Demons-of-Batalanda-Torture-Chamber-Who-was-behind-them

Demons of Batalanda : Who was behind them ? Les démons de Batalanda : Qui était derrière eux?

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Demons of Batalanda : Who was behind them ? Les démons de Batalanda : Qui était derrière eux?

Batalanda-Torture-Chamber and Ranil Wickremasinghe - Actual Premier Ministr of Sri Lanka - 03.02.2017 - By SinhalaNet

 

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Sri Lankans in Globally protesting Ranil's Appearance in Deakin Uni. in Australia

Posted by admin On February 03, 2017

http://www.sinhalanet.net/sri-lankans-in-globally-protesting-ranils-appearance-in-deakin-uni-in-australia

Sri Lankans living in globally raised their concerns and protest to the University of Deakin for inviting Ranil Wickramasinghe as their guest speaker of the “Law 2017 Oration” of the University to be held on 16 th  February at the university premises.

Concerns of the Global Sri Lankans were that the person whom Deakin University had invited for the Law oration is currently implicated in a major financial fraud in Sri Lanka – the Central Bank Bond Scam. During Ranil Wickramasinghe'unworthy political career (lost popular elections close to 30 times) he was implicated  in many a human rights violations only to find clemency due to his political clout, wealth and nothing else!

While there is a separate Finance Minister he took under his purview the Central Bank of Sri Lanka which is normally under the purview of the Finance Minister. (He was made  the Prime Minister of Sri Lanka by the current President of Sri Lanka while not commanding  a majority in the parliament) on the 12 Feb 2015 on the excuse that it was an ‘election promise'.

The Central Bank Bond Scam took place on 27 Feb 2015 just two weeks into his administration. Ranil Wickramasinghe and his cohorts netted undue financial gains running into billions of rupees. This fraud which involved 30 year Rupee Bonds have resulted in the increase of the Central Bank lending rates, severe devaluation of the Rupee (from Rs 132 to a $ to now over Rs 150) as well as heavy taxes on the people of Sri Lanka.

This fraud is currently under investigation while many attempts were made and are being made  to sweep it under the proverbial carpet.

Moreover major human rights abuses during his early years as a politician – most famous one being – Batalanda Torture Chambers – a place far worse than Guantanamo – where many hapless victims were tortured and killed during a major youth insurrection in Sri Lanka circa 1989!

At present as the Prime Minister of Sri Lanka Ranil Wickramasinghe is engaged in a major witch hunt bringing Sri Lanka closer to a police state, where political opponents are arraigned by an unlawfully constituted investigative body called the Financial Criminal Investigation Department (FCID) for the flimsiest of misdemeanour while major frauds that have taken place under his watch remain un-investigated.

The Sri Lankans in globally has written to the Deakin University to bring this information for their attention to determine whether Ranil Wickramasinghe is a person worthy of making such an oration. The closest they think of is inviting Hitler or a Saddam Hussein to make such an oration!

The Sri Lankan expatriates demands that it is a shame to see how such an esteem educational institute like “Deakin University” inviting and taking the service of such a person who was found guilty by the Government Commission appointed to probe the massacre, tortured  of thousands of youth who were imprisoned in torture chambers under his supervision.   The management of Deakin University  should think seriously to replace Ranil Wickramasinghe  from an eminent academic but not this sort of dirty and cheap corrupted politicians.

