Security measures in place to control the movement of Tamils between northern and southern regions of the country (August 2005 - September 2006) [LKA101784.E]

In June 2006, the government of Sri Lanka announced that security measures in effect prior to the 2002 cease-fire agreement with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) would be re-imposed because of the country's "fragile security situation" (Xinhua 28 June 2006; see also EIU 11 Aug. 2006). Human rights and news sources from 2005 and 2006 report the imposition of a number of security measures, including:

-curfews (UN 25 Aug. 2006; BBC 30 Aug. 2006; Daily News 28 Aug. 2006);
-an increased number of checkpoints (Le Figaro 2 May 2006; Xinhua 15 Aug. 2006);
-road blocks (Canada 15 Aug. 2006; TamilNet 28 Aug. 2006; AFP 2 June 2006); and
-the closure of roads (UN 18 Aug. 2006; Daily News 22 Aug. 2006) and entry points between LTTE-controlled and government-controlled areas (TamilNet 24 Aug. 2006; ibid. 12 Aug. 2006; ICRC 22 Aug. 2006).

The movement of people between the two areas has reportedly decreased "considerably" as a result of the security situation and restrictions imposed by both the government and the LTTE (ibid. 30 Aug. 2006; see also Reuters 6 Sept. 2006).

According to a report on internal displacement in Sri Lanka prepared by the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC), in February 2005, Tamils were no longer required to have travel passes in order to move around the country (1 Sept. 2005). In 15 September 2006 correspondence, an official at the Canadian High Commission in Colombo further clarified that,

[although] all travellers coming from the North and East of the country to Colombo are now more likely to be questioned and searched than during the 2002 to 2005 period, ... the system of travel passes for Tamil civilians that existed in the conflict years [prior to 2002] has not been reinstated (Canada 15 Sept. 2006).

Correspondence sent to the Research Directorate by a representative of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) also indicated that travel passes were no longer required in Sri Lanka (26 Sept. 2006). The Representative stated that

[t]here was a pass system in place prior to the signing of the [cease-fire agreement] in certain parts of the country, and in Vavuniya in particular, but this pass system was successfully challenged in the courts as a violation of fundamental rights under the Constitution of Sri Lanka. (UN 26 Sept. 2006)

The UNCHR Representative also noted that, while travel passes are no longer required, identity documents are checked (ibid.). The Representative indicated that the national identity card (NIC) is an essential document in government-controlled areas, and since summer 2006, the LTTE has begun issuing an ID card for those living in LTTE-controlled areas" (ibid.).

Other sources consulted by the Research Directorate likewise indicate that Tamils may be asked by Sri Lankan security forces to produce their national identity cards (AI 29 June 2006; AP 31 Dec. 2005). In a December 2005 door-to-door search for LTTE members in Colombo, Sri Lankan security forces detained over 900 people for failing to produce their national identity cards or for not having a valid reason for staying in the city (AP 31 Dec. 2005). Security forces later released 867 of the detainees, but kept the others for further questioning (ibid.). No information on whether charges were laid could be found among the sources consulted by the Research Directorate.

A state of emergency imposed in August 2005 and still in effect as of September 2006 (Australia 20 Sept. 2006), reportedly gives Sri Lankan security forces the authority to close roads without notice, set up road blocks and impose curfews (ibid. 1 Sept. 2006), as well as make arrests without warrants and detain individuals for up to 12 months without trial (US 8 Mar. 2006, Introduction).

According to a 15 August 2006 UNHCR briefing note on Sri Lanka, strict curfews in Jaffna district in the North have prevented civilians from travelling long distances to safe areas (see also BBC 30 Aug. 2006). By late August 2006, however, daytime curfews had reportedly been relaxed, allowing civilians between four and six hours of unrestricted movement each day (UN 25 Aug. 2006; Daily News 28 Aug. 2006), depending on their location (ibid.).

News sources from 2006 report an increase in the number of checkpoints and roadblocks in the capital city of Colombo (Xinhua 15 Aug. 2006; AFP 2 June 2006; The Press Trust of India 27 Aug. 2006), as part of an effort to prevent LTTE bomb attacks (ibid.; AFP 2 June 2006). In late August 2006, road blocks were reportedly set up on all the main roads leading to Colombo (TamilNet 28 Aug. 2006), and every vehicle entering and leaving the city was checked (ibid.; The Press Trust of India 27 Aug. 2006). Other security measures in Colombo include parking restrictions along busy roads (Xinhua 15 Aug. 2006), increased military personnel patrolling the streets (Canada 15 Aug. 2006), and body searches of individuals wishing to enter public buildings and shopping centres (AFP 2 June 2006).

