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Sri Lanka's War Is Long Over, But

Reconciliation Remains Elusive

Ma
nnar, in northern Sri Lanka, is a fishing village where ethnic Tamils live. The country's long civil war ended
in 2009, but many in the village say there will not be reconciliation until there's an accounting of the
thousands who disappeared during the fighting.Julie McCarthy/NPR

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JULIE MCCARTHY

JUNE 29, 2015


Sri Lanka, a palm-fringed island in the Indian Ocean, is in the sixth year of peace. But
as the country prepares for elections in August, the legacy of its long civil war still
casts a shadow.
The intervening years have been especially painful for the families of the thousands
who disappeared in three decades of conflict and remain unaccounted for.
The trauma endures in the fishing village of Mannar in the Northern Province, where
most of the fighting unfolded between the Tamil rebels and the government forces.
Residents say men were snatched off the streets "in broad daylight," bundled into
vans, and never seen again.
Manuel Udaya Chandra is still haunted by the events of the night her son disappeared.
"Three men carrying weapons" came around midnight, took him away for questioning,
she says. "They said he'd be back."
Anton Sanistan was 24 when he disappeared into the maw of Sri Lanka's brutal war in
September 2008 eight months before the final offensive of the war.
The government declared the war over in May 2009 with a military blitz that
annihilated the rebel Tamil Tigers who had felt persecuted by the majority Sinhalese
and had pressed for an ethnic Tamil homeland.
Chandra insists her son was no Tamil militant, and that he juggled school and odds
jobs to support the family. The 58-year-old lists all the places she's gone searching for
word of her son.
"To the navy, 30 times, the police a hundred times." She went to the prison holding
detainees and a myriad of criminal investigation departments. She testified before a
presidential commission on the missing, and met with British Prime Minister David
Cameron. Her voice cracks as she recalls the journeys.
"It was no use," she says.

Manuel Udaya Chandra's 24-year-old son disappeared in 2008, shortly before Sri Lanka's civil war
ended. She holds out hope that he's still alive, though a government commission looking into those
who disappeared has moved slowly.-Julie McCarthy/NPR

Clinging To Hope
She still clings to hope and finds solace in a grainy photograph she clutches. It
purportedly shows a prison and detainees one of them her son, she claims. She
found it on the Internet and says other mothers have identified their sons in it as well.
"I'm his mother," says Chandra, who's now sobbing. "I gave birth to him, I raised him. I
can feel he is alive and I cannot give up."
Today, Chandra now leads 5,000 families across the north demanding the government
account for those who disappeared.
Many believe their relatives are alive in secret camps. Rayappu Joseph, the Catholic
bishop of Mannar, says the idea that black sites exist has flourished in the absence of
any proper investigation, including those of men who surrendered at the end of the
war. The bishop himself turned over one such young man.
"We want justice. We want to know what has happened to my son? To my husband?
What has happened to them? Where are they? Who killed them? Accept the truth and
acknowledge it and feel that you have done this evil thing," says the bishop, visibly
angered. "A fellow has surrendered himself and you go and kill him. Where is this
allowed in the world?"

i
The Catholic bishop of Mannar, Rayappu Joseph, has been an outspoken critic of military abuses by government
forces during the long civil war. "Where are they?" the bishop says of those who are missing. "We want justice."
Julie McCarthy/NPR

In September, the United Nations is expected to release a landmark and long awaited
report on possible war crimes committed in Sri Lanka.
There's the shelling of tens of thousands of civilians in the final stages of the war by
the regime of the former president, Mahinda Rajapaksa. Tamil rebels were accused of
using civilians as shields.
Tracing illegal detentions, disappearances and the impunity that prevailed are part of
the larger question of justice for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity.
A Commission To Investigate
The former president, who was voted out of office in January after 10 years in power,
formed a commission to investigate missing persons back in 2011.
But Alan Keenan, senior analyst and Sri Lanka Project Director for the International
Crisis Group, says just as the commission was never intended to find the disappeared,
"It was never intended to hold anyone to account," he says.
"It was established by the previous government as something that it could say to the
international community, in particular to the Human Rights Council in Geneva, that it
was doing something."
Keenan says at times the commission risked exposing Tamil eye-witnesses to new
dangers.
"The commission has allowed military intelligence to regularly be in the room as
people are testifying about disappearances," which they allege the military
perpetrated, "and that's ... a blatant form of intimidation."
But that has not deterred more than 20,000 people from registering their case with the
commission, which is made up of Sri Lanka's retired justices.

The new government of President Maithripala Sirisena, which took power in January,
promised to begin the reckoning of crimes committed during the war, and has added
commissioners to accelerate its work.
New Elections Planned
But pledges of a more muscular inquiry are likely to recede in priority at least until the
outcome of national elections later this summer.
The president dissolved parliament last Friday, paving the way for general elections in
mid-August.
Government spokesman Rajitha Senaratne says the government is moving cautiously
because if it appears to be favoring the minority Tamils, there will be a backlash at the
polls.
He said the government is not necessarily satisfied with the commission's speed, but
says, "The majority [is] Sinhalese and we have to balance them also not to show we
are a pro-Tamil government or a pro-Western government. "
Leaders of the Tamil community say that without "truth," there will be no national
reconciliation, and many would trust only an outside tribunal conducted by
international jurists.
But Senaratne says Sri Lanka is not "answerable to the United States or the West,"
and can investigate itself.
Even as it opposes an international tribunal, the new government of President Sirisena
is taking pains to project more openness and a humane face. It is difficult to imagine,
however, the creation in Sri Lanka of a Truth and Reconciliation Commission like the
one in post-apartheid South Africa.
But Manuel Udaya Chandra says the war cannot be over as long as what happened to
the disappeared like her son remains a mystery, and she's counting on the new
government to solve it.
"The new president was in the old government but came to power with the votes of the
Tamil people," she says. "And he can't just dump this question. You must," she says,
"answer us."
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