Document #1241652
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
1) No information is currently available to the
IRBDC regarding the possible ill treatment
and rape of Tamil women by the JVP in Sri Lanka
2) No specific information is available in
published sources regularly consulted by the IRBDC regarding the
ill treatment of members of the CWC or their families by either the
JVP or LTTE. In general, the Indian Tamils have kept a low profile
in Sri Lankan politics and have refused to be enlisted into
separatist movements by the Jaffna Tamils. [Barbara Crossette, "A
Sri Lankan Minority That Doesn't Do Battle", The New York
Times, 16 June 1989.] They have instead supported their trade
union, the Ceylon Workers Congress, whose leader, S. Thondaman, is
the Sri Lankan Minister of Rural Industrial Development. [Rodney
Tasker, "Under the surface calm", Far Eastern Economic
Review, 28 May 1987.] According to Jeyaratnam Wilson, a
Canadian scholar on Sri Lankan politics, the CWC essentially
represents the current ruling party in Sri Lanka, the United
National Party (UNP), in the tea plantation areas. Members of the
UNP have been among the major targets of the JVP [Asia Watch,
Cycles of Violence: Human Rights in Sri Lanka Since the Indo-Sri
Lanka Agreement, (Washington: Asia Watch Committee, 1987), p.
71-74.], but it is not clear whether the JVP has targetted members
of the CWC because of its relationship with the ruling party.
A report published in The Manchester
Guardian Weekly on 8 October 1989 stated that a strike by tea
pluckers called by the JVP has paralysed Sri Lanka's tea plantation
industry. [Chris Nuttal, "Tea strike adds to Sri Lanka despair",
The Manchester Guardian, 8 October l189, p. 11.] According
to Professor Bruce Matthews, a Canadian expert on Sri Lankan
politics, the fact that it is the JVP which is enforcing the strike
demonstrates that the CWC has been overpowered. The article from
The Manchester Guardian Weekly further points out that the
strike is being ruthlessly enforced by the JVP, and three planters
have been killed, provoking many more to flee the plantations
because of death threats. [Ibid.]
Professor Matthews further remarked that
the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam have tried in the past to
"crowd out" the CWC in the affairs of the plantation Tamils, but
failed.
The information provided by Professors
Matthews and Wilson cannot be corroborated in published sources by
the IRBDC at the present time.