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Sri Lankan Human Rights Commission stalls inquiry into disappeared
SEP member
By our correspondent
15 October 2007
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Three months after its last hearing, the Sri Lanka Human Rights
Commission (HRC) has not fixed a date to recommence the inquiry
into the disappearance of Socialist Equality Party (SEP) member
Nadarajah Wimaleswaran and his friend, Sivanathan Mathivathanan,
in northern Sri Lanka on March 22.
Speaking to SEP general secretary Wije Dias last Thursday,
the HRC officer in charge of the investigation, Prasanna Arampath,
acknowledged that these things are getting late but
offered no reason, other than his personal workload. When pressed
on the fact that no hearing had been held since July 6, Arampath
would not set a date, saying only that it would be as early as
possible.
Hundreds of people have disappeared or been murdered in circumstances
that point to the involvement of the security forces since President
Mahinda Rajapakse restarted the war against the Liberation Tigers
of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) last year. Yet, in all but a handful of
cases, no one has been charged, let alone convicted.
The lack of any serious investigation by the HRC into the disappearance
of Wimaleswaran and Mathivathanan is paralleled on Kayts Island
where both men lived. Despite evidence strongly indicating the
involvement of navy personnel on Kayts, the police and the local
court have not compelled the commander of the Kanchadeva navy
camp at Velanai to answer basic questions.
Wimaleswaran and Mathivathanan were last seen riding a motor
bike toward the Velanai road-block on Kayts Island on March 22
via a long causeway from the neighbouring island of Punguduthivu.
The two men were returning to Kayts after picking up clothes from
a village on Punguduthivu to attend a wedding that night.
The navy, which has a heavy presence throughout these northern
islands, maintains a checkpoint at either end of the causeway.
The pair were seen at about 5 p.m. at the Velanai entry point
on Kayts as they headed toward Punguduthivu and then at the Punguduthivu
checkpoint at about 6.30 p.m., restarting the motorbike to return
to Velanai.
The commanding officer at the Punguduthivu naval camp has confirmed
that the motor bike passed through the checkpoint at about that
time. Given there is nowhere else to go, the two men must have
reached the Velanai checkpoint shortly afterward. However, the
commanding officer of the naval camp at Velanai claims to have
no knowledge of the two men and has refused to provide details
about the checkpoint.
At the insistence of the SEP, the HRC initiated an inquiry
into the disappearance on June 14. Representatives of the countrys
Navy Commander and Inspector General of Police (IGP) appeared
at the hearing, but the commanders on Kayts and Punguduthivu refused
to attend or send representatives.
The next hearing was fixed for July 6 but the HRC official
in charge, Arampath, failed to appear. After SEP general secretary
Dias protested, another HRC official convened a hearing. However,
neither the navy commanders nor the Kayts police were present
and hearing was closed without a new date being fixed.
On August 15, the HRC sent a letter to the SEP requesting sworn
affidavits as evidence of the disappearance. A similar letter
was sent to the navy commanders legal office, requesting
the names of naval personnel on duty at the Velanai check point
on March 22 and names of the navy officers investigating the SEPs
complaint.
The SEP filed five affidavits with the HRC on September 3,
from the wives of Wimaleswaran and Mathivathanan, and three eyewitnesses
who saw Wimaleswaran and Mathivathanan on the day of their disappearance.
The HRC has not responded to the SEP.
A separate case in the Kayts magistrate court has made no further
progress. At the most recent hearing on September 14, the public
relations officer for the Kanchadeva navy camp at Velanai was
present, but once again the commanding officer refused to appear
or send a representative.
The presiding magistrate only briefly referred to the case.
No questions were asked of the public relations officer. The magistrate
told the complainantsthe wives of Wimaleswaran and Mathivathananthat
the court could not guarantee to find their husbands and told
them to provide the names of any witnesses. He then postponed
the case until October 19, without directing the police or naval
personnel to be present.
The two women have already provided the names of eyewitnesses
who confirm that Wimaleswaran and Mathivathanan were stopped,
searched and questioned by naval personnel at the Velanai checkpoint
on their way to Punguduthivu. The naval commander at the Velanai
camp is yet to confirm there was a checkpoint and has thus far
refused to provide the names of the personnel manning it.
During the past month, at least 24 more people have disappeared
on the northern Jaffna peninsula alone. Over the same period 72
civilians, including four families with children, have sought
protection from the HRC branch in Jaffna town, out of fear of
abduction or murder. If taken before a magistrates court,
they face the prospect of being sent to a remand prison for their
protection.
On October 11, lawyers at Point Pedro, north of Jaffna, staged
a protest accusing the army and allied paramilitary groups of
intimidation, extortion and making death threats. A similar protest
organised by the Jaffna Peninsula Lawyers Association took place
on September 19. Despite promises of protection by the Jaffna
military commander, the threats have not stopped.
