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The Massacre of Tamil youths in the Bindunuweva REHABILITATION centre in October 2000. There are hundreds of schools and facilities in the North East but the Sinhala govt is sending the Tamil youth to the Sinhala areas. Let s pray for their safe return.

Wednesday, 28 October 2009 - 7:31 AM SL Time


-JUSTICE BEFORE RECONCILIATION-

On October 25, 2000, twenty-six persons (twenty-nine by some estimates), were chopped to death, while about fourteen others were seriously injured, in a rehabilitation detention centre at Bindunuwewa, Badulla, Sri Lanka. According to the National Human Rights Commission, which inquired into the incident, `the police officers, approximately 60 in number, were present at the place of massacre at the time of the massacre` and they `were fully armed`. At least two of the detainees were shot by the police while trying to escape their attackers. Clearly these officers were participants in the massacre and have committed an even graver crime than the actual perpetrators. The armed police presence encouraged and enabled the attackers to engage in the massacre they were assured that their crimes would have no legal consequences.

Initial stories told of a mob attack, however the timing of the event, in early morning, debunks the idea of a mob. Reliable inquiries have since revealed that the attackers were brought to the place by vehicle. In recent decades, there have been many attacks carried out by persons brought to the crime scene by others. The cruelty consistently demonstrated in these cases - hacking people to death, burning people alive, burning buildings - reveals that the attackers have not been amateurs, but persons with previous experience or `professional` training. At Bindunuwewa, they briskly did their job and soon disappeared.

What grounds for personal anger or fury have been suggested to explain why someone would engage in such brutal crimes? The implausible proposition that members of a farming community living in the area carried out this massacre contradicts all that is known about the behavior of Sri Lanka`s poor rural folk. This atrocity was committed by men with muscle, the will to kill and the know-how to go into hiding fast.

Sri Lankan law clearly states that accessories to murder are equally guilty of murder. What took place during this incident is much more than that. The sixty officers present were part of the arrangements for the carrying out of this massacre. Attempts to treat these police officers as less responsible parties go against the law. Additionally, efforts to diminish their legal responsibility will only result in further degeneration of the police force itself. Among the sixty police present, however, there must have been some with different ranks and some with a duty over others. These higher officers bear greater responsibility than their subordinates for the crimes that happened on this occasion.
Senior officers must also be held responsible for the actions of those present during the crime. The indications of these higher officers` culpability are:

a. These sixty police could not have been present at this particular place and time but for their being assigned there. The documents in which their assignments are recorded will reveal who authorised their movement. On that basis, it should be possible identify and question the superior officers.

b. Immediately after the incident, there were many official versions of what happened that are now known to have been fabrications designed to misdirect inquiries. When senior police officers - normally those who conduct investigations - undertook to fabricate stories and misdirect criminal investigations they must have known the seriousness of their actions. Thus the senior police officers who made false press statements must be considered among the persons responsible for this crime.

c. Two to three hundred innocent villagers were detained in an effort to put the blame for this crime on the local people and cover up the real perpetrators. That senior police officers went this far suggests the extent of their involvement, how vast their fabrications. The pre-crime conspiracy was supplemented by subsequent falsehoods. These innocent persons were released only after sit-down protests by other villagers at the front of the police station.

d. Posters inciting violence were exhibited locally prior to this incident. How could they have been displayed without the knowledge of high law enforcement agents in the area? On previous occasions, for example during 1988-89, law enforcement agencies themselves forged posters and other materials under the name of the insurgents, to mislead the public about attacks they themselves carried out. Even if they were exhibited without their prior knowledge, tacit or express approval, why did they not have these posters removed? With prior knowledge of these incitements why did they not take action to provide greater security to the detainees or move them to a safer place?

Unfortunately, even the National Human Rights Commission has deemed the police officers` actions in this case as nothing more than a `serious dereliction of duty`, effectively exonerating them from criminal responsibility and transforming the whole affair into a mere internal disciplinary inquiry. The criminals have been miraculously reduced to a group of fictitious `outsiders`.

The totality of this event and others like it as an act of mass murder has been undermined and the legal stage set for a few unimportant persons to take the fall in some low-key murder trials, at best. Meanwhile, the victims` families have already been promised compensation, not as an act of compassion by the authorities, but as a pay-off to silence their outrage and confuse the sheer criminality of the massacre by giving it the veneer of a civil case. Thus, this heinous crime is swept under the carpet.
Reports on the investigation into this incident indicate that the burden of proof has now perversely been cast onto the survivors.

