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Query: Please provide information on the treatment of Moors (Muslims) in
Sri Lanka by government forces, particularly in Beruwala. Also
provide information on the extent of Tamil Tiger (LTTE) activity in
Beruwala. Would a Moor who may have been targeted by government
forces for allegedly assisting the Tamil Tigers be able to return
safely to Sri Lanka? Response: SUMMARY Sources consulted by the Resource Information Center (RIC)
indicate that the overall situation in Sri Lanka is tenuous against
the backdrop of rising political killings by the Tamil Tigers (LTTE,
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam*) in spite of a cease-fire agreement
between the Tigers and the government. While representatives of
Human Rights Watch and the U.S. Department of State indicate that
Moors (Muslims*) in Sri Lanka currently may have more to fear from
the LTTE than government forces, they pointed out that the Sri Lankan
government has a record of abusing human rights, particularly during
the civil war. It is plausible that government forces may have
mistreated a Muslim who was suspected of assisting the LTTE. Unlike
the LTTE, the government has been adhering overall to the cease-fire
agreement, although Muslims are concerned about the lack of measures
in the agreement to assure their protection in areas controlled by
the LTTE. BACKGROUND In February 2002, the rebel Tamil Tigers (LTTE) and the Sinhalese-dominated government of Sri Lanka entered into a cease-fire agreement
that has to-date halted fighting between the two sides. Peace talks
to end officially the two-decade long civil war in Sri Lanka are
scheduled to resume in September 2003 (McDonald 7 Aug 2003). Beruwala, located in south-western Sri Lanka, is described as a
"resort" town and as a "coastal gem trading town" (virgin.net n.d.;
Cooke n.d.). Several sources refer to the centuries-long presence of
a significant (though minority) Muslim population in Beruwala, and
some suggest that Beruwala was originally settled by Muslims (Hussein
n.d.; Siriweera n.d.; Fernando n. d.). Beruwala is currently a majority ethnic-Sinhalese area (Fernando
n.d.). There is no indication that Muslims face systematic abuse in
parts of Sri Lanka under the control of the Sinhalese-dominated
government, although the situation throughout the country is unstable
(HRW 18 Aug 2003; U.S. DOS 14 Aug 2003). The RIC was unable to find
specific information on the current situation of Muslims residing in
Beruwala, or on the extent of Tamil Tiger activity in Beruwala in
sources available within time constraints. A Human Rights Watch
representative interviewed by the RIC stated that the LTTE has been
most active in the north and east of the country and that he is not
aware of much LTTE activity in Sri Lanka's south-western coastal
areas (HRW 18 Aug 2003). The RIC contacted a senior research associate specializing in Sri
Lanka at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs
(German Institute), who was in the Kalutara/Beruwala area as an
elections observer during the parliamentary elections in 2000. He
stated that there were some minor incidents of political violence but
he did not see LTTE activity. "The district has some Indian Tamil
population in the hill region but the LTTE (as representatives of the
Sri Lanka Tamils) were never successful to mobilise them in their
struggle against the government" (Senior Research Associate 20 Aug
2003). Sri Lanka's Muslims, historically referred to as Moors, comprise 7
percent of the country's population (Sinhalese 74%, Tamil 18%, 1%
other) (CIA 2003). According to information previously provided by
the RIC, the Moors often have been caught between the Sinhalese-dominated government of Sri Lanka and the rebel Tamil Tigers
throughout two decades of civil war in Sri Lanka. Currently, Moors
are at continued risk of kidnapping and extortion by the Tamil Tigers
despite an April 2002 assurance from the Tigers that they would
discontinue this practice (INS RIC 10 Sep 2002; U.S. DOS 18 Aug
2003). Moreover, Moors as well as Sinhalese civilians have been
targeted in the past in large-scale assaults by the LTTE, and Moors
have been caught up in several ethnic clashes since the cease-fire
(INS RIC 10 Sep 2002; AI 2003). Following violence between Muslims
and Tamils in April 2003, the USAID wrote in a field report: "The
clashes, which continued for a number of days, point to the ongoing
fragility of the situation in some mixed community areas of Sri
Lanka, and the potential for sparks to lead to whole-scale and
indiscriminate violence. If left unchecked this could severely
undermine the national peace process" (USAID Apr 2003). The RIC also previously reported that the Sri Lankan government
generally views Moors and moderate Tamils as allies in the struggle
against the LTTE, installing them in armed civilian militias known as