 An Article below about “Batalanda Torture Chamber and Ranil” appeared on Sinhalanet in August 2015; Demons of Batalanda: Who was behind them? It was the time when terror enveloped the whole of Sri Lanka. The JVP's second insurgency was raging. Many were the sacrifices made to appease the demons in human form. They were celebrating and enjoying life while murder squads under their direction were roaming the country looking for prey. Torture chambers were setup at different places. People died by the thousands after suffering brutal torture. Bodies of victims were seen everywhere. They were burnt or dumped in rivers and canals. The buildings which housed the torture chambers were (1) state institutions, (2) private houses which were rented (3) public places and (4) housing complexes. Outside Colombo the infamous ones were at Eliyakanda Matara, Pelawatte, Mahaweli Housing Scheme opposite the Embilipitiya National School, Soranatota Estate Kalutara, Walawwatta Galle, Community Centre Angunukolapelessa, Ekanayake Medirigiriya, Pelvehera Government Farm Dambulla, Haliela Motors Garage Badulla, Polwatte Chilaw, Weligama Camp, Thalalla Workers Vocational Training Centre Matara, Hilltop Galle, Kotigala Galle, Unagaswala Karandeniya, Bombuwala Kalutara, Siyambalanduwa Monaragala, Muthukandiya Project office near 4th Mile Post Ampara, Polgolla Cooperative School, Batheegama Estate, Wickramasinghe Bangalow Kegalle, Beragala Summer Fashion Garment Factory Haputale, Nuwara Eliya Town Hall, near the Syambala tree across the river close to the Pallekela Camp (today a hotel has come up there), Wehera Kurunegala and Lindula Tea Factory among other places.

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Remembering the dead and the missing. The torture chambers in and around Colombo included Yataro Cafeteria, Thunmulla Colombo, Racecourse Grounds Colombo, Batalanda at Sapugaskanda Biyagama, Sethsiripaya Battaramulla, Steel Corporation Training Centre Oruwala, Colombo University's Law Faculty, Government Offices in Torrington Square and Gregory Road Colombo,  Kelaniya University sports building, Mattegoda Camp, Youth Centre Mirigama, Pattiya Junction Peliyagoda, Kesbewa, cattle shed Dematagoda, General Cemetery Borella, Golf Grounds Model Farm Road, Jayewardenapura Hostel, Management Building Jayewardenepura University, Henry Pedris Sports Pavillion Havelock Town, Tyronne Fernando Sports Pavillion Moratuwa and the Billiard Hall Pattiya Junction Kelaniya. Among the most notorious torture chambers was the one at Batalanda. It was in a 20-acre coconut plantation in the Biyagama Electorate in the Gampaha District.After the State Fertiliser Corporation was established a British Company was given the contract to set up a urea production plant in a block of land at Sapugaskande. Since the foreign technical experts engaged in the project were expected to stay in Sri Lanka for a considerable period the Batalanda Housing Scheme was built, which is located two kilometres off the junction on the Kiribathgoda-Biyagama Road. The housing scheme comprised 64 different types housing units, an office complex, and a section for a club and a swimming pool.

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Ranil Wickramesinghe. Since Fertiliser Corporation was continuously suffering loses the Government decided to close it down on a proposal made by Industries Minister Cyril Mathew in 1984. But the foreign company which assisted in establishing the corporation did not welcome the decision.  Again in 1986 the then Industries Minister Denzil Fernando gave Asoka Senanayake the power to terminate its operations.  The foreign technicians who were occupying the housing complex left Sri Lanka during the first half of the 1980s.  Thereafter senior government officials came to occupy some of the housing units there. Others were rented out to Ceylon Electricity Board officials and the officials of a private security firm.  Another section was officially released to the military in 1985 for setting up an Army camp. It did not take long for the horrors of Batalanda to be heard across the Kelani Valley.  The torturers and murderers were enjoying political patronage but their crimes unexpectedly came to public attention when several detainees escaped from the place leading to legal action. The PA Government which came to power in 1994 appointed a Presidential Commission to investigate the incidents at Batalanda.  The commission probed the running of the illegal detention centre and torture chamber at the Batalanda housing complex from January 1, 1988 to December 31, 1990.  The Commission began its sittings under Appeal Court Judge Justice Dharmasiri Jayawickrema at the Colombo High Court on September 21, 1995. The other Commission member was Appeal Court Judge, Justice Nimal Dissanayake. Sri Lanka Bar Association's Human Rights Committee Chairman (1996) R.I. Obeysekera participated in an advisory capacity.

