinhalese. He called on the audience to
intensify the campaign for Wimaleswaran and Mathivathanan and
to join the SEP to build a mass internationalist and socialist
party of the working class.
Letters demanding an inquiry into their disappearance can be
sent to:
Gotabhaya Rajapakse,
Secretary of Ministry of Defence,
15/5 Baladaksha Mawatha,
Colombo 3, Sri Lanka
Fax: 009411 2541529
e-mail: secretary@defence.lk
N. G. Punchihewa
Director of Complaints and Inquiries,
Sri Lanka Human Rights Commission,
No. 36, Kinsey Road,
Colombo 8, Sri Lanka
Fax: 009411 2694924
Copies should be sent to the Socialist Equality Party (Sri
Lanka) and the World Socialist Web Site.
Socialist Equality Party,
P.O. Box 1270,
Colombo, Sri Lanka.
Email: wswscmb@sltnet.lk
To send letters to the WSWS editorial board please use this
online
form.
See Also:
Sri Lankan authorities provide no answers
over disappearance of SEP member
[10 April 2007]
Resolution adopted by the ISSE/SEP Emergency
Conference Against War on the disappearance of SEP member in Sri
Lanka
[6 April 2007]
Sri Lankan authorities continue to stall
over disappearance of SEP member
[5 April 2007]
Sri Lankan SEP demands urgent
inquiry into disappearance of party member
[26 March 2007]
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