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, April 1, 2014

Let’s Awake From The Fearful Palsy Fallen Upon The People

By Upul Jayasuriya -April 1, 2014
Upul Jayasuriya -BASL President
Upul Jayasuriya -BASL President
Colombo TelegraphAs I rise before this august assembly for the second time since my last convocation having been re-elected. As the President of the Bar Association of Sri Lanka It is my pride and privilege to place before you some of our achievements and state the way forward in the ensuing year with reference to the issues that we are encountering as the Bar in Sri Lanka.
As you may be aware, the year 2013 will go down in the annals of the BASL given the numerous projects that were added on to its calendar.
The Manupatra Website was introduced free of charge to the BASL membership granting access to over 1 Million judgments including Federal and Supreme Court judgments of India as well as Federal Supreme court judgments in the US and House of Lords judgments in the UK. This would have otherwise cost US$ 550/- per member.
In addition over 24 Seminars have been held in almost every High Court jurisdiction in the past year and will be repeated in the year 2014.
For the first time, the National Law Conference was held over 3 days at Hotel Kandalama,
The first-ever National Labour Conference will be held spanning over two days at the Hotel Cinnamon Lakeside in May 2014.
Further, we have commenced the refurbishment of the BASL Auditorium at a cost of Rs. 9 Million out of which a substantial part of it, is funded by the family of the late Dr. HW Jayawardena the 1st President of the Bar Association of Sri Lanka. This auditorium will be named in memory of late Dr. Jayawardena after completion.
We will be refurbishing and developing the Colombo Law Library which is more than two centuries old at a cost of nearly Rs.6 million.                                                            Read More

Fishy politics in Palk Bay


Tuesday 01st April 2014

Domestic politics in Lanka and imminent Parliamentary elections in India have brought into sharp focus the issue of fishing in Palk Bay.
The Government in Colombo seems unable to reconcile itself to conceding a role for the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) controlled Northern Provincial Council (NPC) in dealing with India on this issue; only Ministers from Delhi, Colombo and Chennai, Tamil Nadu State and not the NPC have met on this issue.

The Proscription of the Tamil Diaspora: War by other means

01 APRIL 2014
BY KRISNA SARAVANAMUTTU
I woke up this morning and found that two organizations I work very closely with, the National Council of Canadian Tamils and the Tamil Youth Organization, are now banned terrorist front organizations in Sri Lanka. Any politician, civil society member or NGO that works with us from the island will be treated as a criminal. Any representative from these Diaspora groups who visits their homeland will be arrested under the Prevention of Terrorism Act.
Through the use of anti-terrorism legislation, Sri Lanka has long been able to designate acceptable and unacceptable political objectives. With the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA), Sri Lanka redefined the legitimate political aspirations of the Tamil Nation into crime and security problems. From the Tamil United Liberation Front’s Vaddukkodai Declaration to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam’s Interim Self Governing Authority, Sri Lanka pursued a military campaign instead of negotiations in good faith. Sri Lanka butchered hundreds of thousands of Tamils under the guise of the PTA. Today Sri Lanka evokes the same PTA to deny fundamental civil liberties to Tamils under the occupation. The arbitrary arrest of Jeyakumari and her daughter; the late night rounds up of entire villages; checkpoints that restrict freedom of mobility; the persecution of former LTTE cadres is all a consequence of the PTA.
The current paranoia around terrorism in the Sinhala Nation comes from a well-conditioned populace, arising from decades of fear through the public policy of “Tamil Tiger Terrorist” discourse. The cultural fear of the Tamil Tiger reconstructed the Tamil civilian as the terrorist other in Sri Lanka. In Sri Lanka, every Tamil is a possible Tiger and every Tamil can be arbitrarily detained, harassed and killed.
The Tamil struggle for independence emerged as a reaction to a post-colonial state building process where the leaders of the Sinhalese Nation subjected the Tamils to riots, military aggression, and police brutality while denying them power sharing, employment opportunities, land rights, and access to higher education. Violent repression of peaceful politics compelled Tamil youth to take up arms. Sri Lanka’s war on the Tamil People, branded as a “terrorist problem,” internally displaced thousands. Thousands more were compelled to flee as refugees. We are the children of those refugees.
Even today the Diaspora—numbering over a million across the globe and over 300,000 in Toronto—continue to be a major factor in the island’s conflict. The discourse of terrorism regulates the activities of the Tamil Diaspora even after the military defeat of the LTTE. Vicki Sentas affirms, “targeting the Tamil Diaspora remains a deliberate foreign policy and counter-terrorism strategy” because the Sri Lankan Government “seeks to consolidate its victory over the idea of political self-determination for Tamils” (Sentas, 107). The end of war does not necessarily mean peace. Until a just and equitable political resolution is reached for the island’s intractable conflict, the demonization of the Tamil struggle will inevitably play out as Sri Lankan foreign policy.
Without a doubt, the proscription on the Tamil Nationalist Movement in the Diaspora seeks to create a wedge between Tamils abroad and Tamils in occupied Eelam. The intention of this process fits into the state’s overall strategy of genocide to isolate Tamils in the homeland from their kith and kin around the globe. The recent collaboration in Geneva of Eelam Tamils from the homeland and the Diaspora unambiguously raised the nature of our peoples’ oppression as nothing less than genocide and the struggle as nothing more than liberation. Eelam Tamils boldly stood on their own two feet to assert their sovereign rights as a Nation within the halls of Geneva. 
As of now, we, Tamil youth and students involved in the liberation struggle, are a people in exile, yet the day will come when our feet will touch the soil of our liberated homeland. The ban on the Diaspora will only strengthen our resolve to end the occupation and free the Tamil Nation.
© JDS

