
NESOHR Case Report issued on 14th January 2006
NorthEast Secretariat on Human Rights released a report related to the destruction of life, property and community in Pesalai, on December 23rd 2005. the full text of the statement is as follows:
Destruction of life, property and community in Pesalai,
on December 23rd 2005 1. Claymore attack
On Friday December 23rd, at 1.30 pm, the second
vehicle of the three vehicles carrying Sri Lankan
Navy sailors back to their base in Talaimannar was
hit by a claymore mine. The attack occurred in
Pesalai when the bus was passing through the
“Hundred House Scheme”. The Sri Lankan Navy
camp in Talaimannar is located about two
kilometres from this housing scheme. Thirteen
soldiers died in the attack and many more were
wounded.
2. Retaliation
Uninjured soldiers in the other two vehicles
immediately started spraying bullets towards the
housing scheme. Panicky occupants of the houses
in the “Hundred Housing Scheme” started to flee in
all directions. Following account is based on the statement given to us by a family
member of one of the victims and the descriptions of the attack given by several other
residents who faced the Sri Lankan Navy revenge attack. 3. The Statement: The fleeing As people started to run, Suganthy picked up her younger child aged 3, and her husband,
Fernando, picked up their older child aged 5. Fernando told Suganthy, “Let us run and if
we die, let us die together”. They began to run. Suganthy’s house was on the road side
between the location of where the Navy vehicle got hit by the claymore and the Navy
vehicle that was traveling a few metres ahead. Suganthy is an asthma patient and she
found it difficult to run carrying the toddler. At this time Suganthy saw that the couple
next door was still in their home, standing at their door steps. This couple next door was
not about to run like everyone else. Suganthy told Fernando, “I will wait with them, you
run further”. She tore her hand off from Fernando’s and ran into the house of
Anthoniamma and Emanuel Cruz. That was the last time Fernando saw his wife and
child.
The Cruz couple, whose house at which Suanthy took refuge, have four children, eldest
of them is 14 years old. These children had gone to another house to watch television
with their friends. The parents, worried about what could happen to their children did not
want to run away, and they stayed in their home.
Fernando ran on and stopped about five houses further down and stayed there. After
that, no one knows what exactly happened to Suganthy, her baby and the Cruz couple. The beating and the sexual assault One woman resident states, “The fleeing people were stopped by the Sri Lankan Navy
and the women were forced to sit on the hot sand with their face to the sand. The Navy
soldiers then asked the young women crude sexually motivated questions. They also
dropped their trousers in front of the women. It was so unbearable”.
The men were taken to another side and they were all beaten. There were all together
about 42 men who were beaten. Both men and women were then forced to sit there for
several hours.
Navy men came to the house where Fernando (Suganthy’s husband) had taken refuge
with their older five year old boy. The Navy men picked up the five year old boy by his
collar and was about to beat him. Fernando instinctively put his arm to take the blow.
The Navy men had then turned to the father and said, “Are you so brave and strong that
you can stop us?” They then severely attacked the father. Fernando sustained severe
injuries on his arms, legs, and hips as a result of the attack. He was unable to walk.
Refuge in the church and the missing people
Around 6.00 pm the priest from the village church arrived and rescued all of the
residents sitting on the sand and took them to the church. The Navy did not release nine
men.
When the villagers arrived at the church they realized that several people were missing.
Everyone thought the missing people would have run further and took refuge in the
adjacent villages. The church priest searched for the missing people in the other villages,
found some of them and brought them back to the church. Suganthy, her baby and the
Cruz couple was still missing.
Suganthy’s relatives looked among the injured civilians admitted to the hospital for the
missing four people. There they saw a pregnant mother who was hit in the stomach with
a gun by the Navy men. The nine men On the second day, Saturday December 24th, the Bishop of Mannar (Bishop Rayappu
Joseph), talked to the Navy and got the nine detained men released. It was around 12.00
pm on Saturday when they were released. Residents said those nine men, when they
returned, did not look like they were humans, they were attacked so severely, their skulls
were broken, their hands and legs were broken. The state in which they came back was
beyond belief. Search for the four people On Saturday, no one was allowed to go back into the village. The Navy however,
allowed the Assistant Government Agent (AGA) for the district to go through the village
but she was not allowed to go inside any houses. The Navy stopped them from stepping
off of the road. The Navy only allowed the AGA to go down the road to the adjacent
villages to look for the missing people. The AGA looked through the other villages and
came back and said the four missing people were not to be found.
The residents encouraged the AGA to ask for permission from the Navy to go inside
houses to look for the missing people. The AGA took three more of her officials and
went to look in the houses. Those who came described what they saw as follows,
“It’s hard to describe what we’ve seen, it’s really cruel. There is a lot of blood that has
run from inside a house, outside, and down the front steps of the house. The verandah is
covered in blood. Because there was so much blood, we couldn’t step into the house.
The blood on the steps is still there. We found the hands of a small child just outside the
house and a chunk of flesh inside the house among the ashes”. Among the burnt remains Everyone by now realized that the four people are no more. The Navy did not allow
anyone into the houses for sometime and they must have cleared out the place during that
time. They have just missed to remove the child’s hand and the chunk of flesh that the
AGA and her three officials saw on Saturday.
The third day, Sunday December 25th, which was Christmas day, the Sri Lankan Navy
pulled back, and allowed the people to go to their homes. Fernando was the first one to
be there with his younger brother. The others soon joined him. The ashes in the house
were still there. The hand and the chunk of flesh had been removed. They could see that
some attempt had been made to wash up the blood. They searched among the ashes.
Fernando immediately recognized the green skirt that his wife was wearing. It was half burnt.
In one area there was dried blood in a puddle, which the Bishop took pictures of.
Only the Bishop was allowed to take a camera. They found Suganthy’s national ID
(Identity Card), her army ID, and her bank account book as she must have run with her
purse and these things were in her purse. Her homeowner’s identity card was also there.
They submitted all of these things to the police. The National ID of Emanuel Cruz was
also there. Theft and burning The people were also saying that there had been some theft. The Navy actually stole
jewels from the women and there was 25,000 Rupees missing from one home.
About seven houses had been burnt badly. Furniture and mattresses were heaped in these
houses and were set alight. They completely burnt one of the large shops in the village. Monday By Monday, December 26th, the entire village had collected the remains of their
belongings and left the village. Fernando was also admitted to the hospital on Monday.
On Tuesday, the family members of Fernando took some offerings to the house, as part
of the funeral ritual. They placed the food at the steps and within two minutes of doing
this, the Navy men were there. The family members felt threatened.
People were absolutely scared at the time of the incident. On the second or third day
after the incident the Navy was still carrying out its search operations and the entire
village was in a state of fear. 4. The Inquiry On Sunday, December 25th, two officials from the Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission
(SLMM), the Bishop of Mannar Rev. Rayappu Joseph, and Rev. Fr. Wincent Parick, the
parish priest from the church where resident took refuge, visited the house where the
burnt human remains were found. Mannar Police were given the job of conducting
investigations. It is revealing to note that none of the people who faced the Sri Lankan Navy attack on
December 23rd expect anything to come out of the police investigations.
Dr N Malathy
(NESOHR Secretary) The pdf of version of NESOHR’s report is as follows:

15 January 2006
|