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Then IGP Ernest Perera, Senior SP Nalin Delgoda (then a sub-inspector), SSP Douglas Peris and Attorney Wijedasa Liyanarachchi who died after hospitalization when he in the custody of the Sapugaskanda Police. The public hearings began on January 16, 1996 and the commission met on 127 days. Eighty-two persons were summoned to give evidence before the commission. The sittings continued till October 1997. Its 6780-page final report was in 28 volumes which were handed over to the President on March 28, 1998.

Presidential Commissions are empowered by Commissions Act No 17 of 1948. Accordingly the President has the power to appoint commissions, dissolve them, issue orders and publicise their reports or not.  The history of commissions goes back to the time when Governor-General William Gopallawa appointed the S.W.R.D. Assassination Commission chaired by Justice Samuel Fernando on June 18, 1963. The Sansoni Commission headed by Justice M.C. Sansoni was appointed on November 9, 1977 to probe the communal riots of the same year. A commission was also appointed in January 2004 to investigate the massacres which occurred in Kokkadicholai, Batticaloa on June 21, 1991. On January 11, 1991 President Premadasa appointed the first commission to probe disappearances of individuals after 1991. President Wijetunga appointed three commissions on August 23, 1993 to investigate such disappearances.  Among the other commissions were those appointed in connections with the assassinations of Vijaya Kumaratunga, Denzil Kobbekaduwa and Lalith Athulathmudali.

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How JVP strongly demanded the implementations of Batalanda Commission.(photo courtesy: TheInternet) The main suspect in the Batalanda case was ASP (Kelaniya Division) Douglas Peiris whose ASP appointment had not been confirmed since he had failed to pass the necessary examination.  On November 25, 1989 Senior SP Nalin Delgoda recommended that Peiris be promoted SP. The letter of recommendation stated that he successfully dealt with subversives during the second JVP insurgency. On February 6, 1990 the Cabinet approved two salary increments to Peiris. His appointment on July 20, 1988 was made with retrospective effect. This resulted in him being appointed above 130 other police officers in seniority. It was the first time in the Police Department's history that such a ‘long jump' in promotions happened. During this time ‘removing' was the code word for murder. These killings were called as 55FF deaths. Douglas Peiris admitted that these words meant elimination or destroying. The then IGP Ernest Edward Perera too admitted before the commission that these were extra-judicial killings of subversives. Burning bodies after setting fire to tyres placed on them were called tyre pyres. Douglas Peiris suddenly vanished and did not appear before commission thereafter. It was later revealed that he had fled the country with a false passport under the name of Thalpawila Kankanamge Wimalasena. Police Inspector P. Nissanka committed suicide by shooting himself shortly before he was to be summoned before the commission to give evidence. According to the Batalanda Commision report, in addition to Douglas Peiris, Inspector Keerthi Athapattu of the Sapugaskanda Police, SSP Nalin Delgoda (Kelaniya Divsion), DIG Merril Gunaratne (Kelaniya Division), Ranjith Wickremasinghe Officer in Charge of the Anti-Subversion Unit, Kelaniya and Gampaha District MP and Youth Affairs and Employment Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe figured prominently in the Batalanda case. According to the evidence of DIG Merril Gunaratne special measures had to be taken to deal with the unsual situation which had arisen in the country. It was in 1987 that anti-subversive units were setup in headquarter stations in police divisions. Officers were given the power to travel in mufti in civilian-type vehicles some of which had no registered number plates but only garage numbers.  These groups were identified by such names as PRAA (People's Revolutionary Red Army), Geen Tigers, Black Cats, Yellow Cats and Tarantulas.  Their main task was to arrest subversives and destoy them. Cabinet Minister and UNP MP John Amaratunga told the Commission that in his opinion Black Cats were a police unit.  But his Cabinet colleages Ranil Wickremesinghe and Joseph Micheal did not agree with Amaratunga's view.  The words ‘Black Cats' had been written on the walls of the house occupied by security officers opposite the residence of Douglas Peiris. On Government politician's intructions about seven housing units of the Batalanda Complex were given for his use, his bodyguards and his office. The rest were occupied by police officers, three of them women – Padmini Premalatha, Kanthi Fernando and Sepalika. The three escapees from detention at Batalanda, T.M. Bandula, Sugee Perera and Ajith Jayasinghe identified the houses where they had been kept.  None of these houses had been acquired by the police following proper procedures. Only the water and electricity bills been paid. These houses had been given to the police on a request Douglas Peiris had made to Ranil Wickremesinghe.  Peiris had allowed the police to use the houses the way they wanted. Although the Senior DIG (Adminsitration) had ordered by a circular issued on February 13, 1990 that the houses be given back to their rightful owners it was not done until the end of 1994.

