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

Thursday, December 13, 2012


SLA conscripted Tamil females admitted at Ki'linochchi hospital in mentally affected state

TamilNet[TamilNet, Wednesday, 12 December 2012, 11:59 GMT]
21 of around 100 Tamil girls, who were conscripted to Sri Lankan military in Vanni, were admitted in Ki’linochchi hospital in a mentally affected state on Tuesday night around 11:00 p.m. by the SL military from Paarathipuram in Ki'linochchi, parents of the victims told TamilNet. In the meantime, TNA parliamentarian Sritharan was at the hospital struggling to get permission to witness the plight of the victims. But, around 30 SL military personnel guarding the hospital were not allowing him to independently witness the state of the victims, the parliamentarian told TamilNet. 

Tension prevails as the kith and kin of the females are not allowed to meet them and journalists and civil activists are kept in the dark. There is widespread fear of sexual exploitation and harassment inflicted on conscripted Tamil girls in the SL military.

For more than 2 weeks parents were not able to get in touch with their daughters and they were in shock to learn that the victims were admitted to the hospital. 

Official explanation from the medical sources at the hospital was that 13 females were admitted in a “possessed” (Peay adiththu channatham aadiya) state. But, parents and relatives of the victims put the number at minimum 21. 

The victims were protesting against forced conscription to military service. During conscription, the families were promised that their daughters would be given office work and parents could visit them every Sunday. But, when the parents visited last Sunday they were not allowed. They may able to visit once a month, that too can’t be guaranteed, the parents were told.

In order to show that Tamils are joining the almost exclusive Sinhala military, announcements were made last month through loudspeakers and village offices that many privileges would be given to girls joining the ‘civil coordination offices’ the SL military would be opening soon in Vanni. The work promised was related to handling computers in the offices. The SL military visited schools in Vanni to hand-pick and coerce brilliant students there. 

Those who were coerced to join, numbering around 140, were kept at an SL military training camp at Krishnapuram that was earlier an academy for disabled fighters (Navam A’rivuk Koodam) in the LTTE times.

The girls who were taken for the SL military soon found out that they were recruited for uniformed service and soon felt coming out. They told this to visiting parents. There were arguments between parents and the SL military last week.

The girls were not allowed to return home even to prepare for the GCE O’Level exams falling this month.

They were not given with any professional military training either. The SL military told them that they would be taken on a ‘tour’ programme soon.

According to an inmate most of the girls were crying to come out, but they were intimidated by the SL military.

Around 10 of the girls had already managed to flee from the occupying SL military.

Around 8 girls were noticed in a mentally affected state last week itself. They were crying incessantly.

The SL military brought an exorcist to the camp to ‘treat’ the girls on Monday. According to sources close to the occupying military, the shaman priest, who conducted special rituals, told the SL military that 14 more would get possessed and one might lose life as spirits are haunting them.

Informed circles told TamilNet that the affected state of mind of the girls was due to sexual harassment inflicted on them in the night times by the occupying Sinhala soldiers. 

Like the colonial Portuguese and the Dutch creating Burghers to have a faithful community for them in the occupied colony, the Sinhala military is trying to create a community for it, social workers in Vanni said. 

Genocide is becoming official while international abettors never see any genocide taking place in the island, they further said.
Six more arrested yesterday.

Thursday , 13 December 2012
Six complaints were made to the Sri Lanka Human Rights Commission’s Jaffna Regional Office on yesterday Wednesday, by the relations of those arrested by the Terrorism Investigation unit was mentioned by Regional Coordinator T.Kanagaraj. The increase of complaints in regard with this arrest is 25.
 
Students, former rebels and many from different sectors are getting arrested in the Jaffna peninsula by the Terrorism Investigation unit from November month 30th
 
Three complaints had been received from Vanni district. Yesterday Wednesday, six complaints were recorded.
 
 Five persons were arrested on last Sunday from  Achchuweli locality and one person was arrested on Monday from the Chavakachcheri, are  the complaints recorded at the Commission.
Thursday , 13 December 2012
Sri Lanka: War is Over but Tensions Run High
Three years after the Tamil Tiger's defeat, the underlying issues that caused Sri Lanka's civil war are once again coming to a head.-December 13, 2012
Jaffna_students_walking_past_ruined_buildings_2007
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Jaffna, the capital of Sri Lanka’s Northern Province and once the bastion of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), is once again experiencing unrest.
Violent clashes broke out on November 27, Martyrs' Day for Tamil, between students of Jaffna University and Sri Lankan security forces. Each year Tamils use Martyrs' Day to honor friends and family members who were killed in the Sri Lanka Civil War (1983-2009). 
The civil war pitted the Tamil militant group, the LTTE (often called the Tamil Tigers), against the Sri Lankan government forces. The conflict was essentially an ethno-political struggle that had its roots in the early years of Sri Lanka's independence when Sinhalese leaders effectively transformed the country into a Sinhala-Buddhist state through a series of laws such as the controversial Official Language Act No. 33 of 1956, which made Sinhala the official language. The excluded Tamil population protested and demanded a government based on federalism where the Tamils in the east and north of the country would enjoy greater autonomy. When these calls went unheeded for decades, some Tamils formed the Tamil Tigers and began taking up arms against the government in 1983.