On September 18, the International Independent Group of Eminent
Persons (IIGEP) stated that no substantial progress had been made
by the Presidential Commission of Inquiry (CoI) set up to investigate
serious violations of human rights. President Rajapakse appointed
the IIGEP earlier this year in a bid to quell growing international
criticism of widespread human rights abuses in Sri Lanka. Far
from addressing the IIGEPs concerns, the government and
the attorney general immediately called on the body to cease making
public statements.
While visiting Colombo on Saturday, the UN High Commissioner
for Human Rights Louise Arbour declared: The weakness of
the rule of law and prevalence of impunity is alarming. There
is a large number of reported killings, abductions and disappearances
which remain unresolved. The government immediately dismissed
Arbours suggestion that the UN Human Rights Commission send
monitors or establish an office in Sri Lanka.
We again call on SEP supporters and WSWS readers to demand
that Sri Lankan authorities conduct an urgent investigation to
find Wimaleswaran and Mathivathanan and secure their safe release.
Letters can be sent to:
Gotabhaya Rajapakse,
Secretary of Ministry of Defence,
15/5 Baladaksha Mawatha, Colombo 3, Sri Lanka
Fax: 009411 2541529
Email: secretary@defence.lk
N. G. Punchihewa Director of Complaints and Inquiries,
Sri Lanka Human Rights Commission,
No. 36, Kinsey Road, Colombo 8, Sri Lanka
Fax: 009411 2694924
Copies should be sent to the Socialist Equality Party (Sri
Lanka) and the World Socialist Web Site.
Socialist Equality Party,
P.O. Box 1270, Colombo, Sri Lanka.
Email: wswscmb@sltnet.lk
To send letters to the WSWS editorial board please use this
online
form.
* * *
The following is a selection of correspondence received:
The annual general meeting of the Central Bank Employees Union
(Sri Lanka) held on September 13 in Colombo passed the following
resolution:
This annual congress of Central Bank Employees Union
strongly urges that Sri Lankan government to provide a full report
into the disappearance of SEP member Nadarajah Wimaleswaran and
his friend Sivanathan Mathivathanan in Kayts area of the Jaffna
peninsula last March 22.
The military could be directly responsible for their
disappearance following their entry onto the causeway linking
Punguduthivu island and Kayts island. Checkpoints are maintained
at both ends by the navy and [the area is] regularly patrolled
by the navy. Substantial evidence to this effect has been collected
by the SEP and published on the World Socialist Web Site.
Although five months have passed since their disappearance,
neither the government nor the Sri Lanka Human Rights Commission
has held a proper investigation yet. This annual congress holds
the government responsible for the disappearance of Wimaleswaran
and Mathivathanan and urges the government to secure their safe
release.
The government and its relevant authorities have also
failed so far to hold a proper and serious investigation into
the murder of SEP supporter Sivapragasam Mariyadas who was killed
at his own house in Mullipothana of eastern Trincomalee district
on August 7 last year. There is credible evidence implicating
the military, which spread false rumours in the area after the
killing that Mariyadas was an LTTE member. The failure of the
police to arrest or charge anyone for this crime even after nearly
one year strongly vindicates that point.
This annual congress condemns these disappearances and
killing as political crimes carried out against these persons
and also the SEP because of their opposition to war and all types
of racialist politics, and also their struggle to unite the working
class on a socialist program.
* * *
Sir, I wish to protest the latest blatant attempt by the Sri
Lankan authorities and military to prevent a full investigation
of the circumstances surrounding the disappearance of Nadarajah
Wimaleswaran and Sivanathan Mathivathanan. Wimaleswaran and Mathivathanan
were last seen riding on a motor bike toward a road-block on Kayts
Island on March 22 . They were traveling along a causeway from
the neighbouring island of Punguduthivu. On the day in question,
the Sri Lankan navy maintained road-blocks at both end of the
causewaya fact to which any number of witnesses can testify.
Yet at Kayts Island magistrates court, August 3, police
produced a letter from the navy commander at Kanchadeva camp denying
that any road-block was maintained. This alarming lie serves solely
to defend the activities of the Sri Lankan security forces from
scrutiny, in circumstances where, once again, a dirty war was
been unleashed against ordinary Sri Lankan citizens. I demand
that an urgent and focussed investigation is launched into Wimaleswarans
and Mathivathanans whereabouts. Yours, SJ,
UK
See Also:
Key naval witness in disappearance
of Sri Lankan SEP member fails to appear in court
[6 September 2007]
Sri Lankan navy commander
stonewalls inquiry into disappearance of SEP member
[17 August 2007]
Sri Lankan police stall on
disappearance of SEP member
[2 August 2007]
Sri Lankan SEP demands urgent
inquiry into disappearance of party member
[26 March 2007]
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