Disappeared
“My son was a very sick boy when he was young. I used to take him from hospital to hospital for treatment. At the time of his disappearance, he looked like a prince. It would have been much easier to bear if he had died during the period when he was sickly”, mother of a young man disappeared by the Sri Lankan military in Allaipiddy in 1990. Disappearance is a major aspect of the history of the government of Sri Lanka. There have been several commissions on involuntary disappearances through out the island. The disappearances in the Northeast in particular have been poorly investigated and the actual number of disappeared remains unclear. An Amnesty report of 1997 stated that more than 600 people disappeared in Jaffna during the seven month period just prior to that report. The various Commissions on Disappearances appointed by the government of Sri Lanka have simply issued death certificates to many families that have registered disappearances, without actually giving any explanation for the disappearance. The failure to probe in depth into these disappearances may have been a huge mistake because the history is repeating with vengeance at present, particularly in Jaffna. Since 11 August 2006, Northeast, and in particular Jaffna, has remained blacked out from the rest of the world. Travel in and out is near impossible. Majority of the land phones as well as all cell phones have been cut. Behind this darkened and silenced Jaffna, disappearances are looming large. Fear is preventing many families from even reporting disappearances. On 11 September eight people were abducted in white-van. Such abductions have been going on since December 2005. No one so abducted have been seen alive since. Most have not been seen at all. Some have surfaced as bodies. Although Sri Lanka Human Rights Commission recently said more than 300 people have disappeared from Jaffna this year and 50 people were disappeared in the month of August, the actual number in both cases is most certainly must higher. Countries that have experienced large scale disappearances during a particular period has investigated it later and exposed the culprits. That exposure and soul searching seems to put some remorse in the system, preventing a repetition. Absence of remorse in Sri Lanka, for past disappearance, is astonishing and frightening at the same time. Has the Sri Lankan government and its armed forces perfected the methods of how to disappear people and keep the spot light away from it. The PDF file has disappearances that came to the notice of the LTTE Peace Secretariat unitl October 2006. The actual disappearance even in this period is much higher.
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