The 26-year civil war that ensued, which ended with the LTTE’s military defeat in 2009, would come to claim the lives of between 80,000 and 100,000 people, according to the UN. Some non-governmental organizations like the International Crisis Group say the number of deaths was actually much higher.
Since the LTTE’s defeat, Tamils have observed Martyrs’ Day by quietly “lighting lamps inside their homes.” This year, however, “some Jaffna University students decided to perform the rituals on campus,” E Saravanapavan, Tamil National Alliance (TNA) Member of Parliament (MP) representing Jaffna district told The Diplomat in a phone interview. According to Saravanapavan, this prompted Sri Lankan security forces to forcibly enter the student’s dormitories to prevent them from lighting lamps for Martyrs’ Day.
Tensions have always run high in Jaffna peninsula on Martyrs’ Day. Security forces are put on heightened alert in anticipation of a LTTE attack. These forces equate citizens observing Martyrs’ Day as them showing solidarity with the LTTE militant group. For Tamils, however, it is “a day of mourning, not just for dead LTTE combatants but also for the thousands of civilians, including their kin, who were killed in the war,” Saravanapavan says.
With Tamils determined to properly mourn their dead, and security forces equally determined to stamp out any show of support for the LTTE, it is nearly inevitable that Martyrs’ Day will be marked with some degree of confrontation and tension. What made this year’s Martyrs’ Day more complicated was that it coincided with Karthigai Theepam, a festival when Hindus decorate their homes with lamps.
Photo Credit: Wikicommons
Norwegian Ambassador serious concern towards university incidents


Thursday , 13 December 2012
Norwegian Ambassador has focused serious concern in finding the incidents held at the Jaffna University. He personally visited and discussed this with the Jaffna District Government Agent Suntharam Arumainayagam
Norwegian ambassador to Sri Lanka, Grete Løchen and Embassy Advisor Dakkrey Michael visited Jaffna district yesterday. A meeting was held at the Jaffna Government Agent office yesterday morning. The discussed lasted for one hour.
At the conclusion of the meeting, Jaffna District Government Agent said, the development projects which are processed in the Jaffna district was brought to their attention. 
The necessity of housing schemes to the Jaffna district people and the requirement for livelihood assistance was a request made to them for their assistance.  I also explained to them the working projects advanced by the Norwegian Refugees Assembly.
Regarding investment opportunities were discussed with them, and they showed more attention about other working projects.
They also asked me about the crisis faced by the fishermen located here, mainly the illegal intrude of Indian fishermen.
Finally when discussing about the current situation, they inquired from me some issues about the incidents occurred at the Jaffna university.
The Norwegian panel after meeting Government Agent, met northern provincial Governor G.A.Chandrasiri. They proceeded to Mullaitheevu after the discussions.
Thursday , 13 December 2012

Will the Tamils Lose the Plot Again?

