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

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

வவுனியா அன்பகம் சிறுவர் இல்லத்தில் விபூசிகா ஒப்படைப்பு:- குளோபல் தமிழ்ச் செய்தியாளர் - கிளிநொச்சி:-வவுனியா அன்பகம் சிறுவர் இல்லத்தில் விபூசிகா ஒப்படைப்பு:- குளோபல் தமிழ்ச் செய்தியாளர் - கிளிநொச்சி:-

வவுனியா அன்பகம் சிறுவர் இல்லத்தில் விபூசிகா ஒப்படைப்பு:- குளோபல் தமிழ்ச் செய்தியாளர் - கிளிநொச்சி:-
GTMNகடந்த 13-03-2014 அன்று தர்மபுரம் முசுறன்பிட்டி பகுதியில் இடம்பெற்ற சம்பவத்தை தொடர்ந்து ஜெயகுமாரியும் அவரது மகள் விபூசிகாவும் கைது செய்யப்பட்டிருந்தனர். இதனை தொடர்ந்து தாய் ஜெயகுமாரி பூசா முகாமுக்கு அனுப்பட்டுள்ள நிலையில் இன்று 17-03-2014 மகள் விபூசிகா வவுனியா அன்பகம் சிறுவர் இல்லத்தில் கிளிநொச்சி மாவட்ட நீதிமன்றினால் அனுப்பி வைக்கப்பட்டுள்ளார்.

இன்று பிற்பகல் 2 மணியளவில் கிளிநொச்சி மாவட்ட பொது வைத்தியசாலையிலிருந்து கிளிநொச்சி மாவட்ட நீதிமன்றுக்கு அழைத்துச் செல்லப்பட்ட விபூசிகாவை பொறுபேற்க பல சிறுவர்கள் இல்லங்கள் முன்வந்த போதும் நீதவான் வஹாப்தீன் அவர்கள் வவுனியா அன்பகம் சிறுவர் இல்லத்தில் அனுமதித்துள்ளார்.

மகாதேவா சிறுவர் இல்லம், செஞ்சோலை சிறுவர் இல்லம் என்பன சிறுவர் நன்நடததை அதிகாரிகளினால் சிபார்சு செய்யப்பட்ட போதிலும் வவுனியா அன்பகம் சிறுவர் இல்லம் அருட்சகோதரிகளின் பராமரிப்பில் இருப்பதால் விபூசிகாவும் அண்மையில் பூப் அடைந்த சிறுமி என்பதாலும் பெண்களின் பராபரிப்பிலுள்ள அன்பகத்திற்கு கிளிநொச்சி நீதிமன்று அனுமதிதுள்ளது. இதனை தொடர்ந்து வபூசிகா அருட்சகோதரிகளால் வவுனியா அழைத்துச் செல்லப்பட்டுள்ளார்.

நீதி மன்றில் இன்று பெரும்பாலான சட்டத்தரணிகள் அனைவரும் விபூசிகாவிற்கு ஆதரவாக தங்கள் வாதங்களை முன்வைத்தனர் என்பது குறிப்பிடத்தக்கது.

வன்னியில் தொடரும் பதற்றம்; வெள்ளை வானில் வந்தவர்களால் ஒருவர் கடத்தல்
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logonbanner-118 மார்ச் 2014, செவ்வாய்

புதுக்குடியிருப்பு பகுதியில் வைத்து வெள்ளை வானில் வந்த நபர்களினால் இளைஞர் ஒருவர் கடத்திச் செல்லப்பட்டுள்ளதாக பிரதேச மக்கள் உதயன் ஒன்லைனிடம் உறுதிப்படுத்தி உள்ளனர்.


உடையார்கட்டு தெற்கு, உடையார் கட்டு பகுதியில் வசித்து வரும் மயில்வாகனம் யசீகரன்(34) என்கிற இளைஞனே இன்று மதியம் 12.30 மணியளவில்   கடத்திச் செல்லப்பட்டுள்ளார்.