Krisna Saravanamuttu is the Advocacy and Research Director of the National Council of Canadian Tamils. You can follow him on twitter: @KrisnaS85

SL bans 16 overseas groups functioning as LTTE-fronts

SL bans 16 overseas groups functioning as LTTE-fronts
logoApril 1, 2014 
The Sri Lankan Government on Tuesday banned 16 groups operating overseas over their alleged links with terrorism, the Ministry of Defence said.
Defence Ministry and military spokesman Brigadier Ruwan Wanigasooriya said that the ban was enforced under a UN Security Council resolution 1373 which was implemented following the September 2001 terrorist attack in the United States. 
He said that apart from the Tamil Tiger rebels, the government has listed 15 other groups operating overseas who are keen on having a separate in Sri Lanka.
Among those listed are the Global Tamil Forum, the British Tamils Forum and the Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam, two influential Tamil Diaspora groups operating in Britain and the United States. “Under the ban legal action will be taken against anyone having links with those groups,” he said.
The ban also lists four influential Tamil Diaspora activists, Perinbanayagam Sivaparan alias Nediyavan, Reverend Father S.J Emmanuel, Visuvanathan Ruthirakumaran and Sekarampillai Vinayakamoorthy.
The move comes after most of these groups had been successful in their heavily funded campaigns to convince foreign countries to back a US-sponsored resolution at the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva last week.
The UN Human Rights Council was meanwhile informed by the Sri Lankan government that the Tamil Tigers were regrouping in the North of Sri Lanka following the end of the a 30 year war with the defeat of the rebels in May 2009. (Xinhua)
List of groups banned by Sri Lanka
01. Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam a.k.a LTTE
02. Tamil Rehabilitation Organization a.k.a TRO
03. Tamil Coordinating Committee a.k.a TCC
04. British Tamil Forum a.k.a BTF
05. World Tamil Movement a.k.a WTM
06. Canadian Tamil Congress a.k.a CTC
07. Australian Tamil Congress a.k.a ATC
08. Global Tamil Forum a.k.a GTF
09. National Council Of Canadian Tamils a.k.a NCCT
10. Tamil National Council a.k.a TNC
11.Tamil Youth Organization a.k.a TYO
12. World Tamil Coordinating Committee a.k.a WTCC.
13. Transnational Government Of Tamil Eelam a.k.a TGTE
14. Tamil Eelam Peoples Assembly a.k.a TEPA
15 .World Tamil Relief Fund a.k.a WTRF
16. Headquarters Group a.k.a HQ Group
How did the percentage of votes rise by 11% (67000 votes) after Matara District secretary's announcement? Can a vote be cast every 20 seconds?


