Arab Times

Sri Lanka security forces rape, torture Tamil detainees: group

HRW documents 75 cases

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to prevent the polio spread, were repeatedly targeted. According to UN figures, 19 humanitari­an workers were killed last year in Pakistan. Of those deaths, 11 were related to polio, including a rash of shootings in December when nine polio workers were killed across Pakistan.

In an effort to protect people administer­ing the vaccine, the government has increasing­ly sent police officers into the field along with the vaccinator. But they have come under attack as well.

On Jan 29, gunmen riding on a motorcycle shot and killed a police officer protecting polio workers in the Swabi district in Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province.

Mazhar Nisar, a senior official working with the Prime Minister’s polio monitoring cell, said at least 11 members of polio teams have been killed in various parts of Pakistan since December. NEW DELHI, Feb 26, (RTRS): Sri Lanka’s security forces have used rape to torture and extract confession­s from suspected Tamil separatist­s almost four years after the country’s civil war ended, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said in a report on Tuesday.

The rights group documented 75 cases of predominat­ely Tamil men and women who said they were held in Sri Lankan detention centres and repeatedly raped and sexually abused by the military, police and intelligen­ce officials.

The victims - now living as asylum seekers, most of them in Britain - said once they confessed to being a member of the Tamil Tiger rebel group, the abuse generally stopped and they were allowed to escape by paying a bribe, before fleeing abroad.

“We found that rape was used to secure some sort of confession, but also as a political tool to punish people,” Meenakshi Ganguly, the rights group’s South Asia director, told a news conference in New Delhi. “These were people who had some connection with the Tigers ... who were forced to sign confession­s, and only then would the rapes stop.”

Ganguly said sexual abuse was only one form of torture that the people suffered: “They were also severely tortured, burnt by cigarettes and hung upside down.”

Sri Lanka’s High Commission­er to New Delhi said he had no evidence to suggest the allegation­s of abuse, which the rights group said occurred from 2006 to 2012, were true.

The ambassador, Prasad Kariyawasa­m, said the testimonie­s of 41 women, 31 men and 3 boys were likely made by “economic refugees” who “need a good story” to get asylum.

“Until we do a proper inquiry, we have to believe that these are all sob stories for the sake of obtaining asylum or refugee status in a developed country,” Kariyawasa­m told Reuters.

“Until there is a proper examinatio­n ... in the Sri Lankan court system, we will not be able to accept these allegation­s.”

He said the report was “a welltimed effort” to discredit Sri Lanka ahead of a vote on a USbacked resolution criticisin­g it at the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva this week.

Tens of thousands of civilians were killed in 2009, in the final months of a war that began in 1983, a UN panel said, as government troops advanced on the last stronghold of the rebels fighting for an independen­t homeland.

The UN panel said it had “credible allegation­s” that Sri Lankan troops and the Tamil Tigers both carried out atrocities and war crimes, and singled out the government for most of the responsibi­lity for the deaths.

Sri Lanka has come under internatio­nal pressure to bring to book those accused of war crimes and boost efforts to reconcile a polarised country.

It has rejected allegation­s of rights abuse and resisted pressure to allow an independen­t commission to investigat­e war crimes committed by its army, saying that it is has its own plan to deal with the issue.

But Human Rights Watch said, despite the end of the war, no one had been prosecuted and human rights violations of Tamil Tiger supporters continued. Thirty-one cases of rape and torture in the report had been documented since 2009.

“Many of the medical reports examined by HRW show evidence of sexual violence such as bites on the buttocks and breasts, and cigarette burns on sensitive areas like inner thighs and breasts,” the group said.

 ??  ?? Activists and supporters of the Communist Party of India (Marxists) hold placards and banners as they shout slogans during a protest demanding food security in New Delhi, on Feb 26. Protesters demanded a universal public distributi­on system, a check on...
Activists and supporters of the Communist Party of India (Marxists) hold placards and banners as they shout slogans during a protest demanding food security in New Delhi, on Feb 26. Protesters demanded a universal public distributi­on system, a check on...

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