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 28, 2012


Rs. 150 million house for Gamini Senarath on Gregory’s Road


Saturday, 28 April 2012  


The house worth Rs. 150 million built on Gregory’s Road by the Head of the Presidential Staff, Gamini Senarath is to be occupied by the owners at an auspicious time on the 27th. The house has been completed with imported products and bathroom sets alone had cost Rs. 25 million.
Well known Casino businessmen, Dhammika Perera and Ravi Wijeratne had helped put up the house.
Gamini Senarath is in-charge of depositing monies of the President and family in Swiss bank accounts. MP Sajin Vass Gunawardena has deposited the President’s monies in the Middle East.
Senarath also advices the President on carrying out massive projects with international cooperation and allocating such tenders. He also maintains a large scale printing press. All text books required for state schools are being printed in this printing press and the Education Minister has now power to take any action against the printing press even if it delays delivering the printed text books to be distributed among school children.
Gamini Senarath served as an ordinary public officer and he was appointed as the Commissioner General of the Motor Traffic Department by then Minister Vajira Abeywardena during the two year UNF government under Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe.
Gamini Senarath is also a close relative of the President.
Apart from the house on Gregory’s Road, he also owns several luxury houses in the country.

Friday, April 27, 2012

Ulemas split into two: prayers conducted as usual in Dambulla mosque; Muslim demonstrations in Colombo
Friday 27 of April 2012

(Lanka-e-News-27.April.2012, 11.30PM) Two huge protest demonstrations were staged today by the Muslims after their Friday Jumma prayers in front of the Fort railway station and near the Dewatagaha mosque. Following the communiqué issued by the supreme Muslim Organization , the All Ceylon Jamiyathul ulema Association yesterday , there had arisen a split within the Association. A group had alleged that the Association is unscrupulously doing the sordid biddings of the Govt., and is now functioning independently as Lanka Jamiyathul ulemas. The new Organization held its protest today with the participation of members of the other opposition parties.

Peratugami Samajawadhi party M P Ajith Kumara , Western Democratic Party Mano Ganeshan and leader of Samjawadhi Peramuna , Wickremabahu Karunaratne also participated in the protests.
(this picture shows such a demonstration. More pictures below)

Meanwhile , like how the Jumma prayers were conducted in the Dambulla mosque which was the target of attack in the usual way as were carried out for the last 40 years . A crowd of about 1500 devotees congregated for prayers. There was nobody there to protest . The devotees peacefully conducted their prayers and peacefully dispersed.

At Puttalam , the Muslim devotees after the Jumma prayers went on a peaceful procession .
Iran Ambassador Ayatholla Tashkari had held discussions with the Premier today ,pertaining to the Muslims’ issue.     Full story >>

Big Trouble for Sri Lanka: UN Has Cluster Bomb Evidence from Northern Province

http://www.salem-news.com/graphics/snheader.jpgDiscovery is further proof of war crimes committed against Tamil civilians in 2009.
Majinda Rajapakse
Majinda Rajapaksa. Special thanks to sagennext.com
(SALEM) - You have to wonder about the life span of a lie - they all have one after all. Dead men tell no tales, but living witnesses, photo and video evidence, and actual battlefield remnants of war crimes... have plenty to say. Those elements when combined, can lead to the sound of prison bars slamming shut.
A government's use of inhumane weapons on civilian populations is a dishonorable and illegal act; investigations armed with the evidence now mounting against Sri Lanka, generally expose government scoundrels who have no business leading anyone, and their lies make the process of ushering in the truth an even uglier task. Defiance over war crimes is nothing new, but Sri Lanka's has been nearly unprecedented, by anything in modern history.
Colombo's Rajapakse regime went way too far, they have refused to be accountable for what took place: the slaughter of what may have been well over 100,000 Tamils. Now, United Nations inspectors have pinned the tail on the donkey, one might say, locating evidence of cluster bomb use, something Sri Lanka has repeatedly, vehemently denied, even though it was reported at the time, as further indicated below.
Of course SL denies the use of illegal weapons, and they deny killing civilians, they denied routing those civilians into smaller and smaller areas in order to pound them with all types of munitions; they basically deny everything. Then of course is the fact that after the bombing ended, government forces entered the remaining refugee areas and slaughtered civilians ruthlessly with guns, machetes, and other weapons.

