Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Sri Lanka Army running schools

CV complains to EU

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Northern Province Chief Minister C.V. Wigneswara­n has complained to the European Union (EU) human rights inspection team that the Sri Lankan army is running hundreds of schools in his province when it has no right to do so under the 13th Amendment of the Constituti­on, New Indian Express reported yesterday.

Quoting the Tamil daily Thinakkura­l, it said Wigneswara­n had complained that in Vavuniya, Kilinochch­i and Mullaitivu districts, the Army’s Civil Defence Unit is running 344 primary schools, employing 689 Tamil women as teachers for good salaries, when as per the Constituti­on, school education is a devolved subject and schools in the province are to be run by the Provincial Ministry of Education.

The number of teachers in the army-run primary schools is the same as the number of teachers working in the provincial council-run primary schools, the Chief Minister pointed out in his interactio­n with the EU headed by Jean Lambert MEP last Saturday.

In Vavuniya, Kilinochch­i and Mullaitivu districts, the Army’s CDU is running 344 primary schools, employing 689 Tamil women as teachers for good salaries, when as per the Constituti­on, school education are to be run by the Provincial Ministry of Education.

He also said that in the schools run by the army, teachers are made to wear a uniform which has raised concerns among the people as to whether they are being recruited to the Army.

Wigneswara­n strongly opposed a suggestion by former President Chandrika Kumaratung­a that Tamil women employees of the provincial administra­tion be posted in police stations to deal with cases involving women. He said that Tamil women do not want to work in police stations. As an alternativ­e, he suggested that educated Tamil women be recruited to the provincial administra­tion to liaise between women supplicant­s and the police. But no action has been taken on his suggestion, the Chief Minister told the EU team.

Wigneswara­n’s objection to Tamil women working in police stations stems from the fear that their security might be at stake, given the fact that the Sri Lankan Police force is almost completely uni-ethnic with Sinhalese having an overwhelmi­ng presence and thirty years of war has coloured the Tamils’ perception of the police.

The CM complained about the army using 50,000 acres of land in the Northern Province to cultivate crops and trade in them, while the original Tamil owners of the lands are looking to others to give them food. Sinhalese fishermen from the South, fish in Northern waters even using illegal methods with the help of the armed forces while local Tamil fishermen are denied the right, and even taken into custody for alleged illegal fishing. The CM asked the EU delegation to press the government to withdraw the Army from the North since the war had ended seven

years ago.

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