குறித்த இளைஞர் புதுக்குடியிருப்பு பகுதியில் இயங்கிவரும் வெதுப்பகம் ஒன்றில் வேலை செய்துவருவதுடன் இவர் ஒரு மாற்றுத்திறனாளி என்பதுடன் முன்னாள் போராளி என்பதும் குறிப்பிடத்தக்கது. என  பிரதேச செய்திகள் தெரிவிக்கின்றன.
Sri Lanka: Free Prominent Rights Defenders

Arrests of Ruki Fernando and Father Praveen are Attempts to Silence Critics

Human Rights WatchMARCH 17, 2014
(New York) – The arbitrary arrest and detention of prominent human rights defenders is an attempt to silence criticism and divert the spotlight from ongoing abuses, leading global and Asian human rights monitors said today in a joint statement.

Release HRDs Ruki Fernando and Fr. Praveen form Sri Lankan Police custody - Observatory

Monday, March 17, 2014

SRI LANKA BRIEF''The Observatory condemns the arrest and judicial harassment of Mr. Ruki Fernando, Rev. Praveen Omi and Ms. Balendran Jeyakumari, which seem to merely aim at sanctioning their peaceful human rights activities, and calls upon the authorities of Sri Lanka to release them immediately and unconditionally. ''
MARCH 18, 2014
The arbitrary arrest and detention of prominent human rights defenders is an attempt to silence criticism and divert the spotlight from ongoing abuses, leading global and Asian human rights monitors said today in a joint statement.

The statement was issued by Amnesty International, Forum Asia, Human Rights Watch, the International Crisis Group, and the International Commission of Jurists.

Ruki Fernando of the Colombo-based INFORM and Father Praveen Mahesan, a Catholic priest, were arrested in Kilinochchi on March 16, and are believed to be detained without formal charges under Sri Lanka’s notoriously draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA).

“The Sri Lankan authorities need to release Fernando and Father Praveen, and end the ongoing state harassment of human rights defenders,” said David Griffiths, Amnesty International’s deputy director for Asia Pacific.

“How can the international community take Sri Lanka’s claims to respect rights seriously when rights defenders continue to face intimidation and criminal charges for demanding accountability and human rights protection?”

The police Terrorism Investigation Division (TID) detained and questioned Ruki Fernando and Father Praveen after they sought to ensure the welfare of 13-year-old Balendran Vithushaini, who had been ordered into probationary care following the arrest of her mother, Balendran Jeyakumari, on March 13. Both mother and daughter are active opponents of enforced disappearances in Sri Lanka and have been prominently featured in international media coverage of demonstrations by families of the disappeared, most recently in Jaffna in November 2013 during a visit by British Prime Minister David Cameron.

Fernando and Father Praveen were questioned separately in two different buildings for more than three hours by several TID officers. Lawyers acting on their behalf were given contradictory information about the arrests and the reasons for their detention. The most recent information is that Fernando and Father Praveen have been taken to police Terrorism Investigation Division headquarters in Colombo, and their lawyers are still seeking access to them.

Fernando and Father Praveen have not been charged to date, but according to Sri Lankan Police spokesperson Senior Superintendent Ajith Rohana, they will be charged with “attempting to create instability among communities” and “allegedly promoting separatism” under the Prevention of Terrorism Act.

The PTA has been widely criticized by Sri Lankan civil society, international monitoring organizations, and United Nations bodies. In its report, Authority without Accountability: The Crisis of Impunity in Sri Lanka, the International Commission of Jurists documents how provisions of the PTA have resulted in arbitrary detention, contravened suspects’ right to a fair trial and due process, and facilitated torture and other ill-treatment and enforced disappearances.

The human rights groups said that the arrests are particularly disturbing since a resolution on Sri Lanka’s failure to address accountability is under discussion and will be voted on soon at the ongoing Human Rights Council (UNHRC) sessions in Geneva. The international community has long called for Sri Lanka to take meaningful steps to end its culture of impunity.

“This ongoing campaign of reprisals against those speaking out against human rights violations shows the extent of the government’s impunity,” said Sam Zarifi, Asia director at the International Commission of Jurists.