Photo and Video Evidence



One photo shows a woman with a rocket that literally pierced her lower half, but failed to explode. These are heinous images that the government of SL did everything to prevent being seen, but they had no such power. Even well-planned lies leak visions of truth very early.
In fact it is all very perverse, as shown by the fact that the soldiers recorded themselves on video, gloating over the silenced victims of sexual abuse, as their thrashed bodies; young, stripped of clothing and dignity; raped, dead and dying, are thrown carelessly into the back of a truck. These men of the Sri Lanka army regarded the women as Tamil 'terrorists', implying this gave them a license to get away with rape and murder.
Indeed, it is their own doing, as the outing of that crucial evidence shown by Channel-4 in their pair of documentaries, the series 'Sri Lanka's Killing Fields', seemed to be among the elements that tipped the scales and proved beyond a shadow of a doubt that Sri Lanka was itself guilty of terrible crimes against humanity.
The lies that have accompanied their story from day one, make the emergence of the truth a labor-intensive birth; it hurts more and is far more dangerous to the real health of this country than the Sinhalese Buddhist majority had possibly anticipated, as they conducted their bloodbath of Tamil people; civilians, just children in cases, so much grief, so many tears, and all of Sri Lanka's officials denied every part of it, and accused human rights groups and one particular London television station, of being blatant liars, as they have stated about all parties who refuse to be silent about this.

Cluster Bomb Evidence

The AP and many other sources, have reported that unexploded cluster munitions were located in the Puthukudiyiruppu area of northern Sri Lanka. This appears to confirm, for the first time, that these illegal weapons were in fact used in Sri Lanka's long running civil war.


The news agency speculates that this new finding will increase existing calls for a thorough, international investigation into possible war crimes connected to the last months of the fighting that ended in May 2009. It has been widely reported, that the government of Sri Lanka has exclusively denied all allegations of having used cluster munitions during the final months of fighting.
The Associated Press wrote:
Cluster munitions are packed with small "bomblets" that scatter indiscriminately and often harm civilians. Those that fail to detonate often kill civilians long after fighting ends.
They are banned under an international treaty adopted by more than 60 nations that took effect in August 2010, after the Sri Lankan war. The nations that haven't adopted the treaty include Sri Lanka, China, Russia, India, Pakistan and the U.S., which says the bombs are a valid weapon of war when used properly.
The Associated Press obtained a copy Thursday of an email written by a U.N. land mine expert that said unexploded cluster bomblets were discovered in the Puthukudiyiruppu area of northern Sri Lanka, where a boy was killed last month and his sister injured as they tried to pry apart an explosive device they had found to sell for scrap metal.
The email was written by Allan Poston, the technical adviser for the U.N. Development Program's mine action group in Sri Lanka.
"After reviewing additional photographs from the investigation teams, I have determined that there are cluster sub-munitions in the area where the children were collecting scrap metal and in the house where the accident occurred. This is the first time that there has been confirmed unexploded sub-munitions found in Sri Lanka," the email said.
During the final weeks of the war, tens of thousands of civilians and Tamil Tiger rebel fighters were trapped in a tiny section of Puthukudiyiruppu as attacking government forces closed in on them.
Lakshman Hulugalla, a Sri Lankan government spokesman on security matters, said the military had not used cluster munitions in the war.
"We are denying that information," he said.
The U.N. did not immediately respond to anAP request for comment.
Read Full Article
I strongly advice the Muslim and other ministers to quit –Robin Hood
Friday 27 of April 2012
(Lanka-e-News-27.April.2012, 5.00PM) It is amazing to see the presence of Muslim ministers speaking behalf of the recent Dambulla incident of eviction of a Muslim worship place. It is surprising to see the amount of ambiguous statements being made by different ministers and governors condemning the attack. It is astonishing to see from where these ministers suddenly appeared to speak behalf of the community after disappearing for quite a long time.

