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Sri Lankan defence ministry extends police state moves
By K. Ratnayake
19 March 2007
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As the Sri Lankan government expands its military offensives
against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), preparations
are being made to further curtail basic democratic rights and
suppress political opposition, particularly to the war.
A chilling Ministry of Defence (MOD) press statement issued
on March 1 foreshadowed a widening use of the present emergency
powers against anyone criticising the activities of the security
forces. Significantly President Mahinda Rajapakse is also the
defence minister and thus directly responsible for the statement.
His brother Gotabhaya Rajapakse holds the top administrative position
of defence secretary.
The statement entitled MOD has no intention to suppress
the media freedom was intended to deflect mounting criticism
in Sri Lanka and internationally over the arbitrary detention
without trial of hundreds of people, including journalists. The
arrests have been made under an extended version of the countrys
notorious Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA), which was rescinded
following the signing of the 2002 ceasefire, but reenacted last
December.
The detentions have taken place amid a wave of killings and
abductions in the war zones of the North and East of the island,
and also in the capital of Colombo. Journalists and other media
workers have been among the targets of what are widely believed
to be death squads operating under the direction of the military.
The arrests and murders have provoked widespread outrage and protests.
Far from offering any guarantees of media freedom, the MOD
baldly asserted the right of law enforcement authorities
to arrest and interrogate any individual within the existing framework
of the law for directly engaging in activities threatening national
security. Justifying the detentions, it added: Arrests
of journalists, security forces personnel and civilians who have
acted to threaten national security have taken place even under
previous governments.
It is certainly the case that the security forces have arrested
journalists previously. In 1998, two Tamil journalists were detained
under the Peoples Alliance government for two months and one month
respectively. At the time, however, a state of open war existed
with the LTTE. The current spate of arrests underscores the fact
that, for all its claims to adhere to the 2002 ceasefire, the
Rajapakse government has plunged the island back to war and is
seeking to muzzle any opposition.
A glaring example of the abuse of democratic rights was the
detention of Parameshwari Munusami, a female Tamil journalist
arrested, on November 13 last year. On January 23, a court granted
a police application to hold her for another 90 days under the
PTA. She has now been in detention more than four months without
charge or any explanation for her arrest. Parameshwari is challenging
her jailing through a fundamental rights case.
These are the police state methods provided for within
the existing framework of the law. In the name of national
security, the military and police have sweeping powers to
arrest and detain individuals, including journalists, on the basis
of fabricated stories with little or no evidence. Prior to the
2002 ceasefire, tens of thousands of people, mainly Tamils, were
detained for months or years without charge. In some cases, individuals
were tortured and their confessions used as the basis
for their conviction.
Such measures constitute obvious breaches of basic democratic
rights as outlined in the 1978 constitution of the Democratic
Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, in which freedom from torture,
freedom from arbitrary arrest, freedom of speech, freedom of peaceful
assembly and presumption of innocence are all listed and detailed.
The government and the military rely on Article 15 of the constitution
entitled Restrictions on fundamental rights, which
makes clear that Sri Lanka is no more democratic,
than it is socialist.
Subclause 7 of Article 15 states that all of the fundamental
rights declared and recognised by Articles 12, 13 (1), 13 (2)
and 14 shall be subject to such restrictions as may be prescribed
by law in the interests of national security, public order and
the protection of public health or morality, or for the purpose
of securing due recognition and respect for the rights and freedoms
of others, or of meeting the just requirements of the general
welfare of a democratic society. In other words, the government
has unbridled powers to impose draconian restrictions on virtually
every basic democratic and legal right, including of the media.
In practice, the ability of the government and the security
forces to openly abuse democratic rights has been subject to political
considerationsthat is, opposition and protests by ordinary
working people. The most significant aspect of the recent MOD
statement was that it also targetted such campaigns. After declaring
the legitimacy of arbitrary arrests, it added: Protests
and influences that are initiated in the wake of arrests of individuals
not only hinder investigations but also threaten the stability
of the government.
The statement is a clear threat that the military is preparing
to extend its application of the pretext of national security
to anyone or any organisation that threatens the stability
of the government. While the comment relates in particular
to those who protest against arrests and the abuse of democratic
rights, the same logic could be employed to declare illegitimate
any form of public criticism or political opposition.
Rajapakse is resting on a fragile coalition of parties that
faces mounting popular opposition to the war and the deterioration
of living standards. Over the past six months, there have already
been a series of strikes and protests by workers over jobs, wages
and conditions that have rattled the government. Significantly,
in reintroducing the Prevention of Terrorism Act last December,
Rajapakse extended its application to illegalise the disrupting
or threatening the maintenance of supplies and services also essential
to the life of the community.
Rajapakses response to the opposition has been to whip
up communal antagonisms and to deepen the attacks on democratic
rights. He has accused striking workers on the docks and in the
plantations of aiding terrorism. In early February,
the military arrested three leftists associated with Akuna,
a bi-monthly journal of the Railway Workers Combine (RWC).
The government has been exploiting their alleged confessions of
involvement with the LTTE to try to silence any criticism of the
scores of people currently detained without trial.
In comments last Wednesday, Rajapakse echoed the warning contained
in the defence ministrys statement. He told the media that
he was confronting various political conspiracies
and that stable government was needed to wage war
against the LTTE on the one hand and to initiate economic development
on the other. I am not going to betray the motherland,
he emphatically declared.
The working class must take the sharpest warnings from these
statements. The invocation of the need for stable government
as the pretext for curtailing of basic democratic rights is the
justification employed by dictators and police states to illegalise
all forms of political opposition.
See Also:
Detention of three leftists by Sri Lankan
government signals new round of state repression
[12 March 2007]
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