“The international community, through its voting at the Human Rights Council, must judge Sri Lanka not by its promises, but by its actions.”

In spite of two prior resolutions by the UNHRC in 2012 and 2013, Sri Lanka has taken no measurable steps towards ensuring justice for the victims of its civil war, and has instead launched an aggressive campaign against those who advocate for accountability. Human rights defenders, activists, journalists, and civil society members who are critical of the government have regularly been threatened and harassed. Those who have an international profile, such as Fernando, face particular government hostility.

“Sri Lankan authorities systematically clamp down on those who seek to reach out to the international community, especially around significant events such as the Human Rights Council sessions or the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting,” said Evelyn Balais-Serrano, the executive director of Forum-Asia.

“Instead of protecting human rights defenders, the latest arrests show the Sri Lankan government is stepping up its aggressive stance towards those seeking justice and answers.”

The arrests also call into question the Sri Lankan government’s stated commitment to improving respect for human rights since the end of the armed conflict with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam in 2009, the groups said.

“Arresting peaceful activists known for their work with victims of rights violations from all ethnic communities is not a way to build trust and restore relationships damaged by the war,” said Jonathan Prentice, the International Crisis Group’s chief policy officer.

“If sustainable peace is to be more than an illusion, the rights of Sri Lanka’s victims and human rights defenders to speak freely and safely must be protected.”

The organizations stressed that Fernando and Father Praveen should be given full rights while they remain in detention. Under international law, including the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which Sri Lanka is a state party, people deprived of their liberty must be promptly informed of the reasons for their detention, be given prompt and regular access to lawyers, and be promptly brought before a judge or judicial officer.

The rights organizations pointed out that Sri Lanka’s security forces have a well-documented history of custodial torture. Human Rights Watch’s 2013 report, We Will Teach You a Lesson’: Sexual Violence against Tamils by Sri Lankan Security Forces, documented sexual violence and other torture by the TID and other security forces.

“Human Rights Council members should demand the immediate release of Fernando and Father Praveen and be clear that this will not deter them from adopting a necessary resolution on Sri Lanka,” said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch.

“The arrest of these human rights defenders shows just how important it is for the international community to stand up for human rights in Sri Lanka.”

Arrests of Sri Lankan activists condemned by Foreign Office++

MONDAY 17 MARCH 2014
Ruki FernandoChannel 4 NewsThe arrest of two prominent human rights activists in Sri Lanka is condemned as "not acceptable" by British Foreign Office Minister Hugo Swire, writes Callum Macrae.

Arrest of Ruki F and Fr.Praveen will complicate the search for an honest solution of the National question


JDS photo

Monday, March 17, 2014

SRI LANKA BRIEFThe arrest in Sri Lanka of Rev. Fr. Proveen and Ruki Fernando
We the Catholics of the entire Roman Catholic Diocese of Jaffna, comprising of Kilinochchi, Mullaitivu and Jaffna Districts are sad and perturbed to know from the media that Reverend Father Proveen Mahesan, resident at Amathipuram, an Oblate settlement and Rukki Fernando a Human Rights activist of the South have been arrested in the Kilinochchi area and have since been taken to Colombo for questioning by the TID.

Rev. Fr. Proneen Mahesan omi (Oblate of Mary Immaculate) was the former Director of the Centre for Peace and Reconciliation in Jaffna and was a keen activist promoting Peace, Forgiveness and Reconciliation activities here, going from village to village training especially the children there, in these thoughts and attitudes. In fact he has formed very many volunteers to train and cultivate these considerations and mentality in other children in each area besides those already touched by him.

For true reconciliation, injustices have to be identified or surfaced, victims identified, forgiveness promoted, perpetrators recognized and enticed to repent and seek pardon for their wrong doings.

Thus along with his activities of training children in reconciliation he also collects data about Human rights violations such as extra judicial killings, enforced disappearances, unjust arrests, unending detentions etc.