It is wonderful to witness the interest of these ministers to give statements for the community for matters such as destruction of a mosque, permitting qurban (halal slaughtering) during the Ramadan and for the removal of the ban of calling for prayers (azan). It appears that the Muslim ministers do not have any opportunities other than this to talk behalf of the community. There are hundred and one important issues like this the ministers have never spoken a single word behalf of the people. 
More >>

FRIDAY, 27 APRIL 2012
Tamil National Alliance (TNA) has been forced to seek international assistance to find a political solution to the national issue as all its efforts to come to a deal with the respective governments have failed, its leader R. Sampanthan said yesterday.

“We are being told not to go to India and not to go to Washington to seek help but we have been trying to find a solution locally until January this year, but there had been no favorable response from the Sri Lankan government,” he said speaking during a ceremony that was organized by his party to commemorate the late Federal Parry Leader S. J. V. Chellvanayagam at Katiresan hall said.

Mr. Sampanthan recalled that TNA were engaged in seven rounds of talks with the present government but the latter did not respond to their request for an acceptable solution. He said the government failed to respond positively for a solution based on a united Sri Lanka despite the assurance given that whatever agreement reached ay the bilateral talks with the government would be the basis for the discussions at the proposed Parliamentary select committee.

He recalled that the present government had been giving assurances since 2006 but had not failed to deliver them.

Mr. Sampathan said the proposals which the APRC committee came up with had been swept under the carpet while suggestion made by the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) for a accepted solution for the national issue with maximum devolution had also been thrown away by this government.

He also pointed out that concessions reached in 1995, 1997 and in 2000 during the tike of President Chandrika Kumaratunga and also the agreements reached during the peace talks in 2012 were also thrown away by the respective governments. (Yohan Perera)
BaRa too toes the line of MaRa ; Mervyn’s goons attack residence of Kelaniya UC Vice chairman ; Rs. 20 lakhs looted
Friday 27 of April 2012
(Lanka-e-News-27.April.2012, 11.30PM) After dud Dr. Mervyn Silva was ‘baptized’ again by Basil Rajapakse , Mervyn the infamous vermin has plucked up his innate rowdy courage , and attacked the residence of the Kelaniya local body Vice Chairman Chamila Duminda this morning after arriving along with his gang leader , Sarath Edirisinghe alias ‘Singapore Sarath’ 

The goons of Mervyn have also assaulted the two sisters of Chamila.

Although complaints have been lodged with the police , due to pressures exerted by Mervyn the vermin , nobody has been arrested. Duminda said with deep regret that recently , a brother of a local body member was arrested on a frame up ,and the brother of the local body chairman was also similarly arrested and remanded, and now his house has been attacked.

He warned that if no action is taken to halt this, it cannot be predicted in which direction this violence will travel and explode. People will not always like to be victims of violence and terror at the hands of political gangs and goons., he added.

Despite all the members of the entire Kelaniya local body have turned against Mervyn the vermin is enjoying the patronage of the Rajapakse regime. Basil Rajapakse who apparently eschewed the evil company of murderers , marauders and kudu (heroin) dealers hitherto however demonstrated that he (BaRa) is toeing the line of his own brother MaRa (the President) and his corrupt murderous lifestyle , when at the opening of the new Kelaniya office of Mervyn , he said, on matters pertaining to Mervyn Silva , only the President can take decisions. Even as Basil was saying this about Mervyn , the latter was facing disciplinary proceedings before the party disciplinary Committee. In other words , BaRa was implying that his own SLFP disciplinary Committee is of no consequence and thereby ridiculed it while extolling a notorious vermin cum goon who was thinking and behaving as above the law . Basil by saying he will have dealings only via the electorate organizers insulted the local body which has turned against Dud Dr. Mervyn the vermin.