Jaffna Sri Lanka
12 Dec, 2012
Photo courtesy Christian Science Monitor
Chaos and Fear
Much has happened in the space of three months. Soon after the Eastern Provincial Council election came the Divi Neguma bill and the subsequent calls for the abolition of the 13thAmendment. The impeachment motion against the Chief Justice and the recruitment of Tamil women to the military followed before the Maveerar Naal (Heroes’ Day) incidents in Jaffna. It would seem that the government is bent on creating chaos and fear.
The Present State of Affairs
In response to the negative Supreme Court verdict on the Divi Neguma bill, the government did two things: it unleashed a strong call for the abolition of the 13th Amendment to the constitution and set the wheels in motion to impeach the Chief Justice. It is highly unlikely that the company of Gotabaya, Wimal and Champika made a spontaneous decision to go public with a demand that strikes at the very heart of power devolution: it is a collective decision and the orders must have come from the very top. Abolishing the 13th Amendment, of course, is a long standing agenda of the Sinhalese extremists. But, the time at which Gotabaya Rajapaksa launched the offensive is what demands attention: the government shrewdly diverted the attention of the Sinhalese from the motives of the Divi Neguma bill to separatism. By issuing statements like ‘the TNA is attempting to accomplish what the LTTE failed,’ the government succeeded in evoking the ghost of the LTTE in the minds of the southerners.
It is plain that all protocols pertaining to recruiting for state service were bypassed in the recent conscription of Tamil women to the military. Two questions are worth asking: a. why recruit more to the military three-and-a-half-years after the end of war? b. why recruit women? The government has intentionally kept the Vanni people from returning to normality by limiting livelihood opportunities and robbing them of their lands—the most precious asset for the majority of the people. By preventing the war affected people from actually ‘settling,’ the government has prevented them from mobilising for any common cause, let alone a political cause; everyone in the region is busy thinking about the next meal.
The actions of the government’s Muslim allies, the Company of Rishad, Udumalebbe and Hisbullah, have deepened the division between the Muslim and the Tamil communities.[1] In addition to this, the government has been active Sinhala-izing—creating Sinhala settlements, maintaining a heavy military presence and building Buddhist stupas—the North and the East. There are already many disputes over national resources between the Tamils and the other two communities, and the problems will only get exacerbated with time. Through the impeachment motion against the Chief Justice, the government has sent a strong message to the judiciary: it would be a surprise if any member of the judiciary plucks up enough courage to rule against the Rajapakse bandwagon. The Courts would henceforth be the last place a Tamil would to look for justice.[2]
In forcibly entering the university hostels or in quenching the protests that ensued the next day by using force the army did nothing to improve its reputation: it did the opposite. On the surface, the way the government handled the Heroes’ Day incidents may seem like a mistake or an act of folly. It is not so. The government anticipated what happened on the 27th: military intelligence was present in areas surrounding the university and the hostel starting from Sunday (25th). Thus, it is clear that the army and the police had ample time to evaluate their modes of intervention; if indeed intervening was necessary. Yet, the forces resorted to barbarian conduct. What is even more interesting is the way the military has followed up on the incident. Many student leaders have been arrested on suspicion of—guess what—engaging in acts of terrorism. If the fears theDivi Neguma bill evoked in the minds of the Sinhalese were shadows, the way in which the state media is reporting the whole saga must make such shadows real.
The Future
What is obvious is that the government is intentionally toying with the Tamils. And what we are left with is a powerless Tamil community that is oppressed from all corners, and importantly with no avenue for justice—very similar to the university students of Jaffna. Frustration would build up and with a few encouraging words it could easily translate into a violent response. Surely this regime would love that; perhaps that is what it wants. Amidst all the chaos and fear, the real issues like reaching a political settlement, accountability, poverty and corruption will, naturally, be forgotten. The Rajapakse Brothers will continue in their merry way.
What remains to be seen is the response of the Tamils. Will they repeat the mistakes of the past? Or will they do things differently?

[1] Tamils, of course, cannot blame the Muslims here, for they are directly responsible for the origin of the division.
[2] It must be noted that anyone who doesn’t agree with the regime, regardless of his or her ethnicity, will be treated like an enemy. As the title suggests, this is just an evaluation of how recent developments impactthe Tamils.

HR group alerts on plight of Tamil women coerced by SL military


TamilNet[TamilNet, Wednesday, 12 December 2012, 13:22 GMT]
The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) on Tuesday forwarded a statement coming from the Women’s Action Network, expressing concern on the plight of Tamil women coerced into joining the SL military, The AHRC-forwarded statement for immediate release said that the Women’s Action Network (WAN), as a collective of 11 groups from the North and East, is deeply concerned by the recent efforts to recruit women into the SL military in the districts of Ki’linochchi and Mullaiththeevu. The statement details how the women were deceived and were taken by the SL military and thereafter intimidated not to leave. 

SL Military personnel of Mullaiththeevu and Ki’linochchi area were involved in the recruitment process and have targeted economically vulnerable families. In some villages it has been announced through loudspeakers or they have gone in-person and in a few others they have used the GS of the area.

Those recruited have been informed that they would be engaging in clerical work, or with the GS, that work will only be for a few hours, and that they would be able to work in their own areas. 

They have also been promised a pay of Rs.30,000 per month. Around 109 women applied and appeared for interviews. The information provided never mentioned that they will be working for the military and will have to join the military to perform these duties.

On the 5th of November 2012, the military took the women who registered their names for these jobs to the military camp in Bharathipuram in Killinochchi District. 

The women underwent a medical exam conducted by male military doctor and a male-nurse. All information was gathered in Sinhala, except for their names and addresses.

The military informed the women and girls that they would be in 03-month residential program to learn Sinhala and English.

On November 15th, male military personnel picked up the women from their homes and transported them to the Bharathipuram camp.

The first day was spent collecting detailed personal information of the women. A military function for new recruits was held on the 16th, the second day.

It was only then that the women realized that they were to join the military.

Some panicked and called their families, and informed the military that they did not wish to join. The military informed them that they could only leave after the function.

At the function, a female military officer stood next to each new recruit thus preventing the women from communicating with their families.

Fathers of these women had been garlanded and the mothers were given badges with the title of 'brave mother'.