Home Guards. "Moreover, Muslim political parties, such as the Sri
Lankan Muslim Congress, have played key roles in supporting
successive Sinhalese-dominated governments in Sri Lanka" (INS RIC 10
Sep 2002). For more background information about relations between
Sri Lanka's Muslims or Moors, and the Sinhalese and Tamil populations
in Sri Lanka, and for more in-depth information about the civil war
in Sri Lanka, please see Response to Information Request SRI LANKA:
INFORMATION ON TREATMENT OF MOORS (MUSLIMS) BY SINHALESE AND TAMILS,
LKA02001.ZNY, dated 10 September 2002. For more information on human
rights abuses by government forces, see Response to Information
Request SRI LANKA: INFORMATION ON HARASSMENT FOR RENTING ROOMS TO
TAMILS; GOVERNMENT TARGETING OF SUSPECTED LTTE SUPPORTERS,
LKA03001.ZNY, dated 16 December 2002. POST-CEASE-FIRE (FEBRUARY 2002) SITUATION AND POSSIBLE RETURN OF A
MOOR WHO MAY HAVE BEEN TARGETED BY GOVERNMENT FORCES Reuters reports that the stalled peace talks between the rebel
Tamil Tigers (LTTE) and the Sinhalese government of Sri Lanka may
resume in September 2003 (McDonald 7 Aug 2003). Meanwhile, human
rights groups and the U.S. Department of State have charged that the
Tigers have used the December 2001 cease-fire as an opportunity to
assassinate dozens of political opponents. Most of those
assassinated appear to be Tamils not affiliated with the Tigers, and
government informants (McDonald 8 Aug 2003; McDonald 10 Aug 2003; HRW
7 Aug 2003). "The Eelam People's Democratic Party (EPDP) and Eelam
People's Revolutionary Liberation Front (Varathar) EPRLF(V), at
present the LTTE's two main political opponents, have together lost
thirty-two members or supporters killed or missing since February
2002" (HRW 7 Aug 2003). " 'Members of Tamil political parties are being gunned down and
the available evidence points to the Tamil Tigers,' Brad Adams,
executive director of the Asia Division of Human Rights Watch, said
in a statement. The U.S. State Department said more than three dozen
political opponents of the Tigers have been murdered while Amnesty
International says at least 22 have been killed" (McDonald 8 Aug
2003). Human Rights Watch reports that "political killings are on
the rise again in Sri Lanka," and that "[m]any local observers
believe that the killings are indicative of a systematic campaign to
silence the LTTE's opposition" (HRW 7 Aug 2003). A South Asia
specialist at the U.S. Department of State said in a telephone
interview that tensions are currently high in Sri Lanka due in part
to recent political killings although he said that there has not yet
been any outbreak of large-scale violence. He said it is impossible
to predict what will happen from day to day, but there have been
several occasions since the cease-fire in which tensions seemed to
reach a boiling point but then simmered back down (U.S. DOS 18 Aug
2003). Human Rights Watch reported on the killing of a Muslim rickshaw
driver in January 2003, stating that the victim had a disagreement
with a Tamil whose brother was a local LTTE leader. The report states
also that "[a]t the time of the killing, the LTTE was reportedly
threatening Tamils not to do business with Muslims. Three days
earlier, on January 2, a grenade had been thrown into the Muslim
Market, injuring five Muslims, including a policeman" (HRW 7 Aug
2003). An article discussing more recent political killings states
that two Muslims were gunned down in Trincomalee on 13 August 2003,
nearly 12 hours before suspected Tamil Tigers assassinated another
rival Tamil politician in a neighboring district. These killings
occurred despite a coinciding visit by a Norwegian peace envoy to Sri
Lanka (AFP 14 Aug 2003). The BBC reports that two Muslim farmers
were shot dead in eastern Sri Lanka around 18 August. Local Muslim
politicians blamed the killings on the LTTE, who are "the only armed
group" in the area, but the Tigers have denied the charge and suggest
that opponents to the peace process are responsible (Harrison 18 Aug
2003). Another article reports: "Kuliyan, the deputy political head
of the Liberation Tigers of Tamileelam, denied that rebels were
involved in the killings, according to TamilNet Web site that reports
on Tamil affairs. His denial came as hundreds of Tamil farmers fled
their homes in the region fearing a backlash from Muslims. It was not
immediately clear where they were headed" (AP 19 Aug 2003). The BBC
article states: "It is hard to see what tactical advantage the
Tigers might gain from killing Muslim civilians at this point.... It
is also possible these killings have nothing to do with politics. In
two recent cases murders in the east were blamed on the Tigers, but
then subsequently turned out to have a purely criminal or personal
motive" (Harrison 18 Aug 2003). It is not clear if any other Muslims are included in the several
dozen alleged political killings since the December 2001 cease-fire.