(Lanka-e-News-31.March.2014, 11.00PM) The PAFFREL election monitoring organization disclosed the polling figures just an hour prior to the conclusion of voting as follows:

Colombo 44%
Gampaha 48%
Galle 40%
Matara 40% 
Hambantota 42% -45% 

and these figures were reported by the Lankadeepa newspaper and the other media Institutions too. 

The district Secretary for Kalutara U. D. S. Jayalal also told media that by 2.30 pm there was only 45% polling in Kalutara.

After the conclusion of voting, based on what PAFFREL revealed to the media, the figures were as follows:

Colombo district 49%
Kalutara district 60%
Gampaha district 50%
Galle district 55%
Matara district 55% (this was confirmed by the district secretary)
The figures as revealed pertaining to Hambantota voting was 60% to 64%. 

These figures were published by the Hiru media chain and other media Institutions.

Between the figures revealed after the polling closed and before there had crept in a huge gap as wide as between earth and the sky. 

The election department figures after the polling were as follows:

Colombo district 65.77%
Kalutara district 68.32%
Gampaha district 65.76%
Matara district 66.74% (11% more than the figures confirmed by district secretary.)

Leaving aside the rest of the figures, how come there crept in a 11% difference later in the count after the voting figure was confirmed by the district secretary in Matara? It is certainly possible to regard the voting figure revealed at 4.00 in the evening as 100% correct and is unnecessary to wait until the vote counting is announced. Hence the figure disclosed by the Matara district secretary cannot be swept under the carpet. 

The number of registered voters in Matara district is 608, 524. 11% of the votes is therefore 66937, and significantly the number of illicit polling cards that were found hidden in the office of Matara chief Minister candidate Rasaputra was around 40,000 just before the election.

Let us also look at what the Kalutara district secretary UDC Jayalal announced. According to him, by 2.30 pm at Kalutara, there was only 45% polling. The total number of registered voters in Kalutara is 881,814. Out of this 45% have voted means 396816 votes were cast. Then by 4.00 pm when after the counting the percentage of voting had suddenly risen to 68.32% - that is to 602,463 votes. In other words, the number of votes had increased by 205,647 within just one and half hours!

There were 4253 polling booths in the 6 districts. Then, in the Kalutara district, there should have been at least 700 booths. If 205, 647 votes had been cast at the 700 polling booths within one and half hours, three votes must have been cast every minute. That is one vote cast every 20 seconds.

This means that the voters of Kalutara during the last one and half hours of voting have performed a feat even breaking Ussain Bolt's record. 

It is well for every election official, political party and monitoring organization, before splitting hairs on the other election rackets of the crooked government, to focus their attention on this fraud with statistical proof.

How did the voting rise by 11% suddenly when the polling began, much above the figure disclosed earlier by the Matara district secretary? This is a most serious issue with grave portents because it is very suggestive that this poll rigging had taken place at every district. 

This rigging and fraudulent filling of polling boxes had occurred even in the previous elections monumentally under the MaRa regime. Still no answers have been found. No answers are sought too.

Will at least the answers be found after thunderbolt strikes the curse of the shawls?

Sri Lanka military rule stepped up in North, wartime restrictions re-introduced


Pass system reintroduced (File photo)

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

SRI LANKA BRIEFClamping down on civilian life in the North, the occupying Sri Lankan military has re-introduced pass system for fishermen in the North to access their seas, putting up check posts on the roads, dawn to dusk search operations and military patrols of armed soldiers in the Northern province, especially targeting coastal areas. In the meantime, the occupying Sri Lankan military has 'arrested' at least 44 Eelam Tamils ​​between 07 March and 27 March, news sources in Jaffna said. Most of them have been arrested in abduction style.