As of 2nd December, mobile phones have been barred inside the camp.

The families were informed that the women have been provided with uniforms.

It is obvious that the women or the families were not provided with accurate information, and therefore not allowed to make an informed choice. Moreover these activities have violated the gazette notification procedures, which are required by law.

The WAN noted with concern the militarised environment, including military involvement in economic activities, administration and even reconciliation, and said that this is not conducive for human development further debilitates the already fragile existence of this community.

Even in the occasions of civil service appointments (Montessori teaching and working in government farms run by the military) training have been given to women through the involvement of the Civil Defence Department of the Sri Lankan military rather than the relevant civilian administration bodies, the Wan statement said.

War is Over but Tensions Run High

Thursday, 13 December 2012
Three years after the Tamil Tiger's defeat, the underlying issues that caused Sri Lanka's civil war are once again coming to a head.
Jaffna, the capital of Sri Lanka’s Northern Province and once the bastion of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), is once again experiencing unrest.
Violent clashes broke out on November 27, Martyrs' Day for Tamil, between students of Jaffna University and Sri Lankan security forces. Each year Tamils use Martyrs' Day to honor friends and family members who were killed in the Sri Lanka Civil War (1983-2009).
The civil war pitted the Tamil militant group, the LTTE (often called the Tamil Tigers), against the Sri Lankan government forces. The conflict was essentially an ethno-political struggle that had its roots in the early years of Sri Lanka's independence when Sinhalese leaders effectively transformed the country into a Sinhala-Buddhist state through a series of laws such as the controversial Official Language Act No. 33 of 1956, which made Sinhala the official language. The excluded Tamil population protested and demanded a government based on federalism where the Tamils in the east and north of the country would enjoy greater autonomy. When these calls went unheeded for decades, some Tamils formed the Tamil Tigers and began taking up arms against the government in 1983.
The 26-year civil war that ensued, which ended with the LTTE’s military defeat in 2009, would come to claim the lives of between 80,000 and 100,000 people, according to the UN. Some non-governmental organizations like the International Crisis Group say the number of deaths was actually much higher.
Since the LTTE’s defeat, Tamils have observed Martyrs’ Day by quietly “lighting lamps inside their homes.” This year, however, “some Jaffna University students decided to perform the rituals on campus,” E Saravanapavan, Tamil National Alliance (TNA) Member of Parliament (MP) representing Jaffna district told The Diplomat in a phone interview. According to Saravanapavan, this prompted Sri Lankan security forces to forcibly enter the student’s dormitories to prevent them from lighting lamps for Martyrs’ Day.
Tensions have always run high in Jaffna peninsula on Martyrs’ Day. Security forces are put on heightened alert in anticipation of a LTTE attack. These forces equate citizens observing Martyrs’ Day as them showing solidarity with the LTTE militant group. For Tamils, however, it is “a day of mourning, not just for dead LTTE combatants but also for the thousands of civilians, including their kin, who were killed in the war,” Saravanapavan says.
With Tamils determined to properly mourn their dead, and security forces equally determined to stamp out any show of support for the LTTE, it is nearly inevitable that Martyrs’ Day will be marked with some degree of confrontation and tension. What made this year’s Martyrs’ Day more complicated was that it coincided with Karthigai Theepam, a festival when Hindus decorate their homes with lamps.
We are not prepared to act as government's Muppets. Sri Lanka Teachers Federation

 Thursday , 13 December 2012
“We are not prepared to act as Muppets to the government expected injustice as trade unions or government’s paid worker was stated by Sri Lanka Teachers Federation General Secretary Joseph Stanlin. 
He forwarded a report two days back to Western Province Chief Minister Prasanna Ranathunga and Provincial and Zonal Educational Directors.
He had pointed out this statement in his report.
His report further quotes, our Federation organized a sick notice protest along with 13 trade unions which turned successful. Meanwhile the Education Ministry officials could not absorb this, organized with their supported trade union which acts as Muppets assuming to disturb our protest, but ultimately their attempts failed.
Allegations were that we have threated the teachers and had organized the sick leave protest, which is completely a false allegation.  However the Education sector officers threatened the Principals to furnish the details of Teachers who were engaged in the sick note protest held on last 4th.
They had informed if there are any problems to discuss with them. We submitted 6 demands on last October month 24th and discussions were held, but the officials without giving us any reply evaded.
The important demand submitted by us, is a settlement to the Teachers salary crisis. But they did not corporate. After this we decided for the protest.  If there is a problem to the Teachers we would come forward and will protest for a settlement. We will not get scared in any manner towards this.
We opposed to the incident of military intruding inside the Jaffna university students’ hostel and for causing fear to the education.  We show concern in the welfare of the school students to university students.
Currently some in the trade unions to sustain their position are functioning as paid workers of the government. But we and the other trade unions will not hesitate in jointly organizing protest to achieve our demands.
If government does not take heed for our demands a massive protest will be held in the forthcoming January month which we have decided. To prove our strength all should corporate was mentioned in his report.

