LTTE 'dead' resurface:
Security Forces deserve public apology and compensation
By Shenali D. Waduge
The case of Kathiravel Thayapararaja appearing from the ‘dead’ cannot
be taken lightly.
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Kathiravel Thayapararaja
with his wife.
Pic: Courtesy dbsjeyaraj.com |
If not for his arrest by the Indian police the world would have
continued to believe the University Teachers for Human Rights (UTHR-J)
report, continued to accept the War without Witnesses report, the
European Centre for Constitutional and Human Rights report and continued
to rely on the Australian Government Refugee Review Tribunal report
compiled under Country Advice against Sri Lanka.
These four entities declared that Sri Lankan Forces extra-judicially
killed Kathiravel Thayapararaja on September 15, 2009 going so far as to
even quote places of torture and place of hospitalisation.
This accusation of killing went on for five years with the name
Kathiravel Thayapararaja quoted far and wide to showcase extra judicial
killings by Sri Lankan security forces and form the basis for the ‘human
rights mafia’ to descend on nations to ensure human rights prevail in
these nations.
Before that agenda can take off, UTHR-J and others must make a public
apology, in fact the legal department of the Sri Lankan Security forces
must send a letter of demand seeking apology and compensation for
tarnishing the image of Sri Lanka and its forces.
Falsehood
With the dead coming alive our next question is how many more dead
are out there very much alive?
If not for the Dhanushkodi police in India, arresting the two boat
loads of ‘refugees’ and Sri Lankan intelligence authorities quick to
pick on the name and match the bonafides to the supposed dead, the world
would have continued to believe in the lie cooked up by the University
Teachers for Human Rights and the accusations reported by War without
Witnesses and the countless other international humanitarian
organisations quoting far and wide from these sources.
None of these reports will ever be changed and their publications
will continue to carry that Kathiravel Thayapararaja was in fact
abducted, tortured and killed by Sri Lankan Security forces months
following the LTTE defeat in September 2009.
The falsehood concocted by the UTHR-J and quoted by international
sources needs to be immediately addressed. There are too many examples
of sweeping statements and reports taking place and being quoted
internationally to ridicule and embarrass Sri Lanka's image and that of
its forces.
Witnesses are eventually untraceable, uncontactable or they become
‘witnesses’ by virtue of here-say.
But the damage has been done and irreversible as is the intent with
which the reports were launched.
A crafty ‘witness protection’ system being introduced enables a cap
on the identity when in reality no such person exists because the
accusations are all concocted and the case of Kathiravel Thayapararaja
is just one good example.
Charade
Our next and most important question is Kathiravel Thayapararaja was
an employee of a US NGO, surely the NGO with connections to the US would
have known that Thayapararaja was alive and not dead.
The charade of his supposed ‘death’ was used by the same circle of
people joining to make similar accusations against Sri Lanka on the
human rights theme.
Working for a US NGO with access to the US embassy on what grounds
can Thayapararaja claim himself a victim.
When the same people are quoting the number of dead from 40,000 to
225,000 in the last stages of the war it warrants us to certainly wonder
whether these ‘dead’ are alive and living on their shores with the
knowledge of the foreign governments and certain foreign
parliamentarians who have been mingling with the tigers over the years?
For parties that can concoct lies and use mainstream media to
disseminate the lies far and wide we cannot expect any level of
integrity or ethical practice so the next best option is for the legal
department of the Sri Lankan Security forces to demand that the
University Teachers for Human Rights (Jaffna) make a public apology and
seek damages for tarnishing the image of the security forces. Similarly
both War without Witnesses, the European Center for Constitutional and
Human Rights report and the Australian Government Refugee Review
Tribunal must also be sent letters seeking apology and compensation as
well.
Example
The UNHRC and its head too must issue a statement that reports should
not be published unless organisations can confirm a person is actually
dead. This single example necessitates that the UNHRC produce the names
of the 40,000 dead that even they are accusing as being killed by the
Sri Lankan security forces or refrain from making accusations without
knowing who the dead are or whether they are actually dead.
We are not willing to accept a simply ‘sorry’ and await another
‘dead’ man to resurface to raise the issue again. It is just as well the
public of Sri Lanka are not na‹ve to buy the lies that the bogus
international human rights network promote with a larger agenda in
place.
Moreover, the local agents hired to compliment their lies are people
who have no respect from the Sri Lankan public whatsoever and these
local mouthpieces some of whom are repeatedly rejected politicians have
no public respect either.
With LTTE resurfacing from the dead we now need to wonder how many
more ‘dead’ may be alive and calls for the Sri Lankan Missions to wake
up and demand from their host nations an inventory of all Sri Lankans
domiciled overseas (whether as dual citizens, refugees or awaiting PR).
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