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www.rivira.lk Most cruel and inhuman tortures were inflicted on JVP suspects at Batalanda. These were revealed at the commission hearings by escaped detainees Earl Sugee Perera, People's Bank Clerk Wasala Jayasekera, Electrician Mudalige Bandula and a Buddhist Monk Bhikku Palipana among other witnesses and Ayurvedic Physician Nimal Attanayake who treated the torture victims. Evidence revealed that the suspects were blindfolded before being taken to Batalanda where they were stripped and hung by their feet with heads down. They were assaulted mercilessly, chillie powder was put into their eyes and their fingers were pierced with needles. The blindfold and the chains which bound their hands and feet were removed only when they went to the toilet or were given food.  At other times they were chained to an item of furniture. They were allowed only one meal a day which was given at 10.00 a.m.  On most occasions it was unfit for human consumption. The screams of those who were being tortured were heard continuously. The detainees were lying naked on ground and moaning. Blood was coming out of their wounds caused by being beaten. Some were passing urine with blood. Some suspects were hung by their hands from the roof. Thereafter they were beaten with clubs. When the victim was screaming in pain pieces of cloth were pushed into his mouth. The beating then resumed. According to the witnesses some of the victims' wounds had festered and maggots were found in them. Some had their mouths burnt. A couple of suspects had their hands and legs tied together after making them bend over a pole fixed horizontally.  The victim was then turned like a wheel while being hit on his toes with clubs.  This was euphemistically called the ‘Dharma Chakra' treatment.  Others were burnt with cigarette butts. Some were taken out along roads in the surrounding areas after forcing them to wear hoods to prevent identity. They were then ordered to show JVP suspects. Others were ordered to do the same after forcing them to wear female attire and wigs. The hooded men were called ‘goni billas.' At any given time over 100 persons were detained at the Batalanda complex. The persons taken out were never brought back to the housing complex. Some detainees had been released only after a bribe of around Rs.50,000 had been paid by his relatives to a person whom the torturers had named. Bhikku Palipane of Manelwatte Vihara was arrested on January 31, 1989 and detained at Batalanda where he was stripped before being kicked and made to suffer burns. Testifying before the Commission he identified Woman Police Sub-Inspector Padmini Premalatha as one of those who tortured him. JVP activist Attorney Wijedasa Liyanarachci was tortured at the residence of Tangalle SP Karawitage Dharmadasa after being abducted at Nugegoda on August 25, 1988 at 4.00 p.m. Following protests by his associates he was brought to Colombo on September 1, 1988 at 11.30 a.m. and detained at the Sapugaskanda Police station under the custody of the Kelaniya special police unit operating from Batalanda. The judicial inquiry into his death began in December 1989 before a bench of three High Court Judges. Before the verdict was delivered in 1991 the accused unexpectedly admitted they were guilty of abducting and illegally detaining Liyanarachchi. They were given only suspended jail sentences. Later it was revealed that Liyenarachci had been tortured to death at an undsclosed location. The Batalanda Commission's view was that only those responsible for the crime would have the answer to the question whether he was actually killed. The JVP's armed wing attacked the Sapugaskanda Police Station on July 16, 1989 at 2.55 a.m. and escaped with several weapons. However the police killed two of the attackers. One of the dead was Sumith Perera alias Kaluwa.  