Similarly, Ruki Fernando too was a real Christian and concerned about justice to all irrespective of religion, ethnicity or cast. Along with his numerous activities, memoranda etc to promote justice to all, he was concerned also about individuals, groups and races denied of their basic and human rights. Being firmly convinced that Sri Lanka can achieve true peace and progress only through the implementation of a just solution to the problems of the Tamils of Sri Lanka, though a Sinhalese by birth, he was a keen defender of the ethnic rights of the Tamils of Sri Lanka and was also a firm defender of those promoting such rights and being victimized for being involved in promoting such rights.

It is reliably reported that a lady's husband and father of one child had been 'lost' through enforced disappearance by the security forces.

They had therefore become keen HR activists in their efforts to relocate their lost one. They had taken part in many demonstrations etc towards this end along with hundreds of others suffering from similar fate.

It is also reported that the residence of this defenceless mother and daughter in Kilinochchi  was unlawfully surrounded by the security forces and the mother subsequently arrested and taken into detention presumably as a threat to all those who take part in such HR activities.

We understand that this priest and Ruki were involved in mercifully investigating into the circumstances surrounding the plight of that defenceless mother and child. As a further threat to such HR Defenders these two too have now been arrested and detained.

We therefore wish to point out that such activities of the security forces will complicate the search for an honest solution of the National question and further expose Sri Lanka to International intervention.

These are two persons who are sincerely involved in the true welfare of their Motherland, however unpalatable they may appear to be to the wrongdoers and anti-national, extremist and lawless elements let loose in this Country.

We therefore appeal to you, as the chief Executive of this Country to cause a sincere evaluation of the events surrounding the present plight of Ruki Fernando and Fr. Proveen and order their immediate release to continue their lawful activities.

We appeal also for the early release of the already victimized mother mentioned above again made to undergo further suffering through unlawful detention, agony and anxiety about her child.

Yours truly

A. Santhiapillai
Coordinator, Justice and Peace Desk
Bishop's House, Jaffna
2014-03-17

IFJ calls for global protest against arrest of two Sri Lankan human rights defenders

18 March 2014
The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) has called for a strong international protest in response to the outrageous arrest of two highly-respected human rights advocates in Sri Lanka late last night.
Ruki Fernando, one of Sri Lanka’s most prominent human rights activists and close friend of the IFJ, was detained alongside Fr. Praveen Mahesan, a Roman Catholic priest and the former director of the Jaffna-based Center for Peace and Reconciliation, around 10 p.m. on March 16 in Kilinochchi by Sri Lanka’s Terrorist Investigation Division. The pair was meeting villagers in the area to investigate recent police and military harassment of villagers.
Grave fears are held for the safety of the two men while they remain under arrest. A division spokesperson Ajith Rohana said they were arrested on charges of “creating communal disharmony and inciting racial hatred.” The two were transferred to Colombo for further interrogation.
IFJ said: “It is reprehensible that the Sri Lankan Government would lay these charges against brave and dedicated campaigners for human rights and free speech. These arrests are part of a disturbing pattern of harassment, intimidation and detention aimed at silencing voices in Sri Lanka – a pattern that is on the increase and that is observed by journalists and human rights globally.”
These arrests fit within what IFJ affiliate the Free Media Movement (FMM)describes as a “war against journalism” in Sri Lanka. Since 2005 more than 80 journalists have been forced to flee the country.
In a statement, IFJ affiliate the Free Media Movement (FMM) said: “Ruki Fernando is a leading human rights defender in Sri Lanka, who works tirelessly with immense commitment to protect and promote democratic rights including freedom of expression rights. Fr. Mahesan is a religious leader who enjoys people's confidence and respect for his dedication to humane ideals, including human rights.
The IFJ said: “For his dedication and readiness to help the cause, Ruki Fernando has earned huge respect among his colleagues in Sri Lanka and around the world. He has written several articles documenting human rights and freedom of the press violations in Sri Lanka. 
As the attention of the ongoing Human Rights Council (UNHRC) sessions in Geneva is drawn to Sri Lanka’s human rights record, these arbitrary arrests reconfirm the intensifying suppression of media and human rights each time the Government of Sri Lanka comes under scrutiny on human rights issues.
IFJ said: “These are outrageous charges that cut deep to the heart of the deeply disturbing human rights issues confronting Sri Lanka. The frequency of these assaults demonstrates that the Sri Lankan Government believes it can ignore global opinion.” The IFJ, FMM and the IFJ affiliated Sri Lanka Working Journalists Association (SLWJA) call for their immediate release as well as access to their families, lawyers and medical aid.
For further information contact IFJ Asia-Pacific on +61 2 9333 0950 
The IFJ represents more than 600,000 journalists in 131 countries
Find the IFJ on Twitter: @ifjasiapacific

