Thursday, April 12, 2012

Abductors had 'political backing' - Gunaratnam



BBC Sinhala
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Abductors were trained security personnel that operate unofficially and secretly under the patronage of the political authority says the freed political leader Premakumara Gunaratnam.

“The places they kept me were not military camps or police stations, but the way they operated strongly suggested that abductors were a part of government security services”, leader of the Frontline Socialist Party (FSP) Premakumara Gunaratnam told BBC Sandeshaya.


Deported to Australia

“I was unable to recognise any of my captors, but the way they behave and act strongly suggested that they belong to security forces and operate with the blessings of a political authority”, he added.

He and senior leader of the FSP Dimuthu Artigalle were abducted on the 6th April from Colombo.

Police said that Gunaratnam, who is an Australian national, had walked into the police anti-crime unit at Dematagoda- Colombo on the 10th April and had been deported to Australia.

Speaking to BBC Sandeshaya from Sydney, Australia, Gunaratnam said that he was tortured by his captors immediately after he was kidnapped but later changed their tactics.

New political party

“I see this abduction as a clear death threat to me and it violates fundamental rights. I thought they would kill me,” he added.

According to Gunaratnam captors changed the way they handled him and was extensively questioned about his politics, political party, its agenda and associates.

Gunaratnam who is also known with few other identities claimed that he was kept in two different locations.

“The captors did not extensively question me about my forged identity but indicated to me that they knew all about it” he said.

The Government denies involvement of security personal and has cast doubts on the abduction.

© BBC Sinhala

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Thursday, April 12, 2012

Australian says he was tortured in Sri Lanka



By Matthew Carney | ABC
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An Australian man says he was sexually tortured by security forces after being abducted in Sri Lanka.

Speaking in Sydney on his return home, Kumar Gunaratnam claimed he was abducted at gunpoint by secret police in Colombo on Friday, assaulted, tortured and left to fear for his life.

He was released after the intervention of the Australian Government following a public appeal by his wife.


The Sri Lankan government has denied the kidnapping claims and says Mr Gunaratnam is a dangerous militant.

Mr Gunaratnam says he was about to launch a left-wing political party Sri Lankan officials want to silence.

He says about 15 government security personnel stormed into his house in Colombo around 4:30am on Friday.

The 42-year-old, who holds dual citizenship in Australia and Sri Lanka, claims he was held for about four days and moved around to different army bases around the capital.

"I confirm I was abducted by the Sri Lankan government forces [who] blind-folded me and tortured [me]," he said.

"This includes, I'm embarrassed to say, sexual torture. I was handcuffed and my ankles were bound during the whole period."

Mr Gunaratnam says he believes without the intervention of the Australian High Commission and the media pressure put on the Sri Lankan government, he would be not be alive.

"I have no doubt that if I didn't have the Australian Government's support, I would have been killed just like my brother and hundreds of other political activists and journalists have been killed," he said.

The Sri Lankan foreign ministry has put out a statement saying Mr Gunaratnam's abduction is a fabrication and he was thrown out of the country because he overstayed his visa for more than five months.
Abuse claims

Mr Gunaratnam says he was a member of the Marxist group People's Liberation Front (JVP) but is now no longer a part of the radical organisation.

"I was a former member of the JVP but we had a political debate inside the party and we formed a new party and that was the Frontline Socialist Party," he said.

Sri Lankan author and journalist Rowan Senadeera says Mr Gunaratnam was a well-known member of the JVP in the late 1980s when serious human rights violations occurred.

"During the reign of terror he was a part of the JVP for sure," Senadeera said.

"The JVP slowly came back to the mainstream. At that time I believe that he was not agreeing with their joining the democratic process.

"I don't think he has been a believer in democratic process under capitalist system and even now or then."

But Mr Gunaratnam rejects any suggestions he committed human rights abuses, but for the first time he did confirm he did operate under three different aliases.

When pressed about it he would not go into details.

"I would like to speak with you everything in detail later on because I was just in a trauma...[in] the last 48-72 hours."

Mr Gunaratnam says he has not ruled out returning to Sri Lanka to continue his political work.

He has been reunited with his wife and children.

© ABC

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