Having narrowly escaped death, the victims have found themselves required to identify the culprits and prove their allegations, in spite of the state being legally responsible for the investigation and prosecution. With sixty police officers present during the crime there need be no lack of evidence. These sixty eye-witnesses are those who must be interviewed their log books and other notes that they are required by law to keep are those that must be examined. According to reports, about thirty of the officers were detained immediately after the incident. They must have been interrogated and their statements too must be available.

If there were ever a case with overwhelming evidence, this is the case. Suffice it to say that the Sri Lankan government has in its possession all the information necessary to act.

This incident is not only morally outrageous but of extremely serious nature both under Sri Lankan criminal law and international law.

a. Under Sri Lankan law, the perpetrators of these killings must be charged with murder. The attorney general`s department is legally responsible for the prosecution of crimes in Sri Lanka. As prosecutor, the department is obliged to act objectively and without fear or favour. If these prosecutions do not proceed or if the cases are not dealt with in a satisfactory manner, legal responsibility for the breach will fall primarily on this department.

b. Under international law, these killings are a CRIME AGAINST HUMANITY. They clearly fall within the definition of a crime against humanity of murder given by the Preparatory Commission for the International Criminal Court [PCNICC/2000/1/Add.2, article 7

(1) (a)]. Ultimately, the whole episode must be viewed from this standpoint.

Irrespective, states are obliged to protect prisoners in their custody. The Government of Sri Lanka has failed in this duty. As a state party to both the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the Second Optional Protocol, the Commission is mandated to seek an explanation from the government for its failure to fulfill this positive obligation, and make appropriate recommendations in accordance with the ICCPR and international norms.


Source(s)
http://massacres.ahrchk.net/bindunuwewa/index.php

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Thivya
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LK Information  28 Oct 2009 01:31:53 GMT  Report for Abuse  
Irrespective, states are obliged to protect prisoners in their custody. The Government of Sri Lanka has failed in this duty. As a state party to both the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the Second Optional Protocol, the Commission is mandated to seek an explanation from the government for its failure to fulfill this positive obligation, and make appropriate recommendations in accordance with the ICCPR and international norms.
Thalaivar
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LK Information  28 Oct 2009 01:35:11 GMT  Report for Abuse  
The Massacre of Tamil youths in the Bindunuweva REHABILITATION centre in October 2000


10000 former ltte's carders' who are in rehabilitation camps are in danger.

will there be repeat of The Massacre of Tamil youths in the Bindunuweva Massacre ??

Edited By - Thalaivar - 28 Oct 2009 01:35:55 GMT
samadi
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LK Information  28 Oct 2009 01:49:12 GMT  Report for Abuse  
This is one article I found going to the website Thivya has posted..

http://massacres.ahrchk.net/bindunuwewa/index.php


Fundamental rights petition: Bindunuwewa order reserved

By S.S.Selvanayagam

Daily Mirror, 13 June 2002

The petitioner Captain Banda cited CID Director Keerthi Gajanayake, Inspector Linton, SP Nandana Munasinghe, DIG Punya de Silva all of the CID, the IGP as well as the Attorney General as respondents.

Captain Banda although attached to the Sri Lanka Army, functioned as the officer in Charge of the Bindunuwewa Rehabilitation Camp as civil officer.

In his petition, he has inter alia stated that on 24.10.2000 in the evening when the inmates of the camp had assembled for religious observances, some of the inmates of the camp had been questioning him as to why they could not be released after 3 months of rehabilitation.

The protest was initiated by a youth Dasan who had been sent to the camp from Batticaloa. Capt. Banda promised to look into this matter the next day and requested them to be calm. However, the inmates had become violent.

By this time, some of the inmates had removed the only telephone in the camp to their dormitory stating that they wished to contact officials of the ICRC and as a result Capt. Banda or the other officials could not make use of the telephone to inform the police regarding the situation that had erupted within the camp.

The three constables who were on duty at the police post camp had become over-excited and one of them had fired his gun in the air while the other two with his assistant Lieutenant Abeyratne had run into the village seeking help.

Having heard the gunshots, the inmates of the camp had run towards the police post and tried to grab the firearm from the remaining constable. Capt. Banda had intervened and pleaded with the inmates to remain calm.

The Officer in Charge of the Bindunuwewa police station along with the army officers spoke to the 45 inmates at the camp and they were in a position to persuade them to have their dinner and to remain in their dormitories for the night. As there was a sign of calmness in the camp, the police requested the army personnel to return to their camp in Diyatalawa and the 70 police officers undertook to maintain security at the camp.