The SLFP party was fastened with the label of heroin dealers’ and murderers’ party owing to disgraceful Mervyn. Rajapakses don’t care two hoots about all this. All these years BaRa (Basil) carried only the label ‘20% commission grabber’. But after his speech at Mervyn’s office opening , he had clearly confirmed that he is another Rajapakse , who is hand in glove with the heroin dealers, murderers and marauders .
Immediately after BaRa’s encouragement , the very following day , Mervyn the vermin openly said , in future , he is going to work disregarding the local body. Dud Dr. Mervyn added, he is creating another group and going to work casting aside the local body. Naturally brutish Mervyn being a politico who never had the capacity to abide by the laws or kindergarten knowledge of decent and honorable politics took advantage of BaRa’s pat on his back , and began to act without caring two hoots for Democracy or the local body whose representatives have been duly elected on the people’s votes.

Mervyn’s gang of goons attacked the house and sisters of Vice Chairman of the local body today.

What is next tomorrow? ??

WikiLeaks: Gota And Basil Are To Provide Political Cover To Mahinda

January 16, 2012 
By Colombo Telegraph –

Colombo Telegraph“Moreover, one of their biggest roles is to provide political cover to the President. The President often has Gothabaya and Basil take credit for decisions so he can appear less involved in actions that earn the GSL criticism at home and abroad.” the US Embassy Colombo informed Washington.
Sometimes he avoids decisionmaking altogether by delegating many responsibilities to Gothabaya or Basil, allowing him to avoid blame for unpopular decisions.
The Colombo Telegraph found the related leaked cable from the WikiLeak database. The cable is classified as “CONFIDENTIAL” details the Presidend Rajapaksa’s decision making process. The cable was written on May 15, 2007 by the US Ambassador to Colombo Robert O. Blake.
Ambassador Blake wrote “The President is often reluctant to make decisions and will stall for time, particularly on important issues. Sometimes he avoids decisionmaking altogether by delegating many responsibilities to Gothabaya or Basil, allowing him to avoid blame for unpopular decisions. The most notable example of the President’s stalling tactics is the slow progress of the All Parties Representative Committee (APRC) process and the delay in the submission of the SLFP devolution proposals to the APRC.”
“The relationship between the President and his brothers, obviously, is a family one as well as a political one. There is much that we don’t know about how they interact. Nonetheless, it is clear that the President’s brothers play an important and influential role in shaping GSL security and political policy. Moreover, one of their biggest roles is to provide political cover to the President. The President often has Gothabaya and Basil take credit for decisions so he can appear less involved in actions that earn the GSL criticism at home and abroad. The concentration of power in the Presidency means that Mahinda Rajapaksa, with the help of his brothers, has a unique opportunity to advance key national interests. Thus far, he has failed to use that power to develop a national consensus on a devolution proposal that could form the basis for renewed peace negotiations.” ambassador Blake further wrote.
Sri Lanka Muslims in mosque demo
BBCSinhala.com27 April, 2012
Charles Haviland 
BBC Colombo Correspondent

Sri Lanka mosque

Demonstrations have been taking place in Sri Lanka by Muslims angry about hardline Buddhists’ threats against a mosque.
They are also indignant at a government order that the mosque, in the town of Dambulla, should be demolished and rebuilt elsewhere.
Protest
After an unusually packed Friday prayers at this Colombo city congregation, hundreds of mainly young men thronged the street protesting against the monks’ threat to knock down the mosque at Dambulla because it’s allegedly built on land declared sacred by Buddhists.
Mohamed Fazal who was among the protestors said that Buddha never meant anything like that where other religions cannot be practised.
"It is over 50 years old, that mosque, it’s almost 60 years, renovations has to take place for a 50-year-old mosque – doesn’t mean that it’s expansion,he said.
He accused the government of pandering to Buddhist chauvinism and said it was time that Sri Lanka separated the state from its majority religion.
The demonstrators waved the national flag to show their allegiance and said some people were preaching racism and sectarianism.
The government is dominated by Sinhalese Buddhists but denies favouring one group over others.
A spokesman on security matters, Lakshman Hulugalle, issued a statement not mentioning the Dambulla incident but saying the country was a multicultural one where people live in harmony.