Find the IFJ on Facebook: www.facebook.com/IFJAsiaPacific  
Sri Lanka; Asia and Pacific; Press Releases; Attack on Journalist; arrest; ruki; #FreeRukiAndPriest; war on journalism

Update on the Killinochi three

Sril Lanka Campaign for Peace and Justice18/03/2014
Dear friends,

I am sorry to say that not much has changed with respect to the three brave activists currently held without evidence in Sri Lankan Jail. 
  • Jeyakumari remains in Boosa detention centre, her daughter remains with children's services.
  • Outrageously lawyers and family members still haven't been allowed to see Ruki and Fr Praveen. We do at least now know where they are: in the HQ of the Terrorist Investigation Department in Colombo. We are told that they have been visited by the National Human Rights Commission, and that they appeared well, but we feel that nothing other than family and legal visits will reassure us on that score.
  • Under the terms of the draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act all three can be detained without trial for up to 18 months. Ruki and Fr Praveen have not even been charged yet while Jeyakumari has been charged with harbouring a suspect. If they are not released Ruki and Fr Praveen should be produced before the courts within the next 2 days for charging. They are under suspicion of the patently absurd charges of supporting terrorism and fermenting ethnic discord - which carries a 20 year sentence.
  • There appears to be a general crackdown across Sri Lanka with local news reporting on at least four other arrests, one apparently involving a severe beating and one involving a pregnant woman being detained. Local journalists have also tweeted pictures of the significantly increased military presence around the town of Killinochi.
Meanwhile with respect to the campaign for their release:
We will of course keep you posted on any new developments. We'd finally like to leave you with the thought of how ridiculous it is that this man is currently in jail for fermenting ethnic discord:

Immediatly release Ruki Fernandao and Fr. Praveen Maeasan - Human Rights committee, Europien Parliament

Barbara Lochbihler, MEP writes to GoSL AMB

Monday, March 17, 2014

SRI LANKA BRIEF
Re: Sri Lanka – Arrest and detention of human rights defenders Ruki Fernando and Rev. Praveen Mahesan

Dear Ambassador Amza,
I am writing to you concerning the arrest of the human rights defenders Mr Ruki Fernando and Rev. Praveen Mahesan, who were both arrested and questioned by officers of the Terrorist Investigation Division (TID) in Killnochchi, in northern Sri Lanka on Sunday 16 March 2014. Ruki Fernando is an adviser to INFORM, a human rights documentation centre in Colombo, and Rev. Praveen Mahesan of the Oblates of Mary Immaculate (OMI) the director of the Centre for Peace and Reconciliation in Jaffna.

On the morning of 17 March, Ruki Fernando’s parents were issued with a Notice of Arrest stating that he had been arrested by the TID on alleged acts of terrorism and would be held for further investigation. It is not clear whether the family of Rev. Praveen Mahesan received a similar notice. At 1:30 p.m., the police confirmed that the human rights defenders had been brought to the TID Headquarters in Colombo. It is unclear whether charges under the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) have been formalised.

The two human rights defenders were arrested at approximately 10 p.m. on 16 March while visiting the Tharmapuram area of the Kilinochchi district to investigate the arrest on the previous day of Ms Balendran Jaykumari, a human rights defender campaigning against enforced disappearances, and her 13-year-old daughter. The police initially denied having detaining Ruki Fernando and Rev. Praveen Mahesan, but later confirmed that they had been arrested by a specially appointed unit of the TID. The office in charge of the Kilinochchi police further stated that they had been arrested as “they behaved in a suspicious manner” as they visited families of disappeared individuals.