இலங்கைக் கடற்படையின் தாக்குதலில் தமிழக மீனவர்கள் நால்வர் படுகாயம்!

navy 4 
Tamillitar
கச்சத்தீவு அருகே மீன்பிடித்துக் கொண்டிருந்த ராமேஸ்வரம் மீனவர்கள் மீது இலங்கை கடற்படையினர் தாக்குதல் நடத்தியுள்ளனர். ராமேஸ்வரத்தில் இருந்து 50க்கும் மேற்பட்ட படகுகளில் சென்ற மீனவர்கள் இன்று காலை கச்சத்தீவு அருகே மீன் பிடித்துக் கொண்டிருந்தனர்.
அப்போது அங்கு வந்த இலங்கை கடற்படையினர் ராமேஸ்வரம் மீனவர்கள் மீது தாக்குதல் நடத்தினர்.
இதில் மோகன் என்பவருக்குச் சொந்தமான படகில் சென்ற மீனவர்கள் மரிய எட்வர்ட், விஸ்வநாதன், பாஸ்கரன், ரோனிமஸ் ஆகியோருக்கு பலத்த காயம் ஏற்பட்டது. மீனவர்களை தாக்கிய கடற்படையினர் படகில் இருந்த மீன்பிடி வலை, ஜி.பி.எஸ். கருவி மற்றும் உணவு பாத்திரங்கள் போன்றவற்றை கடலுக்குள் வீசினர். குடிபோதையில் இருந்த இலங்கை கடற்படையினர் கட்டை, இரும்பு தடி மற்றும் பிளாஸ்டிக் கயிறு ஆகியவற்றைக் கொண்டு மீனவர்களை தாக்கியதுடன், ‘இனிமேல் எங்கள் பகுதிக்குள் வரக்கூடாது’ எனக்கூறி அடித்துள்னர்.
இதையடுத்து, இன்று காலை கரை திரும்பிய மீனவர்கள் சிகிச்சைக்காக ராமேஸ்வரம் மருத்துவமனையில் அனுமதிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளனர். இதுகுறித்து புலனாய்வுத்துறை அதிகாரிகள் விசாரணை நடத்தி வருகின்றனர்.
இலங்கை சிறையில் இருந்த மீனவர்கள் அனைவரும் விடுவிக்கப்பட்ட நிலையில், மீனவர்கள் மீது தாக்குதல் நடத்த தொடங்கியிருப்பது மீனவர்கள் மத்தியில் பதட்டத்தை ஏற்படுத்தியுள்ளது.

58 Indian fishermen to be released today

58 Indian fishermen to be released todayApril 1, 2014 
logoFrom the 58 Indian Fishermen Sri Lankan jails will be released by the Indian Coast Guard Brought back to Karaikal port Tonight, Reported foreign media. HANDING The Indian Coast Guard in Turn will be released over 17 Lankan Fishermen From Their Ten Indian jails while BOATS will also be returned to Sri Lankan Navy at the international maritime boundary line today.
Indian media reported that 58 Indian Tamil fishermen released from Lankan jail and their 11 boats will also be handed over to Indian Coast Guard by Lankan Navy. They will reportedly be handed over to their local Fisheries authorities and sent back to their villages. 

Sri Lanka: Living in fear of the 'white vans'