SRI LANKA: Crisis in the University of Jaffna --- A new wave of old scenarios

AHRC LogoDecember 13, 2012
The Asian Human Rights Commission expressed grave concern over the present situation in the University of Jaffna. Most students are unable to attend lectures as the whole university is in a state of stalemate. The government has added a “national security” mood to the crisis, rather than taking it as a part of the problem in higher education in Sri Lanka. Therefore, the AHRC has identified the present crisis in the University of Jaffna as a part of the larger issue of higher education in Sri Lanka, as well as the reflection of socio-political trend in the Jaffna Peninsula.
Military deployed together with the police at Kaladdi junction, close to the University of Jaffna.
According to reliable AHRC sources there is not a single free entry point to the University without passing at least five police and army posts. Every student, academic and non-academic staff as well as visitors are highly monitored by the security forces deployed in the area. Not only are they observed from the outside, but the security forces can also enter the university premises any time, without prior notice. It was reported in the last week of November that the security forces in civilian clothing entered the student hostels without any prior notice and many students were questioned by those security forces.
In these circumstances, the situation in the University of Jaffna has become a nightmare and it highlights the real pain of militarization within the Peninsula - more than three years after the elimination of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.
Who is in control of Jaffna? What is happening in the area? Under what authority could the security forces, without any warrant, drag students or any other suspect and put them in cages without allowing anyone to visit them? At the beginning of this week seven of eleven students who were arrested by the police a week ago were released after interrogations. Some of them are still under detention. The situation in the university is the same, though normal routine in the university is yet to be re-started. It is reported that illegal detention, torture, and other human rights violations are frequently being committed against these students.
The Jaffna Campus of the University of Ceylon was established as the sixth campus of the University of Sri Lanka on 01 August 1974 at the Parameswara College premises at Thirunelvely, about four kilometers from Jaffna Town. The campus became an independent and autonomous university, bearing the name University of Jaffna, on January 01, 1979.Since that time the university has become remarkably influential in the socio-political arena, not only locally, but countrywide, as well as internationally. In its short history, the University has groomed many intellectuals to take up their well-earned positions as independent thinkers in society. At the same time the University has faced tremendous difficulties from the various parties over its independence in administration. Despite this, the University has continued to be functional and presently the University of Jaffna has more than 2000 students and over 200 academic and non-academic staff members.
“University of Jaffna has been functioning in the midst of different problems to sustain its academic activities. The University has faced several ups and downs and remained to fulfill the expectations of the society,” 2 noted the newly appointed Vice Chancellor of the University, Snr. Prof. (Ms) Vasanthy Arasaratnam. However, many parties within the University who had communications with the AHRC claimed that she is just another political appointee influenced by one of the Armed-Tamil Political Parties who instill social and political fear in the area. They point to a paper at the American Society of Engineering Education which has a document from the Auditor General’s raising questions of fraud by her in purchasing. With the war and political considerations by the President in the appointment of Vice Chancellors rather than merit, the university even has suffered the indignity of a previous Vice Chancellor being seen naked with a student.
Meanwhile, leaked information from the University highlights heavy corruption during recent years. Reports confirm that many of academics had to leave the university as part of political, military and militant interference. During the conflict time there were many scholars who were directly or indirectly victimized, while some senior lecturers including Dr. Rajini Tiranagama sacrificed their lives. Rajini was a remarkable person who fought to remove blindness in the social system and perhaps she helped to open a new door to change the way of thinking among the people. “A life is a life. Whoever takes a life must be exposed independent of party feeling. We wanted to show, that in the first place, we valued life”,3 Rajini was quoted by the University Teachers for Human Rights ( J) of which Rajini also was once part and founding member.
The socio- political climate in the peninsula changed continually after the ethnic riots in 1983, though revolutionary ideas were seeded long before then. This social change was monitored by the UTHR (J) in their report issued in 1989.
“Up to the early 80’s, there was amongst a sizeable section of Tamil youth, a healthy interest in political issues accompanied by idealism. The issues were often those of social injustice, their national and internatio­nal dimensions. And quite surprisingly there was a remarkable absence of communalism which was poisoning the air in the country. But the 1983 riots and the involvement of foreign resources in the militarisation of our youth ensured that the tendency which gained ground was that of extreme nationa­lism that worshipped military success, and by its nature became intolerant. Every other political tendency felt impelled to imitate this, even at the cost of coming out second or third best. Politics died as homicidal divi­sions increased. We know well our recent history which led to a remarkable indifference to any kind of social or political effort on the part of today’s university students. Guns seemed to determine everything. In this atmosphere of disillusionment, militant groups were finding themselves obliged to strengthen themselves against each other by taking in very young persons through a variety of questionable methods.”4
The AHRC observed the situation in the area become more unsafe for social justice and freedom of ordinary citizens as the area became the main target of militarization. It has created tremendous stress among the people, and social fear is a part of daily life.
In the last three years there have been reports of a number of human rights violations including torture, arbitrary arrests on fabricated charges, illegal detentions, disappearances, extrajudicial killings and sexual abuses. Not only had human rights defenders, journalists and other social activists been victimized but a number of ordinary people also. Reliable sources who communicated with the AHRC claimed that the State Security Forces as well as the Government sponsored armed militant groups engaged in series of violent acts while the Government swept the complaints under the carpet without taking them seriously. The cumulative result of all this has now manifested itself to project an image of tension similar to the one during conflict time.
The government is justifying these acts with claims that those victims had maintained links with the LTTE and their proxy organizations. This argument was brought in to justify all actions taken by the state forces against the people in the area during post-War era. However it does not address the real problems in the area and leaves the door open wide for the entry of social disorder.
The days of the LTTE as a real terrorist threat in the country are over, and the authorities should stop interfering with the liberty of civilians on the pretext of fighting terrorism. Arresting someone simply because he or she held an office in the Vanni in a civilian capacity and had to meet persons in the LTTE in relation to his work is counterproductive and only undermines the community’s ability to rebuild by stripping it of its more accomplished and capable members. In any case, whatever information such a person could give under torture is likely to be useless gossip rather than having any relation to terrorism.5
