"In 2006 and 2007, the United Nations Working
Group on Enforced and Involuntary Disappearances
recorded more new �disappearance� cases from Sri
Lanka than from any other country in the world.
"
|
The Sri Lankan government is
responsible for widespread abductions and �disappearances�
that are a national crisis, Human Rights Watch said in a
new report released today. Human Rights Watch urged the
government to reveal the whereabouts of the �disappeared,�
immediately end the practice, and hold the perpetrators
accountable.
Since major fighting between the government and the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) resumed in 2006, Sri
Lankan security forces and pro-government armed groups have
�disappeared� or abducted hundreds of individuals, many of
whom are feared dead.
The 241-page report, �Recurring
Nightmare: State Responsibility for �Disappearances� and
Abductions in Sri Lanka,� documents 99 of the several
hundred cases reported, and examines the Sri Lankan
government�s response, which to date has been grossly
inadequate. In 2006 and 2007, the United Nations Working
Group on Enforced and Involuntary Disappearances recorded
more new �disappearance� cases from Sri Lanka than from any
other country in the world.
�President Mahinda Rajapaksa, once a rights advocate, has
now led his government to become one of the world�s worst
perpetrators of enforced disappearances,� said Elaine
Pearson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch. �The
end of the ceasefire means this crisis will continue until
the government starts taking serious measures.�
Under international law, a state commits an enforced
disappearance when it takes a person into custody and denies
holding them or disclosing their whereabouts. �Disappeared�
persons are commonly subjected to torture or extrajudicial
execution, and cause family members continued suffering. An
enforced disappearance is a continuing rights violation � it
is ongoing until the fate or whereabouts of the person
becomes known.
The vast majority of cases documented by Human Rights Watch
indicate the involvement of government security forces �
army, navy, or police. In some cases, relatives of the
�disappeared� identified specific military units that had
detained their relatives and army camps where they had been
taken. In other cases, they described uniformed policemen,
especially members of the Criminal Investigation Department
(CID), taking their relatives into custody before they
�disappeared.�
Vairamuththu Varatharasan, a 40-year-old truck driver and
father of five, was abducted from his home in Colombo on
January 7, 2007, and has not been seen since. His wife told
Human Rights Watch:
�A group of about 20 men � some in police
uniforms, some in civilian clothes surrounded the house.
One policeman came inside and asked for our identity
card. I went into one of the rooms to get the identity
card. By the time I came out of the room, my husband was
not there; neither was the policeman. I ran out and
spotted a van parked in a dark place on the road. I ran
to the road, but by the time I got there, the van
started and left.�
Most of the victims are ethnic Tamils, although Muslims
and Sinhalese have also been targeted. In many cases, the
security forces �disappeared� individuals because of their
alleged affiliation with the LTTE. Clergy, educators,
humanitarian aid workers, and journalists also were targeted
� not only to remove them from the civil sphere, but also to
warn others to avoid such activities.
Pro-government Tamil armed groups are also implicated in the
abductions and �disappearances� � specifically the Karuna
group and the Eelam People�s Democratic Party (EPDP) �
acting either independently or in conjunction with the
security forces.
The number of abductions perpetrated by the LTTE is
comparatively low since targeted killings, rather than
abductions, appear to be the LTTE�s primary tactic. The LTTE
has also been responsible for numerous other egregious
abuses, including bombings against civilians, political
assassinations, forced child recruitment, and the systematic
repression of basic civil and political rights in areas
under their control.
In the face of the crisis, the government of Sri Lanka has
demonstrated an utter lack of resolve to investigate and
prosecute those responsible. Not a single member of the
security forces has been brought to justice for involvement
in �disappearances� or abductions. Human Rights Watch said
that Sri Lanka�s emergency laws, which grant the security
forces sweeping powers to arbitrarily arrest and detain
people without being held to account, have facilitated
enforced disappearances.
�So long as soldiers and police can commit �disappearances�
with impunity, this horrific crime will continue,� said
Pearson.
The Rajapaksa government has set up an array of special
bodies tasked with monitoring and investigating
�disappearances� and other human rights violations. None
have yielded concrete results.
Human Rights Watch said this failure is unsurprising given
that, at the highest levels, the Sri Lankan government
continues to downplay the problem, denying the scale of the
crisis and that its own security forces are involved.
�The government�s mechanisms to address �disappearances�
will remain impotent so long as the president and top
officials fail to send a clear signal to the security forces
that these abuses will not be tolerated,� said Pearson.