Correspondence sent to the Research Directorate from the UNHCR Representative indicated that

a regulation has recently been enforced requiring all Tamils from outside Colombo to register with the police if they are staying in Colombo with family, friends or in guesthouses. Such regulations were also in place during the height of the conflict in the 1990s. (26 Sept. 2006)

The Representative further noted that

[m]ore recently, all residents of Colombo have been asked to complete a registration form providing biodata of the residents of each building (owners, tenants, visitors), including their name, nationality, national identification number and employment information. (26 Sept. 2006)

According to an official at the Canadian High Commission in Colombo, Sri Lanka,

visible [security] measures [implemented since December 2005] include new checkpoints, more frequent searches of vehicles at checkpoints and [a] complete check of intercity buses entering Colombo, forcing passengers to [get off] and vouch for their luggage. (Canada 15 Sept. 2006)

In 26 September 2006 correspondence, the UNHCR Representative corroborated the fact that there had been an increase in the number of checkpoints in Sri Lanka. These checkpoints are reportedly located along the A9 highway, a major North-South route, as well as on major roads through Colombo, including Galle Face Green, Duplication Road, Dehiwela and Wellawatte Junctions (UN 26 Sept. 2006). According to the UNHCR Representative, these checkpoints are in addition to the ones established under the 2002 cease-fire agreement, which include Mandur, Paddirupur, Kaludaveli Ferry Point, Anbalantivu Ferry Point, Mamunai Ferry Point, Vanvunateevu, Santhiveli Boat Point, Black Bridge, Sitandy Boat Point, Kiran Bridge, Kinniyadl Boat Point, Valachenai, Makerni, Mahindapura, Muttur, Ugilankulam, and Omanthai (ibid.).

The UNHCR Representative also indicated that

[b]oth the LTTE and the Government carry out checks on travellers at the crossing-points between the LTTE and the Government-controlled areas. The movement of persons in the Government-controlled areas in the North and East is regulated by military checkpoints throughout the area. (ibid.)

A representative of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) delegation in Colombo indicated in 29 September 2006 correspondence with the Research Directorate that travellers on buses and in private vehicles are subject to checks of identity cards as well as body and baggage searches while crossing checkpoints located on all major routes between the North and the South. According to the Representative, "[m]en and women stand in separate queues and female officers are present to check female passengers" (ICRC 29 Sept. 2006).

The ICRC Colombo Representative further noted that checkpoints are widespread in Sri Lankan towns, and that

[v]ehicles are stopped and searched. Passengers and pedestrians are questioned. Mobile patrols are also present and carry out checks on passers-by ... [which] often involve humiliating searches, such as frisking people in the street in full view of the public." (ICRC 29 Sept. 2006)

The main road between Colombo to Batticaloa [eastern Sri Lanka] is reportedly scattered with government security checkpoints and soldiers stop vehicles along the way to check passports and identity cards (World Today 1 Mar. 2006; see also South China Morning Post 4 July 2006). According to a 4 July 2006 South China Morning Post news article,

[o]n the main road into [Batticaloa], Route 11, army fortifications, road blocks and lookout towers have been built every 500 metres, starting more than 30 km out. Controlled fires destroy scrub and trees to deprive the Tigers of hiding places. No car or bus gets into the city without two thorough searches.

Correspondence from the UNHCR Representative indicated that the reinstatement of security checkpoints is "making it particularly difficult for Tamils without proper identity documents to even reach certain Government-controlled areas" (26 Sept. 2006). The Representative further noted that

[f]or those who do have proper identity documents but were born in LTTE-controlled or predominantly Tamil areas in the North and East, it is also very difficult to cross the checkpoints and they face varying levels of harassment at [government] checkpoints. (UN 26 Sept. 2006)

Roads and entry points between LTTE-controlled and government-controlled areas can reportedly be closed without notice (Australia 1 Sept. 2006; TamilNet 12 Aug. 2006). According to an 18 August 2006 UNHCR news release, the A9 access road from the Jaffna peninsula through to Kilinochchi district was closed. In 26 September 2006 correspondence, the UNHCR Representative stated that

[t]he A9, which is the road providing access to Jaffna through the LTTE-controlled area (the "Vanni"), has been closed at various times of heightened military conflict since January 2006, and has been closed to all traffic since 11 August 2006 (there have been very limited openings of the A9 to/from the Vanni at the Omanthai checkpoint to allow movement of the injured and humanitarian staff; between 26 and 30 August, approximately 75 [trucks] carrying food were admitted into the Vanni).