The latest arrests in Sri Lanka are part of a campaign to deter witnesses from giving evidence to a new investigative mechanism, writes Yasmin Sooka.
Marchers protesting the UN and US resolution against Sri Lankan war crimes. (Reuters)
 YASMIN SOOKA
Mail & GuardianThe arrest on terrorism charges this week of two well-known human rights activists in Sri Lanka has sent ripples of fear through those who work for justice on the island, even though the two men were subsequently released. It was the timing, happening just days before the United Nations Human Rights Council votes on whether or not to hold Sri Lanka accountable for grave violations of international law during the final phase of the conflict in 2008-2009. An investigative mechanism under the office of the High Commissioner is envisaged in the current draft of the Resolution, which was tabled for voting on March 26. 
Many fear the latest arrests herald a new wave of intimidation and retaliation to deter witnesses from giving evidence to the new investigative mechanism. But the truth is we seldom hear what goes on in the dark heart of that island. There's already a campaign of revenge and intimidation under way – targeting low-level former rebels, their supporters and some Tamils who just speak out about war crimes and human rights abuses. 
I know this because I've analysed detailed testimony from 40 survivors of recent sexual torture at the hands of the Sri Lankan military for a forthcoming report, An Unfinished War: Torture and Sexual Violence in Sri Lanka, written with the Bar Human Rights Committee, England and Wales. 
This testimony is from young men and women who survived the horrors of the war, only to be abducted in Sri Lanka's notorious "white vans", tortured, raped and subjected to sexual violence. A quarter of those we interviewed had been abducted more than once; after the first incident they assumed wrongly that it wouldn't happen again. Almost half had tried to kill themselves after leaving the country. They would weep, shake physically and even rush to the bathroom to vomit as they recounted their ordeal over several days. The process also left its mark on the lawyers who took the statements, who said it was some of the most upsetting but fulfilling work they'd done. 
Lessons for the future
In the course of taking the statements we learnt a lot about the risks that witnesses from Sri Lanka face and there are lessons here for any international investigation in the future. 
Everyone we interviewed survived because their families managed to track them down and pay a bribe to the security forces. Many left the country illegally and almost immediately, still bruised and traumatised, without even seeing their spouses or parents. It was simply too dangerous. Even now many have lost touch because it's too risky to ring home; they know their calls are being intercepted. They are lonely and they need their families more than ever but don't dare to be in contact.
In several cases, a sibling or parent had been beaten, arrested or abducted, "disappeared" or murdered in retaliation for the escape abroad of one of our witnesses. Sometimes it's because the person abroad had given a media interview or taken part in an anti-government protest, unwittingly endangering their family in Sri Lanka. The abduction of a family member is one of the common triggers for the suicide attempts by survivors abroad. 
It's clear the Sri Lankan authorities are monitoring protests abroad, in cities like London, taking photographs or collecting them off the internet. Tamils abducted and tortured in Sri Lanka have been shown these photographs of themselves or others. In some cases their parents have been shown the photographs to identify their offspring.
Sophisticated recognition software
All the indications are that the Sri Lankan government now has sophisticated facial recognition software for identifying those of interest. They also have an extensive database now of Tamils from the former conflict areas to which they can match photos. Every survivor of the war was photographed, their personal details recorded in the giant internment camp in 2009. We now know that it's standard operating procedure for the security forces to photograph and fingerprint all those they abduct illegally in "white vans". This includes often photographing their bodies for scars from the war or previous torture sessions.
The security forces have many former rebels turned informer; several witnesses describe being turned in by hooded informers who nod when they recognise someone. Others describe turning informer themselves and identifying innocent strangers to survive themselves.  
What's surprising is how many Tamils assumed wrongly that it was safe to go home, years after the war. The typical story is they fled abroad on a student visa at the end of the war but then thought it safe to go back and visit ailing relatives. Some are picked up straight off an incoming international flight. In most cases it's a few days before the "white van" comes for them. 
Yasmin Sooka is a former commissioner on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and was responsible for the final report. In 2004 she was appointed by the United Nations to the Sierra Leone TRC and in 2010 was appointed by UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon to a panel of experts to advise him on the conflict in Sri Lanka. She is the present executive director of the Foundation for Human Rights in South Africa.

Army soldier arrested with fake notes worth Rs.2.7 million

logoArmy soldier arrested with fake notes worth Rs.2.7 millionApril 1, 2014 
An Army soldier was arrested by the Kegalle police in possession of Rs.2.7 million worth of fake Rs. 5000 and Rs. 1000 notes, the Police Spokesman stated.

The police found 520 fake Rs.5000 notes and 10 Rs.1000 notes at the soldier’s home while the equipment used to forge the notes including a laptop was found by the Kegalle police.

The suspect is a 30-year-old soldier attached to the Beragala camp who resides in the Pallegama area in Kegalle.