Sri Lanka�s key international partners and the UN bodies,
including the Office of the High Commissioner for Human
Rights, have raised serious concerns about the alarming
number of �disappearances� and prevailing impunity. They
have expressed growing support for the establishment of a UN
human rights monitoring mission to investigate and report on
abuses by government forces and the LTTE throughout the
country.
Human Rights Watch deplored the Sri Lankan government�s
opposition to an international monitoring mission, given
that such initiatives have proven effective elsewhere in
dealing with �disappearances.� With sufficient mandate and
resources, the monitoring mission could achieve what the
government and various national mechanisms have failed to
do: establish the location of detainees through unimpeded
visits to the detention facilities; request information
regarding specific cases from all sides to the conflict;
assist national law enforcement agencies and human rights
mechanisms in investigating the cases and communicating with
the families; and maintain credible records of reported
cases.
�The Sri Lankan government�s rejection of a UN monitoring
mission reflects badly on its commitment to human rights,�
said Pearson. �While the government dawdles, many Sri
Lankans will continue to pay the price.�
Human Rights Watch called on the government of Sri Lanka to:
- Take immediate measures to end the practice of
enforced disappearances, vigorously investigate all
cases reported, and bring the perpetrators to account;
and
- Cooperate with the UN Office of the High
Commissioner for Human Rights to establish and deploy an
international monitoring team to report on violations of
international human rights and humanitarian law by all
parties to the conflict.
Human Rights Watch also called on Sri Lanka�s
international partners, in particular India and Japan, to
make further military and other non-humanitarian assistance
to Sri Lanka contingent on government efforts to halt the
practice of �disappearances,� and to end impunity, including
its acceptance of an international monitoring mission.
Testimonies from the report
�They started beating Thiyagarajah. They took his
T-shirt off and stuffed it into his mouth. The neighbors
came out to help, but they pushed them away. His wife
was crying and shouting, and they hit her with a gun
butt. She was nine months pregnant. They were accusing
Thiyagarajah of having bombs in the house, and forced
him to dig the ground around the house. They searched
the house, turning everything upside down, but didn�t
find anything. They beat him so badly that he couldn�t
walk � they had to carry him away. They took him away on
a motorcycle.�
� A relative of 25-year-old Thiyagarajah Saran,
�disappeared� on the night of February 20, 2007, from
East Puttur, Jaffna
�The villagers told me they saw Pathinather and
Anton being interrogated by the military. The military
held them at gunpoint. Then the military put them into
the Powell [vehicle], and also loaded their bicycles
into their vehicle. The villagers could not see much
because the army ordered them to disperse, and now they
are too afraid to talk to anybody about what they saw.�
� A relative of 21-year-old Anton Prabananth,
�disappeared� on February 17, 2007 together with
24-year-old Pathinather Prasanna, from Jaffna
�When we got to the [Kodikamam] army camp, I saw my
nephew�s bicycle parked there. It was parked near the
camp, in the military-controlled area. When we asked the
soldiers, they denied arresting them, and when I said we
had seen the bike, they got very angry, and started
yelling, �Who told you to go and look there?! We�ll
shoot you if you ever approach this place again!� We
asked the GS [local civilian official] and the police to
get the bike back, but they couldn�t. Eventually, the
commander in the camp returned the bike to us. He said
that the people who had arrested our men were no longer
there, so we should just take the bike and go.�
� A relative of 26-year-old Thavaruban Kanapathipillai,
�disappeared� on August 16, 2006, together with
30-year-old Shangar Santhivarseharam from Kachai, Jaffna
�Two people came to our door, in uniforms. They were
armed. Another man was dressed in an army T-shirt and
jeans. I asked where they were taking my husband. The
person in civilian clothes showed me a pistol. I asked
where they were taking him again and he showed the
pistol again, and then they took him out. I ran after
them, and they had two vans, white and blue.�
� Wife of 21-year-old Ramakrishnan Rajkumar,
�disappeared� on August 23, 2006, from Colombo
Related Material
Recurring Nightmare: State Responsibility for
�Disappearances� and Abductions in Sri Lanka
Report, March 6, 2008
Four cases from "Recurring Nightmare"
Special Focus, March 6, 2008
Sri Lanka: Truce End Shows Need for UN Monitors
Press Release, January 4, 2008
Return to War: Human Rights Under Siege
Report, August 6, 2007 |