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Postcard from … Sri Lanka

Fred Abrahams | December 8, 2006

Editor: John Feffer, IRC

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The mother of an abducted child in Sri Lanka holds a photo of her missing son. ©Fred Abrahams/Human Rights Watch 2006

For years the Tamil Tigers have used child soldiers in their ranks. Now, after a shaky four-year ceasefire ended in April, the Sri Lankan government is using similar means.

The perpetrators are the Karuna group, an armed faction that split from the Tamil Tigers in 2004. Led by V. Muralitharan, a former Tamil Tiger commander known as Karuna, the group has abducted hundreds of boys and young men in eastern Sri Lanka this year. The Sri Lankan security forces are tolerating the abductions and, at times, directly taking part.

In the most extreme example, members of the Sri Lankan army surrounded a village in the Batticaloa district, rounding up and photographing the boys and young men. Karuna forces came later that day and took eight of the boys and young men away. In other cases, parents saw their abducted children in offices of the Tamil Makkal Viduthalai Pulikal (TMVP), the political party recently founded by the Karuna group. In at least two towns of the east, police guard the TMVP offices. Some parents saw their children in Karuna camps, which are located in government-controlled areas past numerous checkpoints of the military and police.

The Sri Lankan government has promised an investigation, but impunity for human rights abuses in Sri Lanka runs deep. Mothers of abducted children, like the woman photographed here, are desperate to see their children again, but they place little hope in government efforts to achieve that aim.

UNICEF first publicly reported on abductions by the Karuna group in June 2006. The agency appealed to the government “to investigate all abductions and ensure that children in affected areas are given the full protection of the law,” a UNICEF statement said. In July, a group of more than 40 mothers of abducted children filed a detailed petition to the chief justice of the Sri Lankan Supreme Court, seeking an inquiry. Copies went to the president and the minister for disaster management and human rights.

FPIF contributor Fred Abrahams is senior emergencies researcher at Human Rights Watch. HRW will be publishing a report on child abductions in Sri Lanka in December.

 

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Published by Foreign Policy In Focus (FPIF), a project of the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS, online at www.ips-dc.org). Copyright © 2009, Institute for Policy Studies.

Recommended citation:
Fred Abrahams, "Postcard from … Sri Lanka" (Silver City, NM and Washington, DC: Foreign Policy In Focus, December 8, 2006).

Web location:
http://fpif.org/fpiftxt/3773

Production Information:
Author(s): Fred Abrahams
Editor(s): John Feffer, IRC
Production: Chellee Chase-Saiz, IRC

Latest Comments & Conversation Area
Editor's Note: FPIF.org editors read and approve each comment. Comments are checked for content only; spelling and grammar errors are not corrected and comments that include vulgar language or libelous content are rejected.
 
Name Concerned Date: Dec 08, 2006
Dear Fred, can you please please do something to help those poor parents and the abducted children. Can you please take measures to force the sri lankan government to release these children.

Thanks
Name ChrisP Date: Dec 08, 2006
Have you got any views on LTTE's child abductions? They've been at it for the past 20+ years! There are over 1000 cases of abduction by LTTE pending investigation. Your report is based on one made by someone who has attended an LTTE fundraising event. Should anyone regard that as an unbiased view? Col. Karuna has offered to open his camps for inspection by UNICEF. Sure, GOSL forces have made many mistakes along the way, but let's have a balanced view, OK?
Name Chandi Sinnathurai Date: Dec 09, 2006
Thank you so very much for this blood-soaked post-card. One hopes in this desperate situations that the international community [IC] would open their eyes and press for independant impartial investigations. Such investigations will have to be conducted by international bodies for obvious reasons. There are 'white van' death squads etc; The A9 road closure embargo has created mass-starvation of the Tamils in the North. I wonder whether such extreme situations call for humanitarian intervention by the IC. Finally, one would stress that what is happening in Sri Lanka is a slow-genocide of the Tamils. That has to be averted by the IC if another monumental Rwanda mistake is to be avoided on the global conscience.
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