The arrest of the two human rights defenders occurred while the United Nations Human Rights Council discusses a draft resolution on reconciliation, accountability, and human rights in Sri Lanka.

I am deeply concerned about the detention of Ruki Fernando and Rev. Praveen Mahesan, and believe that their arrest is solely motivated by their legitimate human rights work.

I urge the authorities in Sri Lanka to:

1.      Immediately and unconditionally release Ruki Fernando and Rev. Praveen Mahesan, as their arrest appears to be solely motivated by their legitimate human rights work;

2.      Ensure that the human rights defenders have immediate and unfettered access to their families and lawyers;

3.      Ensure that their treatment, while in detention, adheres to all those conditions set out in the ‘Body of Principles for the Protection of All Persons under Any Form of Detention or Imprisonment', adopted by UN General Assembly resolution 43/173 of 9 December 1988;

4.      Guarantee in all circumstances that all human rights defenders in Sri Lanka are able to carry out their legitimate human rights activities without fear of reprisals and free of all restrictions.
Yours sincerely,

Barbara Lochbihler, MEP

Chair of the Subcommittee on Human Rights,Europien Parliament

NB: Similar requests have also been sent to the Ambassador of Sri Lanka to Germany in Berlin, HR/VP Ashton and EUSR on Human Rights Stavros Lambrinidis.

Subtle Business Interests More Damaging Than Anti–Democratic Regime: Dhanapala Should Answer Conflict Of Interest Questions – Dr. Nirmal Ranjith

Colombo TelegraphMarch 18, 2014 
The former president of the Federation of University Teachers’ Association has strongly criticised the unethical behavior of the Dialog Axiata PLC board member and the key co-signatory of the Friday Forum and the former Under Secretary General United Nations, Jayantha Dhanapala for his continued lying over Colombo Telegraph blockade.
Dr. Nirmal
Dr. Nirmal
Dr. Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri urges Dhanapala to be “equally outspoken when business interests are cooperating with the anti-democratic regime.”
“This is a serious allegation. As a key public figure who is in the frontline in defending democratic rights in recent times, he has a duty to defend himself against this allegation. While acknowledging his role in raising his voice against the growing authoritarian tendency in Sri Lanka, I would like him to be equally outspoken when business interests are cooperating with the anti-democratic regime. Perhaps business interests are more damaging for freedom of expression and right to information than the state repression because the former is more subtle. I think, therefore, that The Colombo Telegraph has every right to ask Dr. Dhanapala for a clarification on this serious matter, and we the readers of the Colombo Telegraph too should do the same.” he said.
Related posts;
Dialog Board Director And Friday Forum Member Jayantha Dhanapala Fails To Stop CT Blockade On Dialog Network

Our Silence Towards Atrocities In North Invited Terror To Our Doorstep In South: UNP



Colombo TelegraphMarch 18, 2014
The United National Party is concerned about the recent arrests under the draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act in the North and the breakdown of law and order in the country.
Karu and Ranil colombotelegraph
Issuing a statement today the UNP said; “The UNP once again call on the people of this country, particularly in the South, to realise the gravity of the human rights situation. We have been misled numerous times by thinking that human rights are an issue of merely the people of the North. It is because of our silence towards the atrocities in the North that the terror of Weliweriya came to our doorstep in the South; it is because of our apathy at the killings of journalists in the North that Editors of national newspapers were killed in broad day light in the streets of Colombo; it is because of our inaction that this regime has been able to get away with crushing all our collective rights.”
We publish below the statement in full;
Recent developments in the North raise serious concerns about the human rights record of the ruling regime, while also creating doubt as to whether it is intentionally provoking international action in order to gain petty political milage.
                                                          Read More


article_image
By Dasun Edirisinghe-March 17, 2014,

The Federation of University Teachers’ Associations (FUTA) yesterday threatened to resume their suspended trade union action if the Higher Education Ministry did not respond to them before April 10.

