| Amnesty on TRO Abductions AI Index: ASA 37/007/2006 10 March 2006
 
 UA 55/06           Fear for Safety/ possible "disappearance"
 
 SRI LANKA
 Kasinathar Ganeshalingam (m), aged 50, Director of the
  Tamils Rehabilitation Organization (TRO) and Co-ordinator of Pre-School
  Education Development Centre, North-East Province Kathirkamar Thangarasa (m), aged 43, TRO Driver
 Thanuskody Premini (f), aged 25, Chief Accountant for TRO in Batticaloa 
    town and Student
 Shanmuganathan Sujendram (m), TRO Accountant, 
  Mankikkavasar Children's Home
 Thambiraja Vasantharajan (m), TRO Accountant, 
  Batticaloa
 Kailayapillai Ravindran (m), aged 26, TRO Accountant, Vipulananda Children's Home
 Arunesarasa Satheesharan (m), TRO Accounts 
  Trainee, Vellavali
 
  
    | 
 Ms Thanuskodi Premini, Chief Accountant, TRO, Batticaloa (photo courtesy TamilNet)  |  Kasinathar Ganeshalingam, Kathirkamar Thangarasa, Thanuskody Premini, 
        Shanmuganathan Sujendram, Thambiraja Vasantharajan, Kailayapillai 
        Ravindran and Arunesarasa Satheesharan, all employees of the Tamil 
        relief and development charity, Tamils Rehabilitation Organization 
        (TRO), were abducted in two separate incidents in late January 2006 on 
        the Jaffna Peninsula in the far north of Sri Lanka. It is feared that 
        they may have "disappeared" and there are grave concerns for their 
        safety.  
 On 29 January, Kasinathar Ganeshalingam, Kathirkamar Thangarasa and 
      three female TRO employees were driving from the town of Batticaloa in 
      eastern Sri Lanka, on their way north to the TRO headquarters in the 
      town of Kilinochchi in northern Sri Lanka. According to two TRO workers 
      who were later released, at about 8pm they saw a white Toyota Hi-Ace van 
      following their vehicle. They were stopped and subjected to checks at 
      the Sri Lanka Army checkpoint at Welikanda, on the borders of Batticaloa 
      and Polonnaruwa districts, and saw the white van parked behind their 
      vehicle. When they moved a short distance from the checkpoint, the white 
      Hi-Ace van came behind them, overtook their vehicle and stopped them. An 
      unknown number of armed men got out of the van and assaulted both 
      Kasinathar Ganeshalingam and the driver, Kathirkamar Thangarasa, tied 
      them up and dumped them in the back of the TRO vehicle. The TRO vehicle 
      was then driven for about three hours and finally stopped at a camp in a 
      jungle area at about 11.30pm. The five TRO staff members were held 
      overnight in the camp. The women, who were reportedly held separately 
      from their male colleagues, claim that they heard the two men being 
      beaten by their captors. The following evening at around 9pm, two female 
      staff members, Punniyamoorthy Nadeswari and Sithiravel Sivamathi, were 
      released, taken to the nearest main road and put on a bus by their 
      abductors, who warned them not to speak to anyone about what had 
      occurred. A third female TRO staff member, S Dosini, was released later. 
      However, Kasinathar Ganeshalingam and the driver, Kathirkamar 
      Thangarasa, are still missing.
 
 Five more TRO employees apparently "disappeared" on 30 January in 
      similar circumstances in the same area. At 4pm, 15 TRO staff members 
      were travelling from the organization's Batticaloa District office to 
      the town of Vavuniya to attend a training session, when their way was 
      blocked by a white van approximately 100 metres after the Sri Lanka Army 
      checkpoint at Welikanda. According to those who were later released, the 
      white van had previously been following them. Five armed Tamil-speaking 
      men, aged between 20 and 25, reportedly got out of the white van and 
      boarded the TRO vehicle. One of them dragged the driver out of his seat 
      and then drove the vehicle to a jungle area. All 15 of the captives were 
      then blindfolded. Thanuskody Premini, Shanmuganathan Sujendram, 
      Thambiraja Vasantharajan, Kailayapillai Ravindran and Arunesarasa 
      Satheesharan were removed from the TRO vehicle and the remaining 10 were 
      taken back to the main road and released. The released TRO workers 
      reported that when one of the abductors shouted out that there was a 
      police jeep ahead, another of the abductors replied that this would not 
      present a problem to them.  Before the 10 TRO staff members were 
      released, they were told by the abductors that they should prepare the 
      funeral rites for the five remaining abductees.
 
 The TRO has stated that it has filed police reports with the Batticaloa 
      Police Station and some of the relatives of those missing have attempted 
      to file police reports. Police took statements from the two young women 
      who were released, who were kept overnight at the police station in 
      Batticaloa. The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) also 
      investigated and took statements from the two women but have not to date 
      made their findings public. The TRO staff have continued to cooperate 
      with the authorities and the NHRC.
 
 BACKGROUND INFORMATION
 The government and the LTTE met to discuss the implementation of the 
      cease-fire in Geneva on 22 and 23 February. The abductions of the TRO 
      workers, which took place shortly afterwards were interpreted by some as 
      an attempt to derail this renewed effort to put the peace process back 
      on track. However, the talks in Geneva went ahead as planned and both 
      parties reiterated their commitment to respect the cease-fire agreement. 
      They agreed to meet again in Geneva from 19 to 21 April.
 
 The TRO is seen as being closely affiliated with the LTTE.  However, it 
      is a legally registered Sri Lankan charity and its mission is to provide 
      much needed relief, rehabilitation and development for the people of the 
      northeast of Sri Lanka.
 
 RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as 
      possible, in English or your own language:
 - expressing concern for the safety of the seven employees of the Tamils 
      Rehabilitation Organization (TRO), who have been missing since their 
      abduction in late January 2006;
 - urging the authorities to undertake and complete as a matter of 
      urgency thorough investigations into the fate and whereabouts of the 
      seven, and make the findings public;
 -  calling on the authorities to bring those found responsible to
      justice;
 - urging the authorities to take immediate measures to ensure the safety 
      of all TRO workers and others involved in humanitarian relief work, in 
      accordance with their wishes;
 - calling for immediate steps to be taken to ensure the safety of the 
      families of the seven missing TRO workers, in accordance with their 
      wishes.
 
 APPEALS TO:
 President Mahinda Rajapakse
 Presidential Secretariat, Colombo 1, Sri Lanka
 Fax: + 94 11 2333703
 Salutation: Dear President
 
 Major General Asoka K Jayawardhana
 Secretary, Ministry of Defence, 15/5 Baladaksha Mawatha, Colombo 3, Sri 
      Lanka
 Fax: + 94 11 2446300 / 2541529
 Salutation: Dear Secretary of Defence
 
 Mr Chandra Fernando
 Inspector General of Police, Headquarters, New Secretariat, Colombo 1, 
      Sri Lanka
 Fax: + 94 11 2 438 915
 Salutation: Dear Inspector General
 
 COPIES TO:
 Lt Gen Sarath Fonseka
 Army Commander, Army Headquarters, Flagstaff Street, Colombo 1, Sri 
      Lanka
 Fax: + 94 11 2855018/ 2434862/ 2338653/ 2421374
 
 and to diplomatic representatives of Sri Lanka accredited to your
      country.
 |