The Rs. 5000 note serial number is R/21 392082 while the Rs.1000 note serial number is S/37 686138 while police asked the public to report any forged notes bearing these serial numbers.
DSC01216One Sri Lankan death a day reported to Saudi embassy 

April 1, 2014
The Sri Lankan government has expressed grave concern about the large number of housemaids dying in the GCC with one senior official from the Saudi Sri Lankan Embassy reportedly saying one death was reported every day, it was reported.
Official figures show there are about 450,000 Sri Lankans – almost a third of the 1.5 million Sri Lankan expatriates in the Middle East - living in the kingdom, with the majority working as domestic workers.
According to a senior official from the Sri Lankan Embassy, an average of one death was reported every day, Arab News reported.
“The cause of death is mainly natural and very few cases are due to road accidents,” the official reportedly said.
Asked about the dead bodies of Sri Lankans lying in the kingdom's mortuaries, he said that there were about 20 bodies awaiting repatriation.
He said it sent about two bodies to Colombo daily to be received by relatives.

An official from the Sri Lankan Consulate in Jeddah said that in the western province it received four to five cases a month.

The Sri Lanka Economic Association (SLEA) said between January and October 2012, 75 percent of the bodies returned to Sri Lanka from Gulf states were women below thirty years of age; with majority of cases "determined to be deaths due to heart failure".

It also said the internal organs in most of the bodies "were reported to be missing".

SLEA recommended lobbying through international human rights agencies, better guidelines for Sri Lankan missions in the Gulf on employees' welfare and safety as well as registering all job agencies.

It also recommended harsh penalties for agencies which are not registered and a orientation program "for aspiring migrant workers to improve their soft skills, public relations, ethics and awareness of their rights and duties".  (Arabianbusiness.com)

'Good night' - transcipt shows MH370 pilot's last words

Channel 4 News
TUESDAY 01 APRIL 2014
The last words from the pilot of the missing Malaysia Airlines jet MH370 were "Good night Malaysian three seven zero", a file released today reveals.
The document differs from the original account of the last communication from the plane, which contained a more casual "All right, good night".
Malaysia released the full transcript of communications between the Boeing 777 and the local air traffic control officials before it dropped off radar on 8 March flying from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.
In a statement, Malaysia;s acting transport minister Hishammuddin Hussein said; "There is no indication of anything abnormal in the transcript.
"The transcript was initially held as part of the police investigation".
Minutes after the final radio transmission was received, the plane's communications were cut off and it turned back across Malaysia towards the Indian Ocean, according to military radar and satellite data.

Lessons to learn

The incident has highlighted two major areas where improvements areneeded - aircraft tracking and passenger data - according to International Air Transport Association (Iata) Director Deneral Tony Tyler.
Speaking at an Iata conference in Kuala Lumpur, he said; "In a world where our every move seems to be tracked, there is disbelief both that an aircraft could simply disappear and that the flight data and cockpit voice recorders are so difficult to recover."
He claimed the Air France 447 incident, when a plane crashed into the Atlantic in June 2009, brought similar issues to light a few years ago and "some progress was made".
"But that must be accelerated. We cannot let another aircraft simply vanish."

Journey into an Invisible war in Occupied Palestine

SabbahA filmmaker travels through the  exploring the relationship between Palestinians and Israeli.

Journey into an Invisible war
“We recognise that the  must be big enough to be viable, to be independent, to be prosperous. We will be generous,” Israeli Prime Minister  has said.
But his words have rang hollow.
In the face of international condemnation, the incremental encroachment of new Israeli onto Palestinian land goes on with little restraint.
With every square metre of territory that is taken, with every Palestinian olive grove that is burnt down, or house that is demolished, the land available for an independent  state shrinks a little more.
But why is the settlement movement so difficult to stop? Who is driving it and why? Is it destined to continue until there is no more Palestinian land to take?
In this film, French producer and reporter Paul Moriera travels through the West Bank to meet Palestinians and Israeli settlers.
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In , Moriera sees how the old Arab city is gradually being overwhelmed by Israeli incomers, whose security forces are imposing a bizarre street-by-street  on the Palestinians who have always lived there.
In new hilltop settlements, built on stolen land, he encounters the sometimes startling intolerance of their ultra-orthodox communities who will do whatever they can to take more.
Meanwhile the outside world looks on helplessly – either unable or unwilling to intercede – and there are few signs this tidal wave of  and annexation is ever going to end.