Also, the Human Rights Watch report and other reporting on the issue
do not indicate that government forces have been implicated in any of
the suspected political assassinations. The U.S. Department of State South Asia specialist interviewed by
the RIC stated that there is currently "lots of friction" between
Muslims and the LTTE (U.S. DOS 18 Aug 2003). According to a
representative of Human Rights Watch, the LTTE has imposed
authoritarian rule in areas ceded to them by the government in the
February 2002 formal cease-fire agreement. Moreover, the agreement
between the government and the LTTE does not provide for protection
of Muslims living in these areas. The army is no longer active in
sections of the country under LTTE control (areas in the north and
east) — instead, police forces are supposed to be providing security.
They have been reluctant to impose their authority, however, because
they have been targeted by the LTTE in the past, and they likely
would be among the LTTE's first targets if the cease-fire agreement
were to disintegrate (HRW 18 Aug 2003). Reports indicate that Sri Lanka's Muslims are requesting a modicum
of autonomy in certain LTTE-controlled areas and continued
facilitation of return to the north of Muslims who had been driven
out by Tamil fighters in the early 1990s (U.S. DOS 31 Mar 2003; Mills
16 Jul 2003; Harrison 18 Aug 2003; Rahman 9 Aug 2003). According to
the BBC, "...Muslim politicians are now under pressure to do more to
defend their community's rights in the face of a rebel group which
may soon be governing eastern Sri Lanka if there is agreement with
the government on an interim administration" (Harrison 18 Aug
2003). Sources do not indicate that Moors face systematic mistreatment by
the Sinhalese-dominated government (Mills 16 Jul 2003; U.S. DOS 18
Aug 2003; HRW 18 Aug 2003). The Research Directorate of the Canadian
Immigration and Refugee Board cited a news article in stating that
the Muslim population's dominance in Sri Lanka's trade and business
sectors "has reportedly led to feelings of jealousy and animosity
among some members of the country's Sinhalese population" (IRB-RD 31
Aug 2001). In an e-mail to the RIC, however, the senior research
associate at the German Institute stated instead that "[t]his may be
applicable only to specific sectors like the gem industry" and that
"[n]owadays, the socio-economic situation of the majority of the
Muslims is not better than for the Sinhalese and Tamils" (Senior
Research Associate 20 Aug 2003). One news article quotes a Muslim former school principal as
stating: "…the Sri Lankan Government has generally been fair to us
and Muslims living in Sinhalese majority areas face no problems"
(Rahman 9 Aug 2003). Another article, however, highlights Muslim
frustration over the fact that so far the peace process has not
acknowledged their security needs vis a vis the LTTE. The article
states: "The Muslim youth in several parts of Sri Lanka may soon
form their own anti-LTTE suicide 'Osama squads' to fight the
discrimination meted out to them by the Tamil extremists. With
indiscriminate killings and abductions of the Muslim community by the
LTTE reported in the Eastern province, undercurrents of anxiety
verging on desperation have been increasing in momentum on the West
coastline among its peace-loving members.... Already Muslim youth in
Batticaloa have formed the Ossama [sic] squads since fair play is not
ensured for the community in the embattled north and east" (TIMES OF
INDIA 19 Aug 2003). The senior research associate specializing in Sri Lanka at the
German Institute told the Resource Information Center in a telephone
interview that, given the current instability in Sri Lanka, it is
very difficult to predict whether a Moor who may have been targeted
by Sri Lankan government forces for allegedly assisting the LTTE
would be at risk upon return to Sri Lanka. He stated that it would
depend in part on how "sensitive" government forces viewed the
alleged assistance to be (Senior Research Associate 13 Aug 2003). He
said he feels that it would be more dangerous to return if one had
been targeted by the LTTE, but he indicated that the situation in Sri
Lanka is difficult and changeable. He also said observers are still
hopeful that peace negotiations between the government and the LTTE