Friday prayers
In Dambulla itself Friday prayers went ahead under tight security with no street protests.
But there were Muslim demonstrations in a number of cities and most of the businesses in the Muslim-dominated bazaar district of Colombo were shut.
The government says that not just the mosque but 72 structures in what’s called the sacred area of Dambulla will be moved within six months. That is a highly controversial decision.

Robber Barons, Medamulana Politics And The Performance Of Miracles


April 27, 2012By Samanmalee Unanthenna -
Colombo Telegraph“This country, with its institutions, belongs to the people who inhabit it. Whenever they shall grow weary of the existing government they can exercise their constitutional right of amending it or their revolutionary right to dismember or overthrow it”.
Abraham Lincoln, Inaugural Address, 1861
Several months ago, in an article I wrote, I gently chided Dr Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri for his comment that we should make up our minds to live with this regime for the next 15 years. Reading his recent interview in the Divaina dated 15th April, 2012, it is clear that Dr Dewasiri has changed his mind. He has no intention of waiting 15 years anymore; in fact, he does not want to wait even 15 months! What has happened during the last several months to have brought about this change, not just in Dr Dewasiri, but many others?
It would be good for His Excellency to remember the words of Lincoln who proclaimed that citizens have the right to not just to vote out a government, but if necessary “dismember and overthrow” it.
Clearly, the economic consequences of the Rajapakse regime are becoming intolerable. Apart from the favoured 1% who are profiting by the regime’s excesses, the rest of us fight on a daily basis to cope with the rising cost of living. It is not unusual to see people buying two carrots, one egg, half a loaf of bread, 100gms of sugar; more seriously, even cutting down on essential medication because that too has become a luxury we cannot afford. When Minister Bandula Gunawardene arrogantly claimed that a family can survive on Rs 7,500.00 per month a more conscientised people would have marched up the Ministry of Education and physically hurled him out on to the street.
Perhaps, all of this would have been somewhat tolerable, had the regime shown any sensitivity to the woes of the people. But what this regime has excelled in is twisting not just truth, but hard evidence to suit its agenda. Thus, the countries that abstained from voting in favour of the US resolution in Geneva, were actually supporting Sri Lanka; political activists and journalists are not being abducted but handing themselves into police stations in order to obtain a free ticket out of this country; the price of goods is rising in order to keep up with the rising incomes of people. Governor Ajit Nivaard Cabraal cites the number of SUVs on the roads of Colombo as evidence for how well the economy is doing. How out of touch can this ‘people’s government’ be?


