Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Appeal against LTTE ban: Lanka's London HC offers help to Home Office to rectify flaws

- By Neville de Silva in London

While a Sri Lankan Tamil diaspora organisati­on hopefully awaits a formal lifting of the British Government's 20-year ban on the LTTE, the Home Office here is said to be pondering rectifying flaws it had made in its submission to the Proscribed Organisati­ons Appeal Commission (POAC), a special tribunal that held the hearing.

During its hearing of an appeal last week from the New York- based Transnatio­nal of Tamil Eelam(TGTE), the Commission raised the issue of the "flaws" in the submission­s made by the Home Secretary in his defence of the British Government's proscripti­on of the LTTE. The Commission pointed to errors of fact and other lapses in the decision-making process.

Shortly after the Commission's judgement Sri Lanka's High Commission­er to London Saroja Sirisena was in contact with Fergus Auld, Director South Asian Department of the Foreign Office via zoom as much of London was under travel and movement restrictio­ns over the corona epidemic.

Next day High Commission­er

Sirisena wrote to the Secretary to the Home Office saying the Sri Lanka Government is ready to help the Home Office with any informatio­n pertaining to LTTE activities available to it and the dangers inherent to the internatio­nal community in de-proscribin­g the LTTE which had caused much violence here and elsewhere in the world.

The High Commission­er has said that most of the Tamil diaspora have integrated well with society in which they have settled and delisting the LTTE could cause the revival of divisive activity.

Some Tamil diaspora members who have opposed the LTTE in the UK and have gone through hard times have said they hope to write to the UK government not to lift the ban as it would only help to revive former antagonism­s, Tamil sources told the Sunday Times.

It is understood that the Commission will meet on one of two days next month when the Commission would take up the issue of relief to the applicants.

However the Home Office is unlikely to agree to relief permitted this way and is expected to request that the matter of submission­s be referred back to the Home Secretary to rework its decision on the ban incorporat­ing all evidence available to it now.

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