Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Saturday, April 18, 2015

Magistrates – The Weak Link In Policing

Colombo Telegraph
By Rajan Hoole –April 18, 2015
Dr. Rajan Hoole
Dr. Rajan Hoole
Some police officers have been explicit in the contention that police corruption is what breeds terrorism. Tamils who are regularly taken in by the Police on suspicion would readily agree. Officers in charge of some police stations and certain officers in police units investigating terrorism have been known to hold persons arbitrarily to obtain money for their release. Reports of such officers have come from detainees held by the CDB, CSU, and the more recent TID. Amounts charged have recently been known to exceed Rs.100 000, driving affected families to desperate straits. The practice rose sharply following the LTTE’s terrorist attacks in Colombo in 1991, continued into the term of the PA government in the latter 1990s, and then spread into the estates peopled by Hill-Country Tamils.
Bus board SinhalaSeveral police officers contend that the most promising first step in tackling the problem is to do with the role of the magistrate. The detention of a suspect even under the Prevention of Terrorism Act requires the Police to conform to some objective criteria of suspicion. They point out that in every recent case where a fundamental rights petition has been filed on behalf of a detainee, the Supreme Court has granted relief.
*In a typical case, the magistrate compounded a particular disability suffered by a Tamil in Colombo. A Tamil woman from Jaffna who could not read bus destination boards that were only in Sinhalese, boarded a bus pointed out by a bystander, got lost and was detained by the Police on suspicion.