The following year on February 20 at 8.30, OIC (Crimes) Sapugaskanda Police Rohitha Priyadarshana dissappeared.  His body was found floating in the Kelani River on February 23.  The OIC, Sapugaskanda Police at the time was Keerthi Athapattu. When Sub-Inspector Ajith Jayasinghe of the Ja-ela Police opposed abductions he himself was abducted under the direction of Douglas Peiris near the Dematagoda Railway Crossing on February 24, 1990 and detained illegally. Two brothers Udayachandra and Ratnachandra who resided at ‘Amba Sewana' Kanduboda in Delgoda were abducted on July 7, 1989 and detained at the Batalanda Housing Complex. This resulted in a Habeas Corpus to the Appeals Court. Ratnachandra had been killed under detention.  Udayachandra who escaped from the custody of his abductors gave evidence at the judicial inquiry.  Gampaha High Court Judge Saman Wickremarachchi who heard the case sentenced Douglas Peiris and four other police officers on August 26, 2009 to five years rigorous imprisonment. According to the Batalanda Commission the only conclusion one could arrive at about the matters discussed at Batalanda was that they were illegal. Noting that Ranil Wickramesinghe had advised the police on dealing with public meetings convened without permission, the Commission stated that he had no legal authority to give such instructions to the police and therefore he had abused his position. The Commission was of the view that this issue was connected with the running of illegal detention centres and torture chambers at the Batalanda. There was no question that ASP Douglas Peiris, Chief Inspector Ranjit Wickremasinghe and other officers of the Kelaniya Anti-Subversive Unit were directly responsible for the running of illegal detention centres and torture chambers, as the Commission stated. Wasantha Kulatunga of the Presidential Media Unit, who first videoed the Batalanda Torture Chamber, had handed over the video tape to the President Chandrika Kumaratunga's media advisor. But when the Government Analyst visited the scene all the blood stains on the floor and walls of the torture chamber had been wiped off. The Commission had further stated that no matter the violence the JVP unleashed in an attempt to cripple the state the government should have acted with responsibility.  The Government should have responded in accordance with the law and accepted rules of governance. The Batalanda events is only one example of political meddling during the period in question, going by the relevant report, according to the Commssion. Some politicians of the ruling party not only actively participated in police operations but had also directed them. The Commission also recommended in its report that the Supreme Court be given additional powers to deprive the civil rights of persons – including a Government politician – identified as those who repeatedly violated fundamental human rights. The Commission stated that judicial procedures had been repeatedly violated with impunity. Some individuals representing the Executive had continued to violate fundamental human rights without fear of punishment. The Batalanda Presidential Commison's Report was handed over to President Chandrika Kumaratunga on March 27, 1998. Although the the time for handing over the report had been fixed 5.30 p.m. the President arrived only at 8.30 p.m. If anyone asks why was there no follow up action on the recommendations made by special commissions appointed by six Presidents the answer would be that the commissions were meant to politically hoodwink the public. The past Presidents referred to had wittingly or unwittingly shirked their responsibility of enforcing the law on the recommendations made. (The writer is a senior journalist who could be reached at  ejournalists@gmail.com )

