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Lankan army still ruling Tamil areas with ‘iron fist’ years after end of war: Report | The civil war in Sri Lanka is over, but the military still governs Tamil areas with a heavy hand, according to a report. Residents said that they still live
in fear of security forces, and also fear speaking out about the atrocities meted
out on them. According to the Christian Science Monitor, three years after the
national army defeated the Liberation Tigers for Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in a 2009
offensive that left 40,000 civilians dead, military camps still occupy the predominantly
Tamil north. According to the report, the Sinhalese-controlled government has
justified the militarization citing national security concerns. “When you’ve lived
under terrorism for 30 years, you’re going to take precautions,” Malinda Seneviratne,
the editor in chief of The Nation, a weekly English newspaper in Sri Lanka, said.
But many Tamil civilians worry that the increased security is a cover to exert
control over the Tamil minority, the report added. “Given the ethnic divide in
Sri Lanka, there is a perception amongst people that the military are there to
restrict the rights of the people of the region,” Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu, the
director of the Centre for Policy Alternatives in Colombo, said. “There is no
chance of violence anytime soon. But if people come out in peaceful protest and
violence is used against the population, then the likelihood of the population
itself becoming more militant is greater,” he added. The Army tightly controls
the region. Civilians have to take permission from the army for everyday activities,
from purchasing property to hosting a funeral, the report said. Even non-governmental
organizations must get all projects pre-approved before proceeding, it added.
“There is no freedom here,” the report quoted one Tamil social activist, as saying.
Human rights groups have also reported that between October 2011 and March 2012,
56 people, mostly Tamils, were abducted by security forces.
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