In August 2006, news sources also reported on the closure of the Omanthai entry point (TamilNet 12 Aug. 2006; Daily News 30 Aug. 2006), 13 km north of the town of Vavuniya (TamilNet 24 Aug. 2006), leaving hundreds of civilians trapped on both sides (ibid. 12 Aug. 2006). Although the entry point opened briefly on 21 and 22 August to allow the passage of some 250 civilians (ICRC 22 Aug. 2006; Daily News 22 Aug. 2006), it was closed again following a confrontation in the area between the Sri Lankan security forces and the LTTE (TamilNet 24 Aug. 2006; Daily News 30 Aug. 2006). Other entry points in the Vavuniya and Mannar districts were also reportedly closed in August 2006 (TamilNet 12 Aug. 2006). Information on whether these entry points or the Omanthai entry point had been re-opened could not be found among the sources consulted by the Research Directorate.

According to 15 September 2006 correspondence from an official at the Canadian High Commission in Colombo,

[t]ravellers coming from LTTE-controlled areas of the North and East face the additional hurdle of having to cross the forward defence lines of the LTTE and the Sri Lankan Army. The respective [entry points] of the LTTE and [Sri Lankan] Army have been opened only sparsely since 11 August 2006. (Canada 15 Sept. 2006)

In 26 September 2006 correspondence, the UNHCR Representative indicated that during periods of conflict from August until early September 2006, humanitarian workers were denied access to areas such as Sampur and Muttur in the Trincomalee District (UN 26 Sept. 2006). While these restrictions have reportedly been lifted, "humanitarian agencies are exercising extreme caution in accessing these areas" (ibid.).

A 25 August 2006 press release by the UNHCR indicates that on Jaffna peninsula, "road, sea and air links to the outside world have been cut." Later that month, however, several relief trucks were granted access to certain areas and relief supplies were shipped to the peninsula (UN 25 Aug. 2006; Canada 15 Sept. 2006). UN chartered flights carrying relief supplies also reportedly landed in Jaffna (ibid.). On 5 September 2006, the government of Sri Lanka announced that domestic flights between Colombo and Jaffna had resumed (Sri Lanka 5 Sept. 2006).

According to the UNHCR, the majority of people leaving the northern Jaffna peninsula have been "fleeing on foot, with a lucky few on tractors" (UN 25 Aug. 2006).

This Response was prepared after researching publicly accessible information currently available to the Research Directorate within time constraints. This Response is not, and does not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any particular claim for refugee protection. Please find below the list of additional sources consulted in researching this Information Request.

References


Agence France-Presse (AFP). 2 June 2006. "Bomb Fears in Sri Lanka Capital Trigger Appeal." (Factiva)

Amnesty International (AI). 29 June 2006. "Sri Lanka: Waiting to Go Home - The Plight of the Internally Displaced." http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGASA370042006?open&of=ENG-375 [Accessed 5 Sept. 2006]

Associated Press (AP). 31 December 2005. Dilip Ganguly. "Sri Lankan Security Forces Detain 920 People While Tracking Rebel Infiltrators in Colombo." (Factiva)

Australia. 20 September 2006. Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. "Travel Advice: Sri Lanka." http://www.smartraveller.gov.au/zw-cgi/view/Advice/Sri_Lanka [Accessed 20 Sept. 2006]

_____. 1 September 2006. Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. "Travel Advice: Sri Lanka." http://www.smartraveller.gov.au/zw-cgi/view/Advice/Sri_Lanka [Accessed 1 Sept. 2006]

British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). 30 August 2006. "Sri Lanka: Stories from Conflict Zones." http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/5278756.stm [Accessed 5 Sept. 2006]

Canada. 15 September 2006. Canadian High Commission in Colombo, Sri Lanka. Correspondence from an official.

_____. 15 August 2006. Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada (DFAIT). "Travel Report: Sri Lanka." http://www.voyage.gc.ca/dest/report-en.asp?country=276000 [Accessed 21 Aug. 2006]

Daily News [Colombo]. 30 August 2006. Ranil Wijayapala. "LTTE Shells Lorries Carrying Essentials." http://www.dailynews.lk/2006/08/30/sec01.asp [Accessed 30 Aug. 2006]

_____. 28 August 2006. Ranil Wijayapala. "Jaffna Curfew Further Relaxed." http://www.dailynews.lk/2006/08/28/sec06.asp [Accessed 28 Aug. 2006]

_____. 22 August 2006. Ranil Wijayapala. "Security Forces Consolidate Positions in Muhamalai, Kilaly." http://www.dailynews.lk/2006/08/22/sec03.asp [Accessed 24 Aug. 2006]

Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU). 11 August 2006. "Sri Lanka Politics: Sliding Back to War." (Factiva)

Le Figaro [Paris, in French]. 2 May 2006. "Les Sri Lankais pris entre deux feux." (Factiva)

International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). 29 September 2006. Correspondence from a representative of the Colombo, Sri Lanka delegation.