Buddha wept as we beat our women



Groundviews

Groundviews
54% of adolescent girls in Sri Lanka feel that a husband is justified in beating his wife. The UNICEF Global Report Card on Adolescents 2012 however is not available yet to try and unpack this further. What do they mean?
Surely, they cannot be suggesting that the arbitrary violence that some wives are subject to in Sri Lanka is acceptable; burned rice that results in cut lips and black eyes? It must be wives that were somehow overly flirtatious with another man. Wives that have behaved, or even worse, dressed, inappropriately. Wives that have proved to be whores!
What about those husbands that use wives like dogs? Psychologists call it displaced aggression, commonly known as kick-the-dog syndrome. Surely the adolescent girls can’t mean these husbands? Their wives did nothing more than open the door and welcome them home.
What about the husbands that come home inebriated and then proceed to beat their wives to a pulp for looking at them the wrong way? Do the 54% think this is justified?
Our friends at the Alcohol and Drug Information Centre (ADIC) have a theory that the alcohol socialization process in Sri Lanka begins with the mother at the fence discussing with her neighbour her husband’s need to consume alcohol due to the various problems he faces. ADIC says this results in young people (who accompany their mother to the fence as kids) turning to alcohol to solve their problems – meka bonna ona prashnayak!
Do you think the mothers at the fences talk about how beleaguered their husbands are to rationalize their still bloody noses, or visible grab marks on arms? Perhaps the 54% have stood by holding on to maternal hems listening to why this is ok, understandable even, that’s it, understandable.
Do you think that this level of acceptance among young adolescent girls mirrors our own as Sri Lankans?
Violence is under reported here.  As a Nation, we’re also on record refuting allegations that we in anyway mistreat women. Apparently we revere them, and have placed them in the highest offices of the land as a symbol of our respect and adoration. This ridiculous response however was not pilloried by our free and easy going mainstream press. We seem to accept that this is just the way things are in Sri Lanka…
Is it a really surprise then that 54% of young adolescent girls think that wife beating is acceptable?
We did a series of workshops for the Rotaract Club in 2010 and also 2011 that included a discussion on violence in relationships. Over two thirds of the participants, predominantly from Colombo, affluent, English speaking, agreed that a man can in fact hit a woman, if the woman has done something to deserve it… defining what deserved a violent response in relationships ran the gamut from overcooking rice to being unfaithful. We were surprised at the levels of acceptance that first year, and then, as we did more workshops and listened to what were rational and well thought out justifications for intimate partner violence, our surprise soon gave way to disbelief and finally almost resignation.
This is the way we are. Simple, really. It’s not even about insidious forms of patriarchy. There’s nothing insidious about our acceptance of intimate partner violence… or at least, it’s no more insidious than us using the term intimate partner violence in a bid to be inclusive of men and women who face emotional and physical violence in their relationships, regardless of marital status and sexuality. No, in Sri Lanka, we’re honest, open, even proud of our patriarchal weltanschauung. A man is a man, with man responsibilities and commitments, and similarly, a woman is a woman, with woman obligations and duties. Those who fall between and into the cracks… well, tough, this is Sri Lanka.
Recently we have wondered if Sri Lanka’s patriarchy has its roots in Buddhism. You might think this an unnecessarily reductive approach to what has long be acknowledged as an amalgam of anthropology, religion (especially the people of the book) and their resultant socio-cultural influences. But still, we have to examine our contemporary expressions of Buddhism, which must surely be derived from the various influences just outlined, including the Judeo-Christian God of those who colonized us for nearly 450 years.
Religion’s role in patriarchy is well documented. It is steeped in power. Just read the Ten Commandments. They were written for men who owned slaves, donkeys and women. Nietzsche, before syphilitic insanity claimed him – a judgment from God, of course – spoke at length of how faith and belief was used to manipulate the masses. The herd. The priests didn’t believe in the lie of God, and most crucially heaven and hell. They merely perpetuated it.
Have we men similarly perpetuated a lie that it is in fact normal i.e. the norm, to slap our women about, especially when they deserve it?
Do we believe this, or do we find it convenient? Are we afraid that our women may wake up to the fact that we’re bullies and cheats and, in general, loathsome? Surely this is unnecessary Feminist vitriol? Next thing you know, I’d be advocating that all women become lesbians? That’s what feminists do apparently, even the men.
This last week, we’ve been forced to engage with our Buddhist ways in Sri Lanka.
When we heard of what happened in Dambulla, did we collectively shudder, or did we bang our hairy Sinhala chests in exultation? Nietzsche’s ascetic priest that believes not what he preaches was alive and well. Power was on display. Policemen and the armed forces were mocked and chided.
Is there a connection between Dambulla and the 54% of young adolescent girls who have beatings and marital rape to look forward to? Are they not both a reflection of what we have become… or even worse, who we’ve always been?
There are answers out there, but we mustn’t be afraid to ask the questions.
How do we recover? How do we help the 54% and the rest of our young girls feel self worth and value that will not perpetuate our peculiar patriarchy?
We’re as far from comprehensive sex education – any well structured programme addresses gender and patriarchy – in schools as we’re from freedom of speech. But how far is that really? What is the distance? How many miles to go before we sleep?
The shortest verse in the Bible is John’s Gospel Chapter 11, verse 35: Jesus wept.
This last week, as I watched and read of the ugly militant Buddhism that has raised its head and stripped itself of robes to jump up and down naked and unabashed, all I could see were tears in Buddha’s eyes. Today, reading of the 54%, Buddha’s tears continued to flow.
Buddha wept, and we, if we don’t laugh, we’ll cry too.