It was observed that in last few elections held by the Government using their cynical manipulations the outcomes were not in favour of the Government. The majority of the area reject Government policy. The crisis of the University of Jaffna is a manifestation of all this.
The local media reported that dozens of students were arrested under the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) after being attacked for their peaceful protest against militarization and its manifestations on November 27. The arrested students were first taken to Colombo and then to Vavuniya where the TID (Terrorism Investigation Division) has a special office, more than 140 Kms away from the University. There those students were “interrogated.”
Meanwhile, the President of the Teachers’ Association of the University of Jaffna, Mr. Parameswaran Thamodaran, has told the Media that many students have abandoned their studies and some had even left the country in fear.6 Adding further, he said that during a protest against a military raid on the Jaffna University, 10 students were arrested, and six of them were released, while parents have been told that the remaining four others are being detained at the Welikanda Army camp.
The AHRC, supports and endorses the well thought out petition sent by the Members of the University Community, Jaffna to President Mahinda Rajapaksa expressing their concerns regarding the situation in the University. The petition has explained the situation in detail, including how the state forces interfered with students’ life.
Here is an excerpt from the said letter:
It began with the Army entering the students’ hostels on 27th November, ostensibly to prevent the lighting of flames. The occasion had a political association that has polarized society and the community needs space to discuss its significance and to sort out its own differences. Default on the part of the Government through continued presence of the military without tangible moves towards a political settlement, has helped the mobilisation of youthful feelings to turn it into a day of defiance, where its original association becomes less important.
Your Excellency well knows, having been in politics for several decades and in the centre of two Southern insurgencies, that the defeat of an insurgent force does not extinguish the feelings or causes that gave rise to it. Such feelings are not a police matter, but are rather to be handled as part of the political task of reconciliation and rebuilding.
We have all tried hard to make our university one that respects differences and advocates pluralism. The Army entering the halls, separating the Sinhalese from the Tamil students and showing hostility to and even threatening the latter not only undermines our efforts but has serious implications for the future.
The demonstration on the following day, 28th, was a protest against the previous day’s incident, carrying slogans that were well within the norms of democratic protest. If the students had been allowed to walk the short distance from the main entrance on Parameswara Road and reenter by the Science Faculty entrance nothing untoward would have happened. Rather than calm the situation matters were made worse by the Police physically attacking the students.
The same night a petrol bomb exploded at the Sri-TELO camp behind the University causing no physical harm to anyone. Security around the university, including by several agents in mufti, had been very tight and we find it puzzling that the perpetrators got away scot-free. Even more remarkable is that the Kopay Police were able to come up with names of four persons to arrest over the incident, which evidently no one had given them. We are confident that these students had nothing to do with bomb throwing. Two were arrested at their homes before the night was out and two were handed over by the University authorities the following day. They were all detained under the PTA and taken to Vavuniya.
There were several acts of harassment in the University by persons in mufti and the interrogation of an assistant lecturer over the phone over his casual reference to heroes’ day in response to a text query by a Sinhalese student. These reveal an attempt to tackle a political question through heavy handed intimidation. Instead of putting an end to the insanity, more followed.
On the morning of 6th December, the university administration was given, by a man who claimed to be from the TID, a list containing names of ten persons (see annexe) to be produced at the Jaffna Police Station, without any intimation of the reasons or the charges against them. The news shocked the university community and parents were distraught. One sickly mother of a student handed over the Police by the University was so upset with the University’s helplessness that she threatened to take poison.
A study of the list convinced us that all these students were wanted only because they were well known as prominent in student activities or were victims of police assault on 28th November, whose pictures featured in news reports on the internet.
The practice of the University authorities ‘handing over’ students gives rise to some questions and we are not sure of the legal situation. At the same time we realise that parents sometimes wish for the university to be involved out of fear that otherwise something dire might happen. What does concern us however is that, while complying with police requests to hand over students the University authorities fail to question the police as to the reasons and to seek speedy resolution? The situation is so bad that even lawyers are mostly afraid to represent students and ask them to seek help from the University.7
However, the government was engaged in a different political battle in the South while ignoring the cause of the problem at the University in Jaffna. It seems as if the University Grants Commission also has been turning a blind eye to all this without contributing to a solution.
The AHRC agrees with the conclusion made in the petition to the President by the Jaffna University Community.
The result is to cause considerable fear, anxiety and trauma among the students that is detrimental to the academic character of the University. More importantly dragging innocent students through police stations and police cells, as happened in the 1970s and 1980s, is frightening at the start and then hardens them and breeds contempt for the law and for the officers entrusted to uphold it. Where there should be trust and co-operation there is fear, resentment, and then defiance. Surely, we do not want the consequences of that again.8
It is a day dream if the Government think that they can win the mind of the people by spreading fear among them. Government must allow the enjoyment of the basic norms of the freedoms of ordinary life and stable peace.
As per the observations of the AHRC, terror and violence have become the foundation of social control by the Government. It has assumed arbitrary and ruthless authority to be effective. This is widespread and is reaching everyone even though it has not claimed as many lives like it did during conflict time. "Kill a chicken to scare the monkey" is a traditional saying which is being demonstrated continually by the government and its allies. In other words punish one to deter a hundred. This is the actual path that the government is walking through today in this Country.
The AHRC urges the government to facilitate harmony so students could live as students and get fulfilled intellectually and as persons – instead of restricting their freedom and damaging their future. The Government must seriously take this opportunity to heal the wounds without spreading their racial nihilistic sickness to undermine the ordinary way of life.
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1.University of Jaffna, General Information:- http://www.jfn.ac.lk/aboutus.htm
2.From the VC's Desk...... http://www.jfn.ac.lk/
3.University Teachers for Human Rights (Jaffna) - Report No 3 - Janauary/August 1989 - Released in November 1989
4.University Teachers for Human Rights (Jaffna) - Report No 3 - Janauary/August 1989 - Released in November 1989
5.UTHR(J), Special Report No: 34 , Date of release: 13th December 2009
6.BBC- Sinhala service - http://www.bbc.co.uk/sinhala/sri_lanka/2012/12/121211_students_army_camp.shtml
7.Letter to the President by the Jaffna University Science Teachers’ Association, University of Jaffna, Sri Lanka
8.Ibid.
Is govt. serious about reconciliation?

