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: Sri
Lanka
US envoy raises muted concerns about democratic rights in
Sri Lanka
By Nanda Wickremasinghe
21 May 2007
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During his visit to Sri Lanka on May 8-10, US Assistant Secretary
of State Richard Boucher for the first time made reference to
US concerns over the abuse of basic democratic rights by the government
and the countrys security forces.
The Bush administration has backed Sri Lankan President Mahinda
Rajapakse and his renewed war against the Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam (LTTE) to the hilt. While denouncing the LTTE as terrorists
and pressing other governments to ban the separatist organisation,
the White House has deliberately ignored the Sri Lankan militarys
open breaches of the 2002 ceasefire and the governments
anti-democratic methods.
Bouchers latest comments on human rights in Sri Lanka
were very limited and, in the context of the barbaric US occupation
of Iraq, completely hypocritical. But the fact that a senior US
official made any such reference at all is a significant indication
of the scale of the crimes being perpetrated by the Colombo government,
the military and allied armed paramilitaries.
During his visit, Boucher met President Rajapakse, his brother
and Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapakse, top officials and military
officers. Boucher travelled to Jaffna in the northern war-zone
and spoke to military commanders, local religious leaders, politicians
and officials.
At a press conference in Colombo on May 10, the US official
began by again denouncing the LTTE as a terrorist group
that recruits child soldiers, extorts money, kills people,
blows up buses, and attacks government facilities. He reiterated
US support for the Rajapakse government, highlighting US defence
cooperation with the Sri Lankan military and Washingtons
efforts to pressure other countries to slow the ability
of the Tamil Tigers to get supplies, to get money, and to get
weapons.
At the same time, Boucher made clear that in his discussions
with Rajapakse: We have talked quite a bit about the human
rights situation. And there are two aspects that concern us most.
One is abductions and killings, and the second is freedom of the
press... We [in the US] remain very concerned about some of the
killings, the killings of aid workers, killing of people at various
places on the island that have occurred in the last year or so.
On the issue of press freedom, he added: We have seen
a lot of different reports. Weve seen reports of intimidation,
reports of government power being used on newspapers and journalists;
and then of course, weve seen killings and violent acts
committed against newspapers and journalists.
In the same breath, Boucher effectively exonerated the government,
claiming it had laid down proper guidelines for arrests and that
politicians and officials were committed to their
implementation. Speaking of the notorious pro-government paramilitary
groups, he carefully avoided any reference to the close collaboration
of the armed forces and the government in their operations.
Bouchers comments came amid growing outrage in Sri Lanka
and internationally over the operation of pro-government death
squads, directed mainly against the Tamil minority in Colombo
and the war zones in the north and east of the island. Since Rajapakse
won office in November 2005, hundreds of people have been killed
or disappeared by these shadowy gunmen. In virtually
none of these cases have any of the perpetrators been detained,
let alone prosecuted and punished. Many others are being held
without charge under the countrys draconian Prevention of
Terrorism laws.
The SEP (Sri Lanka) and World Socialist Web Site are
currently campaigning for Sri Lankan authorities to investigate
the disappearance of SEP member Nadarajah Wimaleswaran and his
friend Sivanathan Mathivathanan on March 22 from navy-controlled
islands near the northern town of Jaffna, and the murder of SEP
supporter Sivapragasam Mariyadas last August. To date, no serious
police investigation has taken place in either case.
Human rights organisations have been waging broad campaigns
to bring the scale of atrocities in Sri Lanka to international
attention. During the recent cricket World Cup, Amnesty International
(AI) called for all sides to Play by the Rules and
pushed for international human rights monitors on the island.
Defending its campaign, AI noted: Increasing abductions,
illegal killings and child recruitment in Sri Lanka are all going
on unchecked and victims do not receive justice. The intensified
fighting over the last year has forced over 300,000 people to
flee their homes. At least 1,000 people have been forcibly disappeared
since the beginning of 2006.