will soon move forward (Senior Research Associate 13 Aug 2003). A U.S. Department of State South Asia Specialist interviewed by
the Resource Information Center said he agrees with the Senior
Research Associate that one would generally have more to fear from
LTTE forces rather than from Sri Lankan government forces. He stated
that, "the LTTE are regularly assassinating their enemies" (U.S. DOS
14 Aug 2003). He also said that there is "plenty of evidence of
human rights abuses by the government" during the 20-year-long civil
war, but since the cease-fire (December 2001) the number of
allegations of abuses by the government have "dropped dramatically"
(U.S. DOS 14 Aug 2003). He said it sounds plausible that government
forces would have mistreated a Moor suspected of assisting the LTTE,
but he said he "doubts" that someone who had trouble with government
forces in the past would face difficulty today, although he cautioned
that it could certainly happen (U.S. DOS 14 Aug 2003). He noted that
the February 2002 Memorandum of Understanding between the LTTE and
the Sri Lankan government provides that the government will cease
detaining suspects under its anti-terrorism law, and that the
government has honored that provision to date (U.S. DOS 14 Aug
2003). The Human Rights Watch representative interviewed by the RIC
stated that government targeting of a Moor suspected of assisting the
Tamil Tigers would be unusual but not implausible, particularly
considering the human rights record of Sri Lankan government forces
during the civil war. He had not heard of efforts by Muslims to
support the LTTE in their struggle against the government. He said
that it would be more typical for a Sri Lankan Moor to indicate fear
of the Tigers, especially in the north and east of the country where
the government has ceded authority to the LTTE. The representative
felt that someone who had been targeted by government forces for
suspicion of assisting the Tamil Tigers might be able to return
safely to Sri Lanka if lower-level, local government officials were
involved. If higher-level officials were involved, someone who had
been targeted at one time by government forces would have difficulty
even if he or she tried to relocate within Sri Lanka (HRW 18 Aug
2003). The senior research associate at the German Institute agreed
that targeting would be more likely if high-level officials were
somehow involved (Senior Research Associate 20 Aug 2003). *The terms Muslim and Moor, and the terms LTTE and Tamil Tigers
are used interchangeably throughout this Response. This response was prepared after researching publicly accessible
information currently available to the RIC within time constraints.
This response is not, and does not purport to be, conclusive as to
the merit of any particular claim to refugee status or asylum. References: Agence France Presse (AFP). "Tigers Blamed for Another Killing
During Norway Envoy's Visit" (14 Aug 2003) - NEXIS. Amnesty International (AI). REPORT 2003, "Sri Lanka" (2003),
http://web.amnesty.org/report2003/lka-summary-eng [Accessed 19 Aug
2003] Associated Press (AP). "Tamil Tigers Deny Killing Muslims" (19 Aug
2003),
http://www.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,4057,7002684%255E1702,00.htm
l [Accessed 19 Aug 2003] Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). THE WORLD FACTBOOK 2003. "Sri
Lanka" (2003),
http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/index.html [Accessed 18
Aug 2003] Cooke, Kieran. "Survey of Sri Lanka Section I" (undated),
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(INS RIC). SRI LANKA: INFORMATION ON HARASSMENT FOR RENTING ROOMS TO
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(Washington, DC: 16 Dec 2002, LKA03001.ZNY). Immigration and Refugee Board, Research Directorate (IRB-RD). SRI
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[Accessed 13 Aug 2003] Attachments: Agence France Presse (AFP). “Tigers Blamed for Another Killing
During Norway Envoy’s Visit” (14 Aug 2003) - NEXIS. Mills, Elizabeth. World Markets Analysis. “Peace Process in Sri
Lanka Further Complicated by Muslim Party’s Demands” (16 Jul 2003) -
NEXIS. Rahman, Shukor. NEW STRAITS TIMES PRESS (Malaysia), “Sri Lankan
Muslims Consider Dr M a Hero” (9 Aug 2003) - NEXIS. |