At a meeting with
a senior Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) delegation
visiting Geneva, Amnesty International, Human Rights
Watch and the International Commission of Jurists
(ICJ) called on the LTTE to end political killings
and the recruitment of child soldiers and demonstrate
how they will respect international humanitarian and
human rights law in Sri Lanka.
The LTTE delegation,
headed by S.P. Thamilselvan, leader of their political
wing, is visiting several European countries to consider
the Tamil Tigers' next steps in the stalled Sri Lankan
peace process. International human rights organizations
met with the LTTE delegation on Tuesday 5 October.
"We appealed
to the senior LTTE leaders to show the world that
they are both willing and capable of respecting the
lives and rights of all Sri Lankans," said Nicholas
Howen, Secretary-General of the ICJ. "We look
to them to make a clear public commitment to international
humanitarian and human rights standards and practical
ways of putting them into effect," he added.
"At a time when
we should be moving back to peace talks the LTTE seems
to have dramatically escalated the killing of perceived
Tamil opponents and is still recruiting child soldiers,"
said Loubna Freih, Geneva Director for Human Rights
Watch.
Victims of killings
have included activists from Tamil political parties
not aligned with the LTTE, members of a rival LTTE
faction in the east, and alleged Sri Lankan military
informants.
"This climate
of fear, especially in the east, will make it even
more difficult to find a lasting peace in the country,"
warned Peter Splinter, Geneva Representative for Amnesty
International.
S.P. Thamilselvan
said in the meeting with human rights organisations
that the LTTE denies responsibility for such killings
but that the LTTE would consider the development of
confidence building measures to end killings that
are threatening the peace process.
In the last two weeks
reported killings have included: Valli Suntharam,
a 61-year-old trade union activist and member of the
Eelam People's Revolutionary Liberation Front (EPRLF),
shot dead in Jaffna on 27 September; Selvarajah Mohan,
a 22-year-old Eelam People's Democratic Party (EPDP)
supporter, stabbed to death after being taken from
his home in Jaffna district on 24 September; Rajadurai
Sivagnanam, killed in Batticaloa district on 22 September;
and Somasundaram Varunakulasingham, a central committee
member of the EPDP, shot dead in Colombo on 23 September.
Recruitment of child
soldiers also continues. UNICEF has documented that
in May, June and July 2004 alone, the LTTE recruited
259 children, while releasing 106 -- and UNICEF acknowledges
that they learn about only a small proportion of child
recruitment.
The human rights
organizations also met with members of the Northeast
Secretariat on Human Rights, set up in July with the
support of the LTTE. "Such human rights initiatives
could be positive if they help to prevent serious
human rights violations and give ordinary people a
way of seeking protection and remedies," said
Nicholas Howen. "We urge the LTTE to affirm publicly
that they will cooperate fully with this Secretariat.
The international community should assist any genuine
moves towards a culture of respect for rights and
the need for this new Secretariat to be independent
and professional," added Nicholas Howen.
http://www.amnestyusa.org/news/document.do?id=80256DD400782B8480256F2500501DC8
|