The US-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) wrote an open letter
to the Pope prior to Rajapakses visit to the Vatican last
month, drawing attention to the Sri Lankan governments record
as well as that of the LTTE. Enforced disappearances attributed
to state security forces are also on the rise. In the Jaffna peninsula
alone, the governments Human Rights Commission has recorded
707 cases of missing persons since December 2005, 492 of whom
are still missing. In the vast majority of reported cases, witnesses
and family members allege that security forces were involved or
implicated in the abduction, it stated.
The HRW letter also noted that impunity remains the norm,
explaining: Sri Lankas law-enforcement authorities
have proven woefully incapable of dealing with the abuse. The
peace secretariats statement of March 8 provides the results
of police investigations into nine cases of abductions and disappearances,
but this represents a small fraction of the total number of cases
reported every month.
HRW also highlighted threats against the media and government
critics. At the same time, the government is using the war
on terror paradigm to intimidate the media, non-governmental
organisations, and others with independent or dissenting views.
Human Rights Watch is deeply concerned that the government, driven
by the Sri Lankan defence establishment, is dismissing critics
as allies of the LTTE and traitors of the state, it wrote.
Sunanda Deshapriya, the convener of the Free Media Movement,
commented recently: The people in the north and east do
not have the right to have a newspaper, no newsprint. The journalists
have no right to life, they cant take any photograph they
want, they cant access the Internet as they like.
He stated that 17 journalists and media workers had been killed
in the past 15 months.
The governments attitude to the media, particularly the
Tamil-language, was underscored by an internal debate over whether
or not to allow Boucher to meet with the staff of Uthayan,
a leading Tamil newspaper in Jaffna. The Sunday Times,
which revealed the discussions, noted that Rajapakse had quizzed
his foreign minister over why such permission was granted.
Government MPs had expressed their opposition to any meeting with
the pro-LTTE press. In the event Rajapakse relented,
under strict conditions. But the very fact that Rajapakse was
considering blocking a top US official from such a visit is graphic
confirmation of his governments attitude toward any media
critical of official policy.
HRW also produced a detailed report in March demonstrating
that one of the pro-government militiasthe Karuna groupis
actively involved in recruiting child soldiers. The report, which
the Rajapakse government immediately denounced, is significant
because one of the main charges levelled at the LTTE is its involvement
in this practice. HRW not only identified particular cases of
child abduction but also provided first-hand evidence of the open
collusion of the Karuna group with the military in the Batticaloa
districtsomething the government regularly denies. Boucher,
who condemned the LTTEs recruitment of child soldiers, had
nothing to say about the similar methods of the Karuna group.
Criticisms have been expressed in the US Congress, reflecting
concerns that Washington may be associating itself too closely
with the Rajapakse governments flagrant abuse of democratic
rights. Republican senator Richard Lugar, a senior member of the
Foreign Relations Committee, wrote to Rajapakse in March warning
that US aid may be in jeopardy. I am concerned that the
worsening of Sri Lankas indicators may jeopardize funding
from the MCC [Millennium Challenge Corporation] account,
he stated.
Britain announced early this month that it was suspending $3
million in debt relief aid, citing concerns about human rights
abuses and huge defence spending. During Bouchers visit,
a diplomat in Colombo told AFP that Japan, Sri Lankas largest
aid donor, was also planning to meet with international activists
who were demanding aid be linked to the governments human
rights record.
Like Bouchers comments, these cosmetic moves will do
nothing to halt the Rajapakse governments brutal war or
its vicious repression. But they do indicate both the widespread
and criminal character of the Sri Lankan militarys activities,
and the growing opposition on the island and internationally.
See Also:
Sri Lankan police harass witnesses in
case of murdered SEP supporter
[18 May 2007]
Sri Lankan magistrate directs police to
investigate disappearance of SEP member
[14 May 2007]
SEP writes to Sri Lankan defence
secretary demanding answers on disappearance of party member
[28 April 2007]
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