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: Sri
Lanka
Military administration imposed in eastern Sri Lanka
By Nanda Wickremasinghe
10 August 2007
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The Sri Lankan military has quickly demonstrated its intentions
regarding the capture of the islands eastern province from
the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). Far from liberating
the people of the East, the security forces are establishing a
military occupation over the entire area in preparation for stamping
out any opposition to the government and its continuing communal
war.
Following the armys conquest of the LTTEs last
major eastern stronghold, President Mahinda Rajapakse ordered
a victory celebration on July 19 at which he declared that a new
dawn was opening up for the East of the country. The ceremony,
which evoked little popular enthusiasm, was an unabashed glorification
of the renewed civil war that has already resulted in thousands
of deaths and turned 200,000 into refugees.
Just days later, Major General Parakrama Pannipitiya, the military
commander of the eastern province, issued a circular under the
rather deceptive title of directives for rural development
work. In reality, the document is a blueprint for the imposition
of a military-dominated administration through the province, right
down to the village level.
The circular declared: Rural development of areas liberated
by the forces after the humanitarian operations where there is
a civil population must be done under the supervision of the police
stationed in the area, as well as the armed forces. (These
humanitarian operations were in fact offensive operations
in flagrant breach of the 2002 ceasefire agreement between the
two sides.)
Village-level committees are to be chosen, not by a free vote,
but by the police and army. It will be mandatory,
the circular explained, to include in these committees a
member of the armed forces/STF [police paramilitary units], a
police officer, and Grama Niladhari [village official] serving
in the respective village.
The president of the villages committee is to be either a member
of the police or the military. Meetings to discuss rural
development are to be held fortnightly, but the committees
will have no independent budget or means for implementing projects.
All proposals will have to be submitted to higher levelsdivisional
or provincial secretaries. Reports of the meetings will be sent
to the headquarters of the eastern military commander.
If the real purpose of the committees were to develop backward
rural areas in the East of the island, the involvement of the
security forces would be unnecessary. The Rajapakse government,
however, has no more intention than its predecessors to end the
decades of neglect that have produced widespread poverty and lack
of basic services. Far from addressing the needs of villagers,
these committees are instruments of the security forces for spying,
intimidation and repression.
In the North and East, the security forces work in close collaboration
with Tamil paramilitaries such as the Karuna group in suppressing
dissent. Hundreds of people have been disappeared
or murdered over the past yearin all likelihood by death
squads operated either directly or indirectly by the military.
It would not be at all surprising if members of these paramilitaries
were appointed to the newly established village committees.
The military has also placed severe restrictions on the activities
of various non government organisations (NGOs)local and
internationalone of the few sources of assistance in many
areas. According to the circular, village committees may identify
projects but NGOs will require approval from the district secretarial
offices before any involvement.
Please note that in future NGOs should not be permitted
to do as they please in these areas as before. In order to fulfill
this work effectively, the relevant District Secretary, the Provincial
Secretary and the Commanding Officers of different Army units
in these areas, STF and SPs [police superintendents] have to be
well coordinated, the circular stated.
The military and its Sinhala chauvinist supporters have been
bitterly critical of NGOs, denouncing them as supporters of LTTE
terrorism for exposing some of the armys worst atrocities.
Last August the military was implicated in the cold-blooded murder
of 17 aid workers from the French-based Action Contre la Faim
(ACF). The bodies were found lined up outside the ACF office,
shot in the back of the head after the army reentered the town
of Muttur.
Jeevan Thyagarajah, executive director of the Human Rights
Consortium, an umbrella organisation of the NGOs, questioned the
intervention by the military in development work. Is there
going to be a civil administration in the east or a military administration?
People are already suspicious about government plans, Thyagarajah
told the BBC on July 22.
The military has bypassed normal civilian channels. The Sunday
Times noted in its Situation Report on July 29
that the circular has been sent directly to the police heads in
the eastern districts of Trincomalee, Batticaloa and Ampara, the
commandant of the STF in the province, army brigade commanders
and district secretaries. The Daily Mirror reported that
the eastern military commander called a meeting of NGOs and government
officers in late July to explain its new directives.
Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapakse told the Island
on July 14 that the task of the armed forces [was] to keep
the areas and strategic strongholds ... which were captured from
the LTTE terrorists, safe from infiltration. Some 50 new
police stations and posts are to be set up throughout the East.
In May, the government established a new high security zone in
the Sampur and Muttur area to coincide with a new Special Economic
Zone.
The establishment of a military administration in the East
is a sharp warning to working people throughout the island. Determined
to prosecute its unpopular war and to put the economic burden
on the masses, the Rajapakse government is increasingly reliant
on the military and anti-democratic measures. It will not hesitate
in placing other areas of the country under military rule in order
to shore up its shaky rule.
See Also:
Sri Lankan government celebrates
"victory" after army seizes the East
[23 July 2007]
War economy weighs heavily
on Sri Lankan workers
[20 July 2007]
Sri Lankan military intensifies
offensive in the East
[12 July 2007]
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