Sri Lanka – British Tamils Forum https://www.britishtamilsforum.org BTF (United Kingdom), Our organisation will be the bridging voice between the British Tamil Community and the Tamil people in the island of Sri Lanka. Thu, 18 Jan 2024 20:37:15 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.6 Attacks on Churches and other places across Sri Lanka on Easter Sunday https://www.britishtamilsforum.org/attacks-on-churches-and-other-places-across-sri-lanka-on-easter-sunday/ Mon, 22 Apr 2019 04:49:41 +0000 http://www.britishtamilsforum.org/?p=7803 Read more]]>

The British Tamils Forum (BTF) strongly condemns this evil act in Churches and Hotels across Sri Lanka on a holy day of Easter Sunday. We are deeply shocked and saddened to hear that over 190 people were killed and many more injured at this terrible premeditated attack today.

We call on the Sri Lanka Government to establish an investigation with the international community to find the perpetrators of these evil acts. The perpetrators of this crime should be brought to justice unlike other crimes committed with impunity against ethnic and religious communities in the recent past in Sri Lanka.

At this moment in time, our prayers and thoughts are with victims, their families and friends.

We are confident that all people will have come forward to provide any assistance to the victims and their families.

press release Attacks on Churches and other places across Sri Lanka on Easter Sunday – 210419

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ATC, BTF and USTPAC Call for Strong Action to End Anti-Muslim Attacks in Sri Lanka https://www.britishtamilsforum.org/atc-btf-ustpac-call-for-strong-action-to-end-anti-muslim-attacks-in-sri-lanka-address-root-causes/ Sat, 10 Mar 2018 17:46:43 +0000 http://www.britishtamilsforum.org/?p=1539 March 09, 2018 London, Washington DC, Canberra: The US Tamil Political Action Council (USTPAC), the British Tamils Forum (BTF) and the Australian Tamil Congress (ATC) express our deepest sympathies to the victims of the recent anti-Muslim pogrom in the Kandy and Amparai districts in Sri Lanka.  We are deeply frustrated that ethnic violence continues, reinforcing the profound insecurity, which citizens who are neither Sinhalese and nor Buddhist feel on this multi-ethnic island.  In the past two weeks Muslim homes, businesses and mosques have been destroyed in targeted attacks, with loss of lives, scores injured and substantial damage to personal property.

“The Government must take strong, decisive and immediate action for any of those affected by such violence to believe that this is not a deliberate attack on them personally and on the strength of their community as a whole,” said BTF General Secretary Ravi Kumar.  “Impunity for these crimes must not join the inaction on crimes committed against Muslims, Tamils, Christians, and others in the past.”

“We strongly endorse the comments of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein in which he also condemns the recent violence against Muslims and places it fairly in the context of the Government of Sri Lanka’s repeated failure to make progress on the transitional justice agenda, despite the Government’s commitment to do so.  The Tamil community has also suffered chronic cycles of violence and discrimination driven by Buddhist extremism in Sri Lanka.  We stand in solidarity with the Muslim community and call upon the Government to deliver on its promises of a political solution that ensures respect and protection for all communities in Sri Lanka,” said USTPAC President Seetharam Sivam.

All these pogroms were led by Sinhalese Buddhist extremists, including some monks, who object to other communities exercising their rights, giving voice to the aspirations of their communities, and progressing economically on the island that they consider theirs and theirs alone. These ultra-nationalists appear to have support within the majority community and sections of the Government. Tacit government support for violence against non-Buddhist communities is a key ingredient in Sri Lanka’s cycles of violence.  The Sirisena Government must demonstrate its commitment to a plural society by forcefully speaking out, condemning hate speech, and holding the perpetrators accountable.

The recent anti-Muslim incidents mirror the first large-scale violence by Sinhalese Buddhist nationalists, the 1915 anti-Muslim pogrom, which began in Kandy, also the scene of some of the recent violence.  This 1915 pogrom was followed by a steady drumbeat of anti-Tamil pogroms after independence that destroyed the Tamils’ sense of security and their commercial base on the island, leading eventually to the long civil war.

“Impunity for serious crimes against communities and property is almost total and the security forces react selectively and only after the damage is done,” said ATC President Reginald Jeganathan.  “A video of the members of the Special Task Force aiding in attacks in Kandy that surfaced yesterday is of particular concern.”