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December 11, 2012,
There are times when silence is NOT golden. Despite regular newspaper columnists like your own 'Shanie' (NOTEBOOK OF A NOBODY - every Saturday), bemoan the fact that the general public keeps its lips sealed in the face of the many vital issues that constantly crop up, most of us ordinary citizens seem to subscribe to the belief that 'discretion is the better part of valour when it comes to matters of public concern.

Shanie's article last Saturday, 8th December, headed: Reconciliation requires a culture of respect for the other" opened with a very relevant quotation from the report of the LLRC and she went on to highlight the nasty incident in the Jaffna University a week back when the Army behaved as if it were still at war in Jaffna. Tamil students were subjected to verbal abuse with guns pointed at them and some were arrested the next day for no legitimate reason and were, at the time of writing, being held in a camp in Vavuniya,

Your front page of Monday (10) carried a news report regarding a petition to the President, signed by nearly one hundred Jaffna dons, accusing the government of default "through the continued presence of the military, without tangible moves towards political settlement".

Now, your "Opinion" page in today's paper, Tuesday, Dec. 11th), carries a strongly-worded letter from Dr. Janaki Ratnasiri, Past General President, SLAAS, deploring 'Shifting SLAAS annual sessions from Jaffna University'. I quote Dr. Ratnasiri:

"Though it was not mentioned specifically, every one of us could guess that this is an outcome of the recent attack by the armed forces on the University students, particularly the Tamil students. The stupidity of this action is well described in the article on reconciliation by Shanie appearing in The Island of Dec. 8: "It is certainly an action that will cause embarrassment to the government as it is totally against the principle of reconciliation and freedom of speech within the university campus. The armed forces were only sowing seeds of dissent among the students, which was quite unnecessary. It is an attempt to repeat the history that everyone now wants to forget. The government should hold a full investigation on this incident and punish those who have acted in an excessive manner."