 

By Dharman Wickremaratne

 

 

http://www.thehindu.com/2000/08/23/stories/03230007.htm

  Batalanda's ghosts return to haunt Ranil

By Nirupama Subramanian

COLOMBO, AUG. 22. “Anil's Ghost”, the new novel by the celebrated Sri Lankan-Canadian writer, Mr. Michael Ondaatje, is based on the orgy of killings and disappearances that swept southern Sri Lanka in the late 80s when government-backed death squads put down an armed insurrection by the Janatha Vimukthi Perumina. Now, one incident from those dark years has returned to haunt the United National Party (UNP), in power then, and its present leader, Mr. Ranil Wickremesinghe. With the Government stepping up investigations into the incident in the weeks ahead of the general election, the spin team of the ruling People's Alliance (PA) has pounced on it and made it the Big Issue. The allegation is that Mr. Wickremesinghe, then a Minister, was the political authority behind an illegal detention centre in a housing complex at an industrial township outside Colombo between 1988 and 1990. The Batalanda detention centre, as it is known, was run by a government-backed counter-subversive unit, part of the state's operation to put down an armed insurgency by the JVP that threatened to overtake the country. It has been alleged that a number of people suspected of being JVP cadres were taken there and tortured. Many of the victims “disappeared”, some survived. Damaging statement The incident has returned to centre-stage after a policeman associated with the detention centre resurfaced in Sri Lanka earlier this month, and gave a statement to the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) directly linking Mr. Wickremesinghe to persons alleged to be members of a death squad. The former policeman also alleged that various members of Mr. Wickremesinghe's inner circle in the UNP were responsible for sending him abroad and ensuring he stayed out after the present Government announced the appointment of a Presidential Commission of Inquiry into the Batalanda detention centre in 1995. Last week, police questioned twice one of Mr. Wickremesinghe's close associates in the UNP, Mr. Milinda Moragoda, named by the former policeman as one of those who helped him flee the country. According to local media reports, Mr. Wickremesinghe may also be summoned for questioning soon. If the UNP is worried, it is not yet showing it. At a news conference on Sunday, Mr. Wickremesinghe dismissed the whole matter as “part of the mud-slinging campaign against the UNP” by the Government. “Sometimes I am an agent of the LTTE, now the Batalanda charges are being made,” he said. The UNP chairman, Mr. Karu Jayasuriya, described the statement by the former policeman, now in custody, as a “fabricated lie”. “We are not wasting our time on this, there are burning issues facing the country and we will be taking up those issues in our campaign,” Mr. Jayasuriya said. But if the Government so decides, Batalanda's ghosts could take a life of their own which could prove extremely damaging to the UNP even after all these years. That the detention centre existed is not in question. The only matter that needs to be settled is Mr. Wickremesinghe's role in it. Earlier this year, the Government published the report of the 1995 inquiry commission on Batalanda. Panel recommendations Mainly a fact-finding mission, the commission had no sentencing powers, but recommended that the Government bring the guilty to book. One of its findings was that “Mr. Ranil Wickremesinghe and the SSP, Nalin Delgoda, are indirectly responsible for the maintenance of places of unlawful detention and torture chambers in houses at the Batalanda Housing Scheme”. It said Mr. Wickremesinghe held “unauthorised” meetings of police officers involved in counter-insurgency operations in the housing complex, and that as such, he had “abused his authority”. But for the Government, going to town on this issue before the elections could prove a double-edged sword with which it could well cut itself. A Sinhala weekly reported yesterday that one of the persons arrested last week by the police for three murders during that time, a free-lance journalist alleged to have links with Mr. Wickremesinghe, was in fact, a member of the Sri Lanka Mahajana Party (SLMP) founded by Ms. Chandrika Kumaratunga and her actor husband, Vijaya, who was killed by the JVP in 1988. It is a fact that every politician in the Government or in the Opposition in that period was under siege by the JVP, and many openly assisted government-sponsored vigilante death squads to break the insurgency. In the process, thousands of innocents also lost their lives. According to estimates, between 40,000 to 60,000 people were either killed or “disappeared” in those three years. As Sarath, one of the protagonists in “Anil's Ghost”, says: “Terror everywhere, from all sides. We wouldn't have survived with your rules of Westminster then. So illegal government forces rose up in retaliation. And we were caught in the middle. It was like being in a room with three suitors, all of whom had blood on their hands. In nearly every house, in nearly every family, there was knowledge of someone's murder or abduction by one side or the another…”

 

 

 

Demons of Batalanda : Who was behind them ?

http://www.lankanewsweb.today/archives/4609

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It was the time when terror enveloped the whole of Sri Lanka. The JVP's second insurgency was raging. Many were the sacrifices made to appease the demons in human form. They were celebrating and enjoying life while murder squads under their direction were roaming the country looking for prey.