In the Sri Lankan state structure, where Sinhala Buddhist supremacy is institutionalised, attacks on non-Sinhala Buddhists will continue with impunity. Those who commit such violence against the non-Sinhala Buddhist communities are confident of no legal consequences under the present state structure.  In fact, they are celebrated as “heroes and patriots”. This need to change to ensure non-recurrence.

We call upon the international community to closely monitor the Government’s imposed State of Emergency which should end promptly when the violence subsides.  The Government has a pattern of extending these emergency powers indefinitely.  We appeal to the International Community to ensure non-recurrence of violence against the Tamil and Muslim communities as called for by UNHRC resolution 30/1.

http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=22772&LangID=E

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About USTPAC: USTPAC is a US-based Tamil advocacy group advocating for  cessation of ongoing human rights abuses in Sri Lanka, accountability for crimes committed during and after the civil war, and a political settlement to address  root causes of the conflict. Since 2009, it has worked for these goals with the US Government and UN Human Rights Council.

About BTF: British Tamils Forum exists to harness skills and the knowledge of members of the forum, and significant others including mainstream decision makers in the UK with the aim of alleviating the sufferings of the Tamils community in the Island of Sri Lanka and to further their right to self-determination within a democratic framework underpinned by international law, its covenants and conventions.

About ATC: The Australian Tamil Congress encourages positive participation of Tamils in Australian society, highlights issues of importance to Tamils, engages other communities, governments and organisations in addressing the socio-cultural and political concerns of Tamils. Educating people on Tamils’ right to survival and self-determination, and teaching the lessons of Tamil Genocide in Sri Lanka for future generations.

Contact:

  1. Sivam, USTPAC, T: +1 202 595 3123, Website: www.ustpac.org, Email: info@ustpac.org, Twitter: @UstpacAdvocacy
  2. Jeganathan, President, ATC, T: +61 300 660 629, Website: http://www.australiantamilcongress.com/en/, Twitter: @austamilcongres
  3. Sangeeth, BTF, T: +44 (0) 7412 435697, Website: www.britishtamilsforum.org, Email: news@britishtamilsforum.org, Twitter: @tamilsforum

Pdf link to the news: 20180309-statement-by-atc-btf-ustpac-on-anti-muslim-pogrom_final-2

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Tamil Diaspora Organizations call for action on the eve of Sri Lanka’s 70th Independence Day https://www.britishtamilsforum.org/tamil-diaspora-organizations-call-for-action-on-the-eve-of-sri-lankas-70th-independence-day/ Sun, 04 Feb 2018 10:38:21 +0000 http://www.britishtamilsforum.org/?p=1412

An open letter to the Hon Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, High Commissioner for Human Rights on the 3rd of February 2018, the British Tamils Forum and the diaspora organisations jointly called on UNHRC to action against Sri Lanka in March 2018 session for not delivery its commitment to the UNHRC resolution 30/1 and the reaffirmation of commitments made therein through HR/34/1 in March 2017.

We also said, “In 2018, we resolve to use all available diaspora resources to support action against accused war criminals in Sri Lanka through universal jurisdiction”.

For further read, please see the attached.

Honorable Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein

High Commissioner for Human Rights

Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights

Palais des Nations

CH-1211 Geneva 10

Switzerland

Dear High Commissioner,

Tamil Diaspora Organizations call for action on the eve of Sri Lanka’s 70th Independence Day

On February 4 Sri Lanka marks its 70th year of independence from Britain.  Historically, this day has been a painful one for the Tamils both who live in Sri Lanka and those who have been forced into exile by discrimination and anti-Tamil violence.  Tamil dignitaries and politicians did not attend the ceremonies celebrating the event from 1972 to 2014 in protest for the exclusion of the Tamil population from the political, economic, and cultural life of the country and the elimination of protections for non-Sinhalese Buddhist communities left embedded in the constitution at independence. 

Tamil politicians only attended the ceremonies for the past 3 years in recognition of the promises that the current government made about reconciliation, equal rights and a new federal constitution.  Progress on these promises has been virtually non-existent and we call on Tamil dignitaries to express their displeasure at such stalling through re-considering their terms of engagement in appropriate ways.