Ministry had not implemented the agreement that the FUTA entered into with the government when they suspended the 100 days long strike in 2012, FUTA Executive Committee member Dr. Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri said, adding that the agreement had been signed by Economic Development Minister Basil Rajapaksa on behalf of the government.

"We will send a letter to the Higher Education Secretary today seeking s response before April 10," he said.

Dr. Dewasiri said that according to the agreement, the Higher Education Ministry and the University Grants Commission agreed to consult the FUTA when taking decisions regarding the private universities, but ministry did not inform them when issuing gazette notifications regarding private higher educational institutions.

He said the university autonomy was highly recognised by the agreement, but Higher Education Minister was taking his own decisions regarding universities at present.

The agreement proposed a committee to resolve salary issues and a special service for university teachers, but the Higher Education Ministry had yet to grant those promises, although the FUTA had submitted its names for the committee a year ago, Dr. Dewasiri said.

"We temporarily stopped the strike in 2012 on the assurance of Minister Rajapaksa and the agreement, but the Ministry now has forgotten it," he said adding they could resume the strike anytime, but will give time until April 10.

SRI LANKA BRIEFTuesday, March 18, 2014

NEW DELHI — Fears of a broad crackdown against rights activists in Sri Lanka have been heightened after the Sri Lankan police recently arrested two prominent human rights advocates and a woman who has made a public campaign of finding her missing son.
The arrests took place just as the United Nations Human Rights Council considers starting an inquiry into possible war crimes committed by government forces and separatists during Sri Lanka’s 26-year civil war.
vanni post.com

Ruki Fernando, one of Sri Lanka’s most prominent human rights activists, and the Rev. Praveen Mahesan, a Roman Catholic priest and the former director of the Jaffna-based Center for Peace and Reconciliation, were detained around 10 p.m. on Sunday by Sri Lanka’s Terrorist Investigation Department in Kilinochchi, a former rebel stronghold.

The Sri Lankan police said the two activists were being held under the country’s antiterrorism laws. “They have been arrested on charges of creating communal disharmony and inciting racial hatred,” said Ajith Rohana, a police spokesman. He said the two would be taken to Colombo, the capital, for further interrogation.

On Friday, the government arrested Jeyakumari Balendran, an advocate for efforts to find missing people, on charges of harboring an armed man. Her own son, a child conscript to rebel forces, is still missing after he reportedly surrendered to government forces in 2009 and then was pictured in a government publication about rebel rehabilitation. Ms. Balendran’s 13-year-old daughter was taken into custody on Friday and has since been given to child probation officers, the police said.

Military officials denied that Ms. Balendran’s detention was connected to her demonstrations on behalf of missing persons. But the multiple arrests sent a ripple of dread through the country’s human rights groups.

“These are dark days,” wrote Fred Carver of the Sri Lanka Campaign for Peace and Justice in an email.

The United States Embassy in Colombo released a statement on Monday expressing concern about the arrests and saying that as a result, “we remain convinced that continued scrutiny by the Human Rights Council is necessary.”

Five years after the end of a decades-long civil war in which government forces battled the Tamil Tigers — a notoriously brutal insurgent group — the Sri Lankan government has shown little appetite for any robust investigation into possible war crimes. Some 40,000 people, many of them civilians, are estimated to have been killed in the war’s final stages.

Two resolutions pressing the Sri Lankan government to investigate war crimes have already been passed by the Human Rights Council, but Sri Lanka’s failure to heed these resolutions has led some nations to call for an independent inquiry that does not depend on the government.

The end of the insurgency has been a boon for Sri Lanka’s economy, as well as for the political fortunes of the family of President Mahinda Rajapaksa. Roads have been rebuilt, tourists have returned and the pervading sense of unease that gripped the country for decades has largely evaporated.

President Rajapaksa is popular in Sri Lanka because of this turnaround, but an independent investigation of conduct during the war would be risky for him and his brother, Defense Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa, who led the war effort.

A version of this article appears in print on March 18, 2014, on page A4 of the New York edition with the headline: 3 Activists Held in Sri Lanka, Raising Fears of Crackdown. Order Reprints|Today's Paper|Subscribe