_____. 30 August 2006. "Sri Lanka - ICRC Bulletin No. 02/2006." http://www.icrc.org/Web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/iwpList578/D0B0F31EE69B393DC12571DA0038A525 [Accessed 31 Aug. 2006]

_____. 22 August 2006. "Sri Lanka: Civilians Cross Lines." http://www.icrc.org/Web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/iwpList578/C1E38658A9531152C12571D20051F11D [Accessed 31 Aug. 2006]

Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC). 1 September 2005. "Profile of Internal Displacement: Sri Lanka." http://www.idpproject.org [Accessed 31 Aug. 2006]

The Press Trust of India [New Delhi]. 27 August 2006. "Sri Lanka Tightens Security Ahead of SA Games Closure." (Factiva)

Reuters. 6 September 2006. "Sri Lanka's Jaffna Region 'Choking' - Red Cross." http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L06750496.htm [Accessed 7 Sept. 2006]

South China Morning Post [Hong Kong]. 4 July 2006. Greg Torode. "A Place Where War is Part of Daily Routine." (Factiva)

Sri Lanka. 5 September 2006. Department of Government Information. "Domestic Flights Between Colombo and Jaffna Resume." http://www.news.lk/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=729&Itemid=44 [Accessed 20 Sept. 2006]

TamilNet. 28 August 2006. "Sri Lankan Troops Arrest 76 Tamils During Search Operation in Capital." (BBC Monitoring South Asia/Factiva)

_____. 24 August 2006. "Clashes Erupt in Vavuniya, A9 Omanthai Entry Point Closed After Brief Opening." http://www.tamilnet.com/art.html?catid=13&artid=19365 [Accessed 19 Sept. 2006]

_____. 12 August 2006. "SLA Closes Vavuniya, Uyilankulam, Madhu Checkpoints." http://www.tamilnet.com/art.html?catid=13&artid=19203 [Accessed 31 Aug. 2006]

United Nations (UN). 26 September 2006. Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). Correspondence from a representative.

_____. 25 August 2006. Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). "Number of Sri Lankans Fleeing Fighting Passes 200,000 Mark." http://www.unhcr.org/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/news/opendoc.htm?tbl=NEWS&id=44ef07932 [Accessed 5 Sept. 2006]

_____. 18 August 2006. Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). "Sri Lanka: Humanitarian Access Needed." (ReliefWeb Website). http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/rwb.nsf/db900SID/LSGZ-6SSG87?OpenDocument&RSS20=18-P [Accessed 30 Aug. 2006]

_____. 15 August 2006. Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). "Sri Lanka: Heavy Fighting Causes More Displacement." http://www.unhcr.org/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/news/opendoc.htm?tbl=NEWS&id=44e1a60116 [Accessed 13 Sept. 2006]

United States (US). 8 March 2006. Department of State. "Sri Lanka." Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2005. http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2005/61711.htm [Accessed 13 Sept. 2006]

World Today [Ultimo, Australia]. 1 March 2006. Vol. 62, Issue 3. Charu Lata Hogg. "Bloodthirsty Mutation." (Factiva)

Xinhua News Agency [Beijing]. 15 August 2006. "Security Beefed up in Sri Lankan Capital." (Factiva)

_____. 28 June 2006. "Roundup: Security Strengthened in Sri Lanka after Assasination." (Factiva)

_____. 27 June 2006. "Sri Lankan PM Stresses Peace after Army General's Assassination." (Factiva)

Additional Sources Consulted


Oral sources: The Sri Lanka High Commission in Ottawa and South Asia Partnership (SAP) Canada did not provide information within the time constraints of this Response.

Internet sites, including: European Country of Origin Information Network (ecoi.net), Factiva, Freedom House, Humanitarian Information Centre (HIC) for Sri Lanka, Human Rights Watch, Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), The Refugee Council [United Kingdom], ReliefWeb, South Asia Partnership (SAP) Canada, United Kingdom Home Office, United States Department of State.

Verknüpfte Dokumente