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: Sri
Lanka
Sri Lankan military conducts massive anti-Tamil sweep through
Colombo
By K. Ratnayake
5 December 2007
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The Sri Lankan government unleashed the largest-ever cordon-and-search
operation in Colombo on Sunday, detaining hundreds of people,
mainly Tamils, and heightening communal tensions throughout the
country. The immediate pretext for the operation was to flush
out Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) fighters blamed
for last weeks bomb blasts in Colombo and nearby Nugegoda.
While the Western Province command was nominally in charge,
the military top brass, acting under the instructions of Defence
Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapakse, were directly involved in planning
the massive sweep. The defence secretary is the brother of President
Mahinda Rajapakse and has been intimately involved in plunging
the island back to war over the past two years.
An estimated 18,000 heavily-armed troops and police were mobilised
to comb the predominantly Tamil areas of Colombo, including Kotahena,
Wellawatte, Bambalapitya, Kirulapone, Narahenpita and Pettah,
as well as the suburbs of Dehiwela, Mount Lavinia, Ratmalana,
Wellampitiya and Nugegoda. Many of the residents are Tamils who
have fled the war in the North and East or plantation workers
from the central hills districts looking for work. Raids also
took place in other parts of the country.
Roadblocks were set up covering all the major highways into
Colombo. Vehicles and their occupants were checked. Any Tamil
was regarded as suspect. Many Tamils travelling on buses were
taken into custody. Eyewitnesses reported police as saying: We
arrest any Tamil who we come across.
In all, over 2,000 Tamils, including women and children, were
detained and taken to police stations. Speaking in parliament
on Monday, opposition MP Mavai Senathirajah said 419 of those
arrested, including 41 women, had been sent to the Boosa detention
camp despite the lack of any incriminating evidence. Boosa is
in the largely Sinhala south of the island.
Senathirajah, from the pro-LTTE Tamil National Alliance (TNA),
claimed that detainees did not have enough drinking water, adequate
toilet facilities or room to sleep at the Boosa camp, which already
had hundreds of prisoners. Others arrested on Sunday are still
crowded into police cells in Colombo.
The Tamil minority suffers systematic official discrimination.
Tamils coming to the capital are compelled to register at police
stations in their residential areas. On Sunday, however, even
those who had fulfilled this requirement were not spared.
Over the past two years, the Rajapakse government has maintained
emergency rule and reimposed and strengthened anti-terror laws,
which allow for indefinite detention without trial. Tamils living
in Colombo have also been subject to extortion, abductions and
killings by paramilitary groups associated with the security forces.
The military is continuing its siege of the capitals
Tamil areas. Soldiers have been deployed on both sides of residential
streets and have been manning the entrances of some housing estates.
Residents told our reporters that they have to prove their identity
and are subject to a de facto curfew after 9 p.m. Security forces
have been deployed outside some schools.
The operation has provoked widespread anger. The opposition
United National Party, which tacitly supports the war, criticised
the government in parliament on Monday for its arbitrary
actions. Even the Sinhala chauvinist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna
declared that the arrests had been unreasonable, while
at the same time criticising the TNA for failing to oppose the
LTTEs actions.
In a bid to quell the outcry, chief government whip Jeyaraj
Fernandopulle announced the release of around 1,600 of the more
than 2,000 detained, but warned of similar operations in the future.
He also appealed to the opposition parties to help in the process
of separating terrorists from innocent people.
The government exploited two bomb blasts on November 28 to
justify the communal crackdown. The first took place at the office
of Social Services Minister Douglas Devananda, leader of the Eelam
Peoples Democratic Party (EPDP). The party is part of the ruling
coalition and its paramilitary units operate alongside the military.
A female suicide bomber blew herself up inside Devanandas
office, killing his coordinating secretary and injuring several
others. While the LTTE has not claimed responsibility, the bombing
has all the hallmarks of its suicide operations. Several attempts
have been made on Devanandas life.
The second blast took place at a large textiles shop in the
Colombo suburb of Nugegoda at about 6.05 p.m. According to eyewitnesses,
a person entered and left a parcel at the counter, then left immediately
and vanished. While the manager phoned the emergency numbers,
the police did not arrive for 30 minutes. The bomb exploded when
a nearby traffic policeman amateurishly inspected the parcel.
Sixteen people were killed on the spot and another five died from
their injuries.
There is no direct proof that the LTTE was responsible for
the second blast. However, the two bombings came just one day
after LTTE leader V. Prabhakaran delivered his annual heroes day
speech, in which he blamed the Sinhala nation for
the governments renewed war and declared an end to the 2002
ceasefire.
The LTTE has previously targetted ordinary Sinhalese in reprisal
for the militarys atrocities against Tamils. Such attacks
by the LTTE are reactionary in character, fuelling communal divisions
between working people and providing the government with an excuse
for police-state measures.
Last Sundays military operation in Colombo occurred under
conditions of growing opposition to the governments renewed
war and its impact on living standards. While this search was
directed against Tamils, the government has used increasingly
repressive methods against the media, opposition politicians and
anyone critical of its policies.
It cannot be ruled out that the government and security forces
were using the crackdown as a dress rehearsal for the imposition
of martial law in the capital.
See Also:
Sri Lanka: Armed gang sets fire to newspaper
printshop
[4 December 2007]
Sri Lankan defence secretary
menaces newspaper editor
[24 April 2007]
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