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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Sri
Lanka
Sri Lanka
Tamil youth and SEP supporters arrested
By our reporter
14 July 1998
Sri Lankan police have arrested and detained eight workers
and young people, including a supporter of the Socialist Equality
Party, Uday Kumar, in Hatton, a major tea plantation area. These
same youth were among a group of 13 detained for some two years
by Sri Lankan authorities until their release was won by the SEP
in December 1996. They were accused of being supporters of the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). Now they have been taken
into custody as suspects in the bombing last month of a factory
at the Shannon tea estate.
The eight, who were picked up in the week following the bombing,
were previously detained in 1994-96 on the same suspicions. But
the police and the People's Alliance regime of president Chandrika
Kumaratunga could not produce any evidence to substantiate the
charge. The SEP, the Sri Lankan section of the International Committee
of the Fourth International, waged a political campaign throughout
the working class for their release, as part of its campaign to
win the release all political prisoners.
Appreciating the principled struggle carried out by the SEP,
which at the same time clearly differentiated itself from the
politics of the national separatist LTTE, several of those detainees
joined the party after their release. Uday Kumar, who has now
been detained for a second time, remained a consistent supporter
of the SEP and stood as a party candidate at the last local government
election in the area in March 1997.
Another one of the group of 13 previous detainees who joined
the SEP after his release, Devapathi Savarimuththu, was also brought
to the Hatton police station as a suspect in the recent bomb explosion.
But due to the immediate intervention of the SEP on his behalf
the police released him the same day, June 24, after taking a
statement. The threat of arrest still hangs over him.
The incident at the tea factory occurred on June 1. Two alleged
bombers approached the facility in the middle of the night. The
plant was operating at the time and the individuals rang the bell
to gain entry. When the chief tea-maker appeared at the door,
he was ordered to open it. The latter, saying that he had to get
the key, went upstairs and called on workers to help him. Seeing
the group of workers approaching, the two individuals fled. The
workers gave chase and threw stones at the men.
A few minutes later, while the workers were still looking for
the intruders, a bomb exploded near the engine room of the factory.
Although there were no casualties, a part of the factory was heavily
damaged.
When questioned by the authorities, the tea-maker indicated
that the two men he confronted spoke Sinhalese very well. But
all those who have been detained are Tamil-speaking young plantation
workers and unemployed youth. The LTTE has been blamed for the
explosion and the authorities are attempting to implicate the
youth with having LTTE connections.
Both Uday Kumar and Savarimuththu, along with other SEP members
in the Hatton-Maskeliya area, made a strong political intervention
during the 600,000-strong plantation workers' strike in April
of this year. The bureaucracies of the plantation workers unions,
who support the PA regime, tried to intimidate the SEP members
and supporters by physically attacking them at one of the workers'
demonstrations and demanding the police arrest them. The police
obeyed the demand of the PA regime's trade union allies, but had
to release all the SEP members and supporters when the party leadership
intervened. The police officer who spoke to the SEP secretary
tried to cover up their illegal arrest, claiming that the police
brought them to the station only out of concern for their safety.
There is good reason to believe that these same forces, including
officials of the Ceylon Workers Congress and the UP Country Peoples
Front, whose leaders occupy ministerial posts in the PA regime,
are behind the latest attempt to frame up SEP members and supporters
for the bomb explosion at the Shannon factory. It is likely that
the PA regime and the trade union bureaucracies will try to frame
up other SEP members in the area as well, in preparation for a
general clampdown on the party.
This was the motive behind the recent arrest of SEP member
Selliah Rajkumar for the second time on the baseless charge that
he was collecting arms for the LTTE. In the same way that the
war against the Tamil masses is being used to suppress the demands
of the workers for higher wages, job security and decent living
standards, bogus connections are being used to repress all political
opponents of the PA regime. This must be taken as a serious warning
by the workers and oppressed masses.
The detained youth face the threat of bodily harm or worse
as long as they remain in custody. When the SEP attempted to see
Uday Kumar at the detention centre, the authorities at the anti-subversive
unit would not allow it. When a lawyer representing the SEP insisted
on seeing Kumar, he was allowed to do so only in the presence
of the Officer in Charge. Kumar had been weeping, indicating either
police harassment or physical abuse.
The crime the SEP supporters have committed in the eyes of
the ruling class and its allies is dedication to an international
socialist program. The attempt to witch-hunt the SEP members and
supporters must be defeated. A vigorous political campaign must
be waged for the release of Uday Kumar and the other seven detainees,
as part of a campaign for the release of all political prisoners.
Letters of protest should be sent to:
1. The Defence Secretary, Ministry of Defence,
15/5, Baladaksha Mawatha, Colombo 03, Sri Lanka
(Fax 0094-1-541529)
2. Attorney General, Attorney General's Department,
Colombo 12, Sri Lanka
(Fax 0094-1-436421)
3. The Inspector General of Police, Police Headquarters,
Colombo 01, Sri Lanka
We welcome copies of all letters sent in defence of Uday Kumar
and the other detainees.
The address of the SEP, Sri Lanka is:
General Secretary, Socialist Equality Party,
No. 90, 1st Maligakanda Lane, Colombo 10, Sri Lanka.
E-mail: wijed@applesri.lk
See Also:
Sri Lankan police detain Tamil socialist
SEP member Selliah Rajkumar held for 24 hours
[2 July 1998]
Sri Lankan government tightens
censorship
[13 June 1998]
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