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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Sri
Lanka
LTTE arrests two more Tamil socialists
Labor and civil rights organizations must demand halt to repression
of SEP
By the Editorial Board
9 September 1998
Two more members of the Socialist Equality Party of Sri Lanka
have been apprehended by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
in the Killinochchi area.
The August 31 arrest of A. Rasaratnam and E. Nayalvale brings
to five the number of SEP members in the hands of the Tamil secessionist
organization and provides disturbing confirmation of a report,
sent from Killinochchi in mid-August, that the LTTE is hunting
down all SEP members in the area.
The lives of the five Tamil socialists are in grave danger.
Thirugnana Sambandan and Kasinadan Naguleshwaran were arrested
by the LTTE on July 26. Rajendran Sudharshan was taken from his
home on August 2. Yet the London-based leadership of the LTTE
refuses to acknowledge these arrests, let alone give any explanation
for why the SEP members are being detained or any guarantees of
their well-being.
This refusal mirrors the practices of the worst police-state
regimes, like that which waged Argentina's "dirty war"
against militant workers and other socialists in the 1970s. The
cardinal right of a detainee is public acknowledgment by the authorities
of his or her arrest. Such acknowledgment constitutes a minimal,
although utterly inadequate, guarantee that the authorities can
be held to account for a captive's well-being. Without it, the
detainee is lost in the void of the disappeared.
No less ominous is the declaration by an LTTE cadre to the
parents of one of the newly-arrested SEP members: "If your
sons are not TELO (Tamil Eelam Liberation Organization) members
why [do] you get so excited? The LTTE will investigate and release
them."
There is absolutely no possibility of confusing the politics
of TELO, an organization which is allied with Sri Lanka's People's
Alliance regime, and thus party to the war the Sri Lankan state
is waging against the Tamils of the north and the east, with those
of the SEP. The SEP, and it predecessor, the Revolutionary Communist
League, have a long and proud history of defending the democratic
rights of the Tamils and opposing the 15-year anti-Tamil war--a
record of which the LTTE leadership is fully cognizant.
That after more than six weeks of the LTTE "investigating"
the SEP, one of its cadres could suggest that it might be connected
to TELO, an organization with which the LTTE is locked in bloody
struggle, indicates that the LTTE leadership has decided to intensify
its repression of the SEP. Unable to explain before the Tamil
masses its suppression of its socialist political opponents, the
LTTE is trying to provide a pretext for its actions through innuendo
and slander, by associating the SEP with a discredited pro-government
party.
The SEP is waging a powerful campaign in Sri Lanka to mobilize
popular support to demand the LTTE leadership immediately and
unconditionally release the five SEP members and cease its campaign
of repression against the SEP. Well-attended public meetings have
been held in Colombo and other centers in the south. Reports on
the defence campaign have been featured prominently on Sri Lankan
radio and television.
Scores of artists, intellectuals, and representatives of labor
organizations have issued statements calling for the LTTE to stop
persecuting the SEP. Vasudeva Nanayakkara, a Member of Parliament
for the Lanka Samaja Sama Party, the largest and oldest political
party on the island claiming to be socialist, was among those
who issued a statement last week condemning the repression of
the SEP.
Professor Amal Jayawardane of Colombo University wrote to the
LTTE leadership deploring the arrests. "It is of common knowledge
that the SEP has consistently and unreservedly stood for the democratic
rights of the Tamil people in Sri Lanka, and it should be able
to continue the campaign without any hindrance.
"The protection of persons from enforced disappearances
is a cardinal principle of human rights and the rule of law. As
advocates of human rights, we call upon both the government and
opposition groups to put an end to the violation of democratic
rights of political activists. In this context, we urge the leadership
of the LTTE to release unconditionally those SEP members in its
custody."
The World Socialist Web Site urgently calls on all its
readers, all labor, human rights and Tamil organizations, 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:
44-171-403-1653
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:
Email: editor@wsws.org
Fax: (US) 248-967-3023
See Also:
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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