Not only has there been little progress on reconciliation, transitional justice and political reform, but serious human rights abuses continue against the Tamil and Muslim communities, as well asjournalists, human rights defenders and political dissidents.  The brutal security apparatus remains in place, undiminished and unreformed, if not as visible under the current government, but ready to be deployed as those in power wish.  Extrajudicial executions, abductions, torture, sexual violence, illegal land appropriation, state-sponsored population movements that change the demography of Tamil areas, religious and cultural intolerance, language and economic discrimination, political exclusion and gerrymandering, appropriation of timber, agricultural land, minerals and resources of the sea under the protection of the state, fresh occupation of Tamil lands in the guise of expansion of tourism, protection of archeological sites and military needs are all continuing under the current government. 

These abuses are exacerbated by the presence of one of the highest concentrations of military forces in the world by one of the largest militaries by population in Asia, most of which remain deployed in the Tamil and Muslim areas.  Such a large military is a drain on all citizens in times of peace, but especially on the Tamil population as the nearly  100% Sinhalese security forces have perfected monetary extortion through torture, sexual violence, human smuggling & trafficking, economic strangulation and monitoring of all civilian activity.  These abuses against the Tamil population, taking place in the aftermath of the mass atrocities during and after the war that ended in 2009, and continuing under the present unity government elected on a mandate for reform are understood to be aimed at the ultimate destruction of the Tamil community as a viable entity within their own ‘area of historical habitation’ on the island.

This Independence Day 2018, the undersigned Tamil diaspora organizations appeal to the International Community, particularly the Western and regional powers with influence and involvement in Sri Lanka, to ensure justice and lasting peace in Sri Lanka following up on consensus UN Human Rights Council Resolution 30/1 and the reaffirmation of commitments made therein through HR/34/1 in March 2017.

The resolutions called for the establishment of a credible accountability mechanism with strong international participation to investigate the war crimes and crimes against humanity committed during and after the war that ended in 2009.  The resolutions also called for de-militarization of the North and East, a truth commission, action on tracing missing persons, reparations to victims and a political solution to the ethnic conflict that guarantees non-recurrence.

We bring to the attention of the international community that 3 years after Resolution 30/1, the Sri Lankan government has failed to implement even a single key mechanism for Transitional Justice.  The Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) is still not repealed, the Office of Missing Persons still not operationalized, and the Special Court, truth commission and reparation mechanisms still not initiated. Your strong call in March 2017, which was echoed by several countries, for Sri Lanka to announce a time-bound action plan for implementation of its commitments remains unfulfilled.  Mothers of the disappeared have been protesting on the roadside for over a year on the lack of action, while Tamil politicians and civil society note the failure to repeal and the continued use of the PTA at every opportunity.

In 2018, we resolve to use all available diaspora resources to support action against accused war criminals in Sri Lanka through universal jurisdiction.

To this end, we call upon the international community to strongly act, including executing travel bans on the accused, implementing asset freezes on war criminals and human rights abusers, and seeking detentions and prosecutions when identified war criminals travel to or through their countries.  As the long promised constitutional reform in Sri Lanka drags on, we ask concerned governments and human rights bodies to push for the incorporation of transitional justice provisions in the new constitution.  

As Sri Lanka gears up for the 70th anniversary of its independence, democratic governments around the world and the United Nations officials taking part in the festivities must call for Sri Lanka to commit to a time-bound plan to implement the totality of the transitional justice provisions. We urge you in your influential position to issue specific alternative measures to address Sri Lanka’s non-compliance with the Human Rights Council resolutions, including possible referral to the UN Security Council.

With the utmost respect,

1. Australian Tamil Congress (ATC)

2. British Tamil Conservatives (BTC)

3. British Tamils Forum (BTF)

4. Ilankai Tamil Sangam (ITS-USA)

5. People for Equality and Relief in Lanka (PEARL-USA)

6. Solidarity Group for Peace and Justice in Sri Lanka (SGPJ- South Africa)

7. Tamils for Labour (TfL-UK)

8. Tamil Friends for Liberal Democrats (TFLD-UK)

9. Together Against Genocide (TAG-UK)

10. United States Tamil Political Action Council (USTPAC)

11. World Thamil Organization (WTO-USA)

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