Abduction Fear Still Alive In Post-War Sri Lanka


April 27, 2012 

By Amal Jayasinghe -AFP
Amal Jayasinghe
Colombo TelegraphThe choice of vehicle was almost inevitable. While describing his terrifying abduction ordeal in Sri Lanka, political activistPremakumar Gunaratnam said his captors came in a white van.
The Sri Lankan-born Australian citizen says he was grabbed by six to eight gunmen outside his house in Colombo in April, stripped and then “sexually tortured” during his detention that lasted four days.
His colleague and fellow hard-left Marxist dissident Dimuthu Attygalle suffered a similar fate. He was also freed after four days in captivity, shortly after Gunaratnam was kicked out of the country.
Unlike others to have disappeared since the end of the country’s Tamil separatist war in May 2009, they both lived to tell their tales after diplomatic pressure from Australia.
Being “white-vanned” — it has become a verb synonymous with being abducted in Sri Lanka — was a widely reported tactic employed by the security forces to deal with troublesome opponents during the island’s ethnic war.
But rights activists such as the Asian Human Rights Council say more than 50 people have been kidnapped in the past six months alone, highlighting what they say are continuing abuses on the Indian Ocean island that is re-emerging as a popular holiday destination.
“I believed they were going to kill me after they took me away at gun point,” Gunaratnam, 47, told reporters via Skype from Australia after he was deported. “They blind-folded me, tied my wrists and legs and sexually tortured me.”
“I am lucky to be alive and one of the very few to have survived an abduction by security forces. But, this is not a question about me, but about democracy and human rights in Sri Lanka,” he added.
Attygalle, 43, a Sri Lankan national, said she was taken to the same place where Gunaratnam was being tortured.
“They said I should enjoy a comfortable life abroad without doing politics in Sri Lanka,” Attygalle said. “I thought they would kill me, but I told them I expected something like this and that I am not afraid to die.”
She was blindfolded and then later dumped in a Colombo suburb.
“Even after the official announcement of the end of that (Tamil separatist) conflict, there has been no end to abductions,” the Hong Kong-based Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) said.
“A tacit policy that the use of abductions may be extended, not only to counter insurgency but also to the suppression of any opposition to the government, has been followed by all recent governments.”
The AHRC said the only way Colombo could answer allegations of its involvement in the “white van abductions” was by demonstrating “credible action” to stop kidnappings.
The abductions of Gunaratnam and Attygalle came two weeks after the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in Geneva urged Sri Lanka to probe alleged war crimes committed in the final stages of its war.
“Though the UNHRC called the regime to order… abductors in white vans have thumbed their noses at the world and continue to ply their trade with impunity,” said Kumar David of the South Asia Analysis Group think-tank.
The government denies any involvement in the abductions and says police cannot be expected to prevent criminals using the tactic to settle scores.
Rights groups concede that at least some of the documented abductions are likely to be by criminals taking advantage of the climate of fear and the inability of police to find the perpetrators.
“You must understand that we are a country emerging from nearly four decades of war,” spokesman and acting media minister Lakshman Yapa Abeywardena told AFP.
“There may be several groups still carrying arms… Police can’t be expected to be behind everyone to stop this.”
In the cases of Gunaratnam and Attygalle, they were both luckier than Tamil newspaper editor N. Vidyatharan, 52, who was grabbed by gunmen as he attended a friend’s funeral in Colombo suburb in February 2009, three months before the war ended.
Vidyatharan was bundled into a white van, stripped and assaulted. He was then handed over to the same police unit where Gunaratnam was dumped by his captors and held for two months without charge.
“Several big countries put a lot of pressure on the government when they heard I was abducted,” Vidyatharan told AFP. “I did not think they would free me. My prayer was for a quick death when they started assaulting me.”
He has since given up his newspaper work and maintains a low profile.
Journalist Poddala Jayantha, 47, was mugged and taken away in a white van in June 2009, stripped and assaulted and then dumped on a roadside with a warning to stay away from media activism.
He said he had been a key figure organising the funeral of anti-establishment editor Lasantha Wickrematunga who was killed by unidentified gunmen in January 2009.
Police have so far made no arrests in connection with any of the high profile abductions and the Sunday Leader editor Wickrematunga’s murder remains unsolved.