The next day morning about 2,000 people began to march towards the camp. Most of them were carrying clubs, swords and axes and some even carried firearms. The crowd began attacking the inmates who were by that time dispersed all over the camp premises and 24 inmates were killed in the most gruesome manner and their bodies were thrown into the dormitories and set on fire.


did you write this article..????or copy and pasted from many articles..????
Pannacotta
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LK Information  28 Oct 2009 01:59:38 GMT  Report for Abuse  
Hacked by axe inside police canter witness
by Jayani Wegodapola

the Island, 28 September 2002

'I was hacked by an axe inside the police canter by a group of about 7 persons. Two or three police personnel were only a few yards away from where I was', said Thambirajah Nawarajah, a detainee of the Bindunuwewa camp when examined by the state counsel Priyantha Nawana in the Bindunuwewa massacre case before the Trial-at-Bar on Thursday at Hultsdorf.


wonder if this was the same guy who gave Velu the axe... )

Thivya, strange isn't it, that you are mourning the deaths of terrorists.... but you celebrate the deaths of real innocents, the muslim, and sinhalese border villagers...

Edited By - Pannacotta - 28 Oct 2009 02:01:00 GMT
Piyal
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LK Information  28 Oct 2009 01:59:53 GMT  Report for Abuse  
Let s pray for their safe return.


Aniwa,.... otherwise those Army officers will give the same steel rod treatment to them as Prabhakaran,.....

Now,.. Praying is the best thing you can do ?
Why not blocking the roads in Canada ?

BTW,.. why aren't you protesting against the Canadian government on Inhumane treatments of those 76 residentially challenged chaps ?

What happened to Human rights watch ? UN refugee council ? Why aren't they make a valid case against Canadian Government ?

Too bad,.. Tamil Di ass pora is having Mental imbalance,.....
deborak
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LK Information  28 Oct 2009 03:51:27 GMT  Report for Abuse  
Aiyo......Where ever you morons go...u all are begging for land!

:)

provincial governor refuses entry to Lankans

By Stephen Fitzpatrick,

Jakarta: October 27, 2009: Indonesian provincial officials will bow to presidential orders to take 78 Sri Lankan asylum-seekers waiting on board the Australian Customs vessel Oceanic Viking despite their concerns that the newly built immigration detention centre is not ready for them.

Riau Islands Governor Ismeth Abdullah queried the readiness of the detention centre, built with Australian funds in the provincial capital of Tanjung Pinang.

'We want to refuse to have them land here, because it could create new problems, he told reporters.

'But if it s an order from Jakarta, we have to accept it. There s nothing we can do.

A spokesman for Justice and Human Rights Minister Djoko Suyanto said late yesterday that Mr Abdullah was 'expressing his concerns, which I understand as a politician he would do . . . but there is no suggestion he is stopping the people from coming ashore .

An immigration department official emerged from a coordination meeting discussing how the Sri Lankans would be contained in the facility also saying it was 'not ready to hold them. Even though it has the capacity, the infrastructure is not there - there s no running water, the electricity s unreliable. Even our own people here have difficulties .
deborak
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LK Information  28 Oct 2009 03:52:52 GMT  Report for Abuse  
A good move...regaing our lost land!

:)

Malwatta Mahanayake Thera appeals to philanthropists
Help reconstruct damaged shrines in North
by Cyril Wimalasurendre

KANDY - The Mahanayake of the Malwatte Chapter Most Venerable Tibbatuwawe Sri Siddhartha Sumangala Thera made an appeal to the affluent Buddhists seeking their assistance to renovate places of worship in the North, which had been damaged or destroyed due to terrorist activities.
Voodoo
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LK Information  28 Oct 2009 04:32:12 GMT  Report for Abuse  
Velu killed 13 soldiers to create 30 year war to kill Srilanka but ended up with an holy axe on the dumb head...

now lost dispora cry for beloved murderers who killed 70 000 and injured millions..

they want the murderers to kill srilankans by restarting the war...
Thalaivar
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LK Information  28 Oct 2009 05:02:17 GMT  Report for Abuse  
A good move...regaing our lost land!


dont grab MY HOMELAND by FORCE!
deborak
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LK Information  28 Oct 2009 07:15:41 GMT  Report for Abuse  
dont grab MY HOMELAND by FORCE!


U grabbed our undisputed homeland for 30 years and we took it back!!

Of course by force and that is the lesson we teach who try to grab our heritage!

:)
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