But, does the government ever feel embarrassed? It seems to move happily from one blunder to another. As an ordinary citizen, I wonder if the government talks with its tongue in its cheek when it utters pious platitudes on peace and reconciliation and makes no genuine, tangible attempt to bring healing to all our people. Silence is not always golden. There are times, such as now, when we ought to speak out boldly, if we care enough about future prospects for lasting peace and the forging of a united Sri Lankan nation.

Anne Abayasekara

FUTA press statement on Jaffna university problem


Sri Lanka Guardian
( December 13, 2012, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian)  While  expressing concern  about  the  recent beating,  harassment  and arrests  of  students  in  Jaffna, FUTA reminds the authorities of its demands made in the recent protest to keep the universities free of  political  interference. Not  only  does  this  hinder academic  enterprise  but  leads to  unrest  in  our universities. We  in  particular  demanded  that  the  training  of  new  entrants  in  army  camps,  which included an  ideological  component,  and  the  imposition  of  Rakna  Lanka  Security  Service  having close association with the Defence Ministry, be rescinded. This  mentality  has  led to a country that spends far more on spying and attempting to control students than on educating them. We see that the regime  considers  the  youth  as  a  force  to  be  feared  rather  than  nurtured  for  the  future  of this country.
The young must be given leeway to express their feelings, opinions and visions within the limits of the law. The first condition for this is that the State must be law abiding with a serious commitment to uphold the law. We cannot agree more with our colleagues in Jaffna that “Default on the part of the Government  through  continued  presence  of  the  military  without  tangible  moves  towards  a political settlement, has helped the mobilization of youthful feelings to turn [27th  November] into a day of defiance, where its original association becomes less important.”

 No  laws  were  broken  in  lighting  flames  on  that  occasion  and  the  army  intrusion  into  halls of residence and separating Tamils  from Sinhalese students to subject the  former to threat and abuse, is very much to be regretted. The following day’s police attack on a student demonstration carrying placards  demanding  respect  for  democratic  rights  was  further  exacerbating  the  first blunder.  The arrest  of  students  subsequently  under  the  PTA  seems  an  attempt  to  find excuses  for  the Government’s misconduct.

 The FUTA fully supports the wish of our colleagues to have in Jaffna University an institution that fosters pluralism, in which it is prepared to help, although the Government’s action was contrary to this aim.

 FUTA condemns the use of the PTA to deal with a problem requiring political effort and a political settlement. To set an example in the observance of the rule of law  the Government should first set up an  inquiry  into  why  the  Police  brutally  assaulted  students  who  were  not  responsible  for  any breach  of  the  law.  As  the  Jaffna  University  community  has  said  in  its  letter,  these  arrests were purely  vindictive.  The  fact  that  a  magistrate’s inquiry has not been held into the assault raises questions about the role of the bypassed and intimidated Judiciary in law enforcement.

Against the harshness of the  action, we have seen no evidence of anti-state terrorism  in  Jaffna. Of the nine students detained six  have  been released. The three students who remain  in  custody  from 10th  December, the anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, are P. Tharshananth, K. Jenemejayan and S. Solomon. Take the case of Tharshananth. He was assaulted with metal rods by  persons  believed  to  have  security  connections  on  18th  May  2012  and  was  admitted  to hospital and treated for head injuries. The occasion was when students planned to observe the anniversary of civilian deaths in Mullivaykkal. Tharshananth was secretary to the University Students’ Union.

 If  the  Government  had  evidence  that  Tharshananth  was  involved  in  terrorist  activities,  the right thing to do was to arrest him and charge him in court rather than injure him. Further, to suggest that this  closely  watched,  frightened  person  was  involved  in  terrorist  activity  between  the  time he  was beaten  up  and  the  27th    of  November  is  hard  to  believe.  His  arrest  only underscores  the  vindictive character of the State. We are bound to regard the students arrested as innocent of any crime. 

 Once more we agree with our colleagues in Jaffna that ‘dragging  innocent students through police stations  and  police  cells,  as  happened  in  the  1970s  and  1980s,  is  frightening  at  the  start and  then hardens  them  and  breeds  contempt  for  the  law  and  for  the  officers  entrusted  to uphold  it.’ The country has seen the effects of breeding contempt for the law in several devastating insurgencies in the  North  as  well  as  the  South.  Justice  must  not  only  be  done,  but  must  be seen  to  be  done.  A government that deviates from this maxim condemns us all to a bleak future.

 We demand that the Government must either charge the students detained  in court or release them forthwith.
 
Dr. Mahim Mendis
Media Spokesman- FUTA
 12th  December 2012