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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Sri
Lanka
British Trades Union Congress delegates condemn LTTE repression
International demands mount for release of Tamil socialists
By Mike Ingram
16 September 1998
More than 200 delegates at the British Trades Union Congress
annual conference signed petitions to demand the release of five
Sri Lankan Socialist Equality Party members who have been apprehended
by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. The British SEP circulated
the petition at the conference in Blackpool as part of an international
campaign to demand an end to the LTTE's political repression of
the Sri Lankan socialists.
The petition, which was addressed to the LTTE's London headquarters,
read in part: "We demand an immediate end to your campaign
of arrests and intimidation directed against the members and supporters
of the Socialist Equality Party in the Killinochchi area in the
north of Sri Lanka and the immediate release of those taken into
custody.
"Since July 26 five SEP members have been arrested, Thirugnana
Sambandan, Kasinadan Naguleshwaran, Rajendran Sudharshan, A. Rasaratnam
and E. Nayalvale. No charges have been laid against them and all
enquiries as to their whereabouts have been ignored. Your office
refuses to acknowledge the arrests or answer correspondence relating
to them.
"We consider your actions to be a blatant infringement
upon the democratic rights of the Socialist Equality Party to
fight for their political positions. We demand that you immediately
inform the family and comrades of those held of their whereabouts
and state of health and that they be released forthwith."
The letter was signed by 234 delegates, representing millions
of workers throughout Britain. Signatures included such prominent
individuals as Ken Cameron, leader of the Fire Brigades Union;
John Foster, General Secretary of the National Union of Journalists;
Jim Simmins, National Officer of the professional union MSF; and
Frank Cave, the Vice President of both the National Union of Mineworkers
and the Socialist Labour Party.
Dozens of delegates from Britain's largest union, the 1.4 million-strong
UNISON, signed the letter, as did General Council member Roger
Bannister.
The petitions were sent to the LTTE together with a cover letter
from Julie Hyland, the assistant national secretary of the British
SEP, which drew attention to the broad sections of the British
working class represented by the signatures. Hyland wrote, "We
will continue to expose your actions before the British and international
working class," and concluded by demanding that the LTTE
"acknowledge this correspondence and respond to our demands
with the utmost urgency."
The support from TUC delegates follows the urgent appeal issued
by Amnesty International calling for messages to be sent to the
LTTE's leadership-in-exile urging it to provide assurances the
SEP members will not be ill-treated or tortured, to allow International
Committee of the Red Cross representatives and relatives to visit
its SEP captives, and to clarify the reasons for their detention.
The appeal was distributed through the organisation's Urgent Action
Network via e-mail, fax and telegram, to thousands of AI members
and other concerned individuals and organisations world-wide.
The SEP has a long and proud record of championing the democratic
rights of the Tamils. Like its predecessor the Revolutionary Communist
league, the SEP has always opposed the anti-Tamil legislation
and policies of the Sri Lankan state, including the privileged
status of the Sinhalese language and Buddhist faith under the
Sri Lankan constitution. It is an indefatigable opponent of the
racist war and demands the withdrawal of all government troops
from the Tamil majority areas. For these principled stands, several
of its members have been murdered by Sinhalese chauvinists and
arrested by the government.
The SEP has come under attack from the LTTE, a separatist guerrilla
group, because of its principled struggle to unite Sinhalese and
Tamil workers and peasants against the capitalist government in
Colombo, on its fight to establish a socialist republic of Sri
Lanka and Tamil Eelam.
The World Socialist Web Site urgently calls on all of
its readers, all labor, human rights and Tamil organisations,
and all those who defend basic democratic rights to send faxes
and letters to the LTTE condemning the repression of the SEP and
demanding the immediate and unconditional release of the five
SEP members.
Letters should be faxed to the LTTE c/o Eelam House (London)
at:
44-171-403-165
Telephone: 44-171-403-4554.
Statements can also be mailed to:
The LTTE
c/o Eelam House
202 Long Lane
London SE1 4QB United Kingdom
Please send copies of all statements of protest to the WSWS
at:
E-mail: editor@wsws.org
Fax: (US) 248-967-3023
See Also:
Amnesty International issues urgent appeal
on behalf of Sri Lankan SEP members
[15 September 1998]
LTTE arrests two more Tamil socialists
Labor and civil rights organizations must demand halt to repression
of SEP
[9 September 1998]
LTTE hunting down socialists
Redouble efforts to secure release of SEP members
[2 September 1998]
LTTE communiqué threatens
Tamil socialists with execution
[19 August 1998]
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