Journey into an Invisible 

Source: Al Jazeera World

Migrants face 'living hell' in Greek detention

Médecins Sans Frontières reveals outbreaks of scabies and TB and human waste seeping through the floor
The Greek coastguard rescued a boatload of more than 300 migrants in the sea near Crete on Monday 31 March 2014. But many detained migrants face hellish conditions in Greece. Photograph: ZUMA/REX
Greece immigration centres in Athens- 
Migrants and asylum-seekers detained in Greece are being forced to endure deplorable conditions, often with devastating effects on their health, according to a report from aid agency Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF).
Doctors who have attended internment camps, police stations and coastguard facilities around the country described "a living hell" for thousands of immigrants denied fresh air, natural light and basic sanitation.
In one detention camp in Komotini, not far from the Turkish border, medics saw human excrement seeping through cracked pipes between the building's floors.
"I did not think that such conditions were possible on European soil," said Marietta Provopoulou, who spent more than a decade working in Africa before returning to Athens to head MSF in Greece. "The main complaint of migrants is that they are not being treated like human beings, that they are being subjected to a living hell," she told the Guardian. "And they are right."
MSF said the practice of rounding up migrants on a massive scale had created a breeding ground for disease in detention centres nationwide.
Outbreaks of scabies in overcrowded camps were commonplace. So, too, were respiratory infections, gastrointestinal disorders, musculoskeletal problems, dental problems and tuberculosis. Unaccompanied minors – mostly from Afghanistan – wrongly registered as adults were also being detained.
"The conditions are shocking," said Panagiotis Tziavas, a MSF doctor.
"Not only are people crammed in a very small area. Another major problem are the sanitary conditions … most of the latrines are in a disgusting state."
Greece is a major transit point for immigrants desperate to get to Europefrom Asia, Africa and the Middle East. Under pressure from the EU to stem the influx, Greece's conservative-dominated coalition began a "clean-up" operation in the summer of 2012, systematically detaining migrants and asylum-seekers, often indiscriminately.
MSF teams with access to detention facilities over the past six years said they had witnessed a surge in the numbers subject to prolonged detention, with most incarcerated for the maximum limit of 18 months. In an atmosphere of far-right anti-immigrant sentiment, there was also the risk of repeated detentions. Even asylum-seekers fleeing war-torn countries such as Syria were being incarcerated for up to 15 months.
"Often migrants are detained for up to 18 months in the holding cells of police stations that were only meant to keep people for a few days," said Ioanna Kotsioni, head of migration policy at MSF Greece.
Many former army camps and military academies were hastily transformed into detention centres overnight. Facilities were cramped and humid with soggy mattresses causing growing numbers to suffer from musculoskeletal problems, the group said.
"Around 6,000 migrants and asylum seekers are currently being detained and the illnesses we are seeing are linked, without doubt, to the squalid living conditions," she added. "In police stations, where bed bugs are common, detainees rarely have access to fresh air, natural light or exercise areas – in violation of European law. In some detention camps they have limited or no access to showers or toilets. And in Komotini, we saw human waste seeping through broken pipes from one floor of the building to the next. The indifference on the part of authorities was extraordinary."
A number of migrants have reportedly tried to take their own lives. One 16-year-old Afghan boy, who had made the perilous journey from his home country to Greece, but was detained in Komotini, recently jumped from the roof of the building in protest over the living conditions, according to MSF.
"We are detained for 18 months. Why? I have come for peace, I am not a criminal," the boy, who broke both his legs, was quoted as telling the relief organisation. "The water of the showers is always cold and the toilets never work. The food is bad, it's not healthy food. Many times I have asked to be released because I am a minor but they have always refused … since they didn't want to release me I thought it was better for me to jump off the roof than to stay here."