WORLD AFFAIRS
A death plot in Jaffna
Investigations are under way at a site at Chemmani in Jaffna, where 400
Tamil civilians are alleged to have been killed and buried by Sri Lankan
security forces.
V.S. SAMBANDAN
recently in Jaffna
IN the many years of enervating fighting between the Sri Lankan security
forces and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, there have been several
allegations of human rights violations by the security forces. However, an
allegation made in July 1998 - that the security forces had done to death
400 Tamil civilians and buried them in a mass grave at Chemmani in the Jaffna
peninsula - was particularly stunning. The allegation was made in open court
by Lance Corporal Somratne Rajapakse of the Sri Lankan Army after he and
five others were sentenced to death for the kidnap, rape and murder of a
Jaffna schoolgirl, Krishanthy Kumaraswamy, and the abduction and murder of
her friends and relatives.
Rajapakse said that close to a checkpoint in Jaffna where he had served,
and where Krishanthy was killed, was a mass grave where at least 400 other
civilians were buried. These, he said, were victims like Krishanthy, who,
according to him, were done to death by the security forces after the Sri
Lankan Government regained control of the northern peninsula from the LTTE
which has been waging a war for a separate Tamil state.
Ever since the allegation was made, there were scores of media reports reflecting
the anxiety and fear among the families of those who were reported "missing"
in the northern peninsula. These prompted demands to dig up the site in order
to verify the truth behind the accusation.
SRIYANTHA WALPOLA
Soil analysts
gather samples from the site at Chemmani in the Jaffna Peninsula, where,
it is alleged, over 400 Tamil civilians were done to death by Sri Lankan
security forces and buried in a mass grave.
Opinion was divided on the veracity of Rajapakse's allegation: there were
people who saw it as a "revelation" made by a convicted soldier to escape
punishment or to try and mitigate the gravity of his crime; others felt that
it should be taken as a full-fledged "confession" by a person who had committed
the crimes.
The fact that the alleged incidents were reported to have been committed
during the tenure of the People's Alliance (P.A.), which came to power in
Colombo on the promise of resolving the ethnic conflict and respecting human
rights, was particularly shocking. One of the reasons for the electoral defeat
of the United National Party (UNP) after 17 years in power was the perception
that there were large-scale human rights violations under its rule.
The Government responded by entrusting to the Human Rights Commission the
investigation of the allegation. Subsequently, the judicial process took
over. Since September 1998, however, there was a change in the situation
in Jaffna following a series of violent incidents, such as the assassination
of Jaffna Mayor P. Sivapalan and the shooting down of a civilian aircraft.
Courts in Jaffna stopped functioning, citing "death threats from the LTTE".
Meanwhile, there was increasing pressure to dig up the alleged site of the
mass grave. Yukthiya, a Sinhala weekly, had challenged the Government
even as early as July 1998 to dig up the site. Recalling a similar situation
in the South following allegations that Sinhala youths were killed as part
of a crackdown on the Sinhala-chauvinist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna and that
their bodies were buried in a mass grave at Sooriya Kanda, the weekly said:
"People's Alliance leaders who were enthusiastically involved in digging
up graves in Sooriya Kanda when they were in the Opposition must now take
up this challenge or forfeit whatever image they have been able to build
for themselves as protectors of human rights."
Tamil parliamentarians demanded that international norms be adhered to in
the exhumation process; they wanted the exhumation to be carried out
scientifically.
However, the process was delayed by the late withdrawal of the monsoon and
the subsequent closure of courts.
SRIYANTHA WALPOLA
Relatives
of Tamil civilians who are reported "missing" and are believed to have been
buried in the mass grave wait outside the Jaffna District Court which is
overseeing the investigation into the allegations in respect of Chemmani.
Early this year, the judicial process resumed but got bogged down. Jaffna
Magistrate Ekanathan pronounced that the case would be taken up for hearing
on March 5; a Foreign Ministry statement, however, stated that the exhumation
process would start on that date. The Magistrate protested and said that
he had been misinterpreted. Shortly thereafter he expressed his inability
to perform his judicial duties owing to "death threats".
The Government was caught on a sticky wicket. But in a series of moves in
early March, it made clear its intention to carry forward with the judicial
process.
On March 2, N. Arulsagaran, a District Judge in Colombo, was transferred
as the Additional Magistrate of Jaffna and was flown to Jaffna to hear the
case. Ekanathan had directed soil experts to be present for the March 5 hearing
so that they could collect samples from the alleged mass grave to ascertain
if the soil had been disturbed since the allegation was made.
On March 5, a plane-load of national and international journalists were taken
to witness the court proceedings and whatever else was to follow. Taking
up the case from where Ekanathan had left it, Arulsagaran firmly said that
he wanted no further delay in the process. "Let us take it and finish it,"
he said.
THE action then shifted to the most-talked-about site in Sri Lanka since
last July. Just ahead of an arch welcoming travellers to Jaffna from Colombo
lay a vast expanse of land - the alleged site of the alleged mass grave.
In the vicinity is a cemetery and small swamps.
Those in attendance were requested not to step on the roads until the Army
had cleared them for landmines. A team of mine-sweepers were soon at work
and were followed by the soil experts, the Additional Magistrate and the
journalists.
But the person who mattered the most - Rajapakse, who made the allegation
and had served at the checkpoint when the alleged atrocities were committed
- was not present at the site to identify the location of the mass grave.
No explanation was offered other than that Rajapakse had stated that he would
be present only after exhumation was ordered; this, however, raised the question
of whether the exhumation process could be undertaken without identifying
the site with certainty. Asked if a court order could not be obtained mandating
the presence of the accused, it was clarified on behalf of the Government
that such a course of action would be resorted to when the need arose.
SRIYANTHA WALPOLA
Jaffna
Additional Magistrate N. Arulsagaran, who is hearing the Chemmani case.
Following a process of elimination and deductive reasoning based on the site
where the body of Krishanthy was reportedly exhumed, a patch of land between
two roads - one leading to Jaffna, the other to Nallur - was selected and
soil samples were taken.
The most evident outcome of the visit organised to Jaffna and the conduct
of soil sample tests at the Chemmani site was that the Government made clear
its sincerety about its attempts to unravel the truth. The exercise would
have gained greater credibility if Rajapakse had been present to identify
the site.
CHEMMANI apart, Jaffna town presents a picture of torment. Clear indications
of a once-idyllic setting abound in the marketplace and the streets of Jaffna.
Bullet-scarred walls and skeletal remains of buildings tell the tale of the
town's painful trudge to normalcy.
"Life goes on," says a restaurant worker, who sought anonymity. Prices of
commodities depend on the arrival of the cargo ship Lankamuditha from Colombo.
Since the town now has no road to the rest of the island, sustenance is largely
dependent on the arrival of the vessel. "Today the prices are better because
the ship has arrived, but we do not know how much it will rise after stocks
run out," the restaurant worker said.
Another person recalls the days when the LTTE had control over the peninsula.
"There were no crimes at that time. Now there is a definite increase in crimes."
A third person displays his watch - the time shown is half an hour behind
the time in the rest of the island. As a daylight-saving measure, clocks
were reset half an hour ahead in the rest of Sri Lanka; however, in the areas
that were originally under LTTE control, people continued to follow the earlier
time, which coincides with the Indian Standard Time. "I follow only this
time," the man said.
In every other way, for him and for a couple of teenagers working in his
shop, life goes on as usual. However, with the military conflict between
the Sri Lankan security forces and the LTTE dragging on, the time for peace
in Jaffna has clearly not yet come.
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