Torture chambers were setup at different places. People died by the thousands after suffering brutal torture. Bodies of victims were seen everywhere. They were burnt or dumped in rivers and canals. The buildings which housed the torture chambers were (1) state institutions, (2) private houses which were rented (3) public places and (4) housing complexes.

Outside Colombo the infamous ones were at Eliyakanda Matara, Pelawatte, Mahaweli Housing Scheme opposite the Embilipitiya National School, Soranatota Estate Kalutara, Walawwatta Galle, Community Centre Angunukolapelessa, Ekanayake Medirigiriya, Pelvehera Government Farm Dambulla, Haliela Motors Garage Badulla, Polwatte Chilaw, Weligama Camp, Thalalla Workers Vocational Training Centre Matara, Hilltop Galle, Kotigala Galle, Unagaswala Karandeniya, Bombuwala Kalutara, Siyambalanduwa Monaragala,

Muthukandiya Project office near 4th Mile Post Ampara, Polgolla Cooperative School, Batheegama Estate, Wickramasinghe Bangalow Kegalle, Beragala Summer Fashion Garment Factory Haputale, Nuwara Eliya Town Hall, near the Syambala tree across the river close to the Pallekela Camp (today a hotel has come up there), Wehera Kurunegala and Lindula Tea Factory among other places.

The torture chambers in and around Colombo included Yataro Cafeteria, Thunmulla Colombo, Racecourse Grounds Colombo, Batalanda at Sapugaskanda Biyagama, Sethsiripaya Battaramulla, Steel Corporation Training Centre Oruwala, Colombo University's Law Faculty, Government Offices in Torrington Square and Gregory Road Colombo, Kelaniya University sports building, Mattegoda Camp, Youth Centre Mirigama, Pattiya Junction Peliyagoda, Kesbewa, cattle shed Dematagoda, General Cemetery Borella, Golf Grounds Model Farm Road, Jayewardenapura Hostel, Management Building Jayewardenepura University, Henry Pedris Sports Pavillion Havelock Town, Tyronne Fernando Sports Pavillion Moratuwa and the Billiard Hall Pattiya Junction Kelaniya.

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Remembering the dead and the missing.

Among the most notorious torture chambers was the one at Batalanda. It was in a 20-acre coconut plantation in the Biyagama Electorate in the Gampaha District.After the State Fertiliser Corporation was established a British Company was given the contract to set up a urea production plant in a block of land at Sapugaskande. Since the foreign technical experts engaged in the project were expected to stay in Sri Lanka for a considerable period the Batalanda Housing Scheme was built, which is located two kilometres off the junction on the Kiribathgoda-Biyagama Road. The housing scheme comprised 64 different types housing units, an office complex, and a section for a club and a swimming pool.

Since Fertiliser Corporation was continuously suffering loses the Government decided to close it down on a proposal made by Industries Minister Cyril Mathew in 1984. But the foreign company which assisted in establishing the corporation did not welcome the decision. Again in 1986 the then Industries Minister Denzil Fernando gave Asoka Senanayake the power to terminate its operations. The foreign technicians who were occupying the housing complex left Sri Lanka during the first half of the 1980s. Thereafter senior government officials came to occupy some of the housing units there. Others were rented out to Ceylon Electricity Board officials and the officials of a private security firm. Another section was officially released to the military in 1985 for setting up an Army camp.

It did not take long for the horrors of Batalanda to be heard across the Kelani Valley. The torturers and murderers were enjoying political patronage but their crimes unexpectedly came to public attention when several detainees escaped from the place leading to legal action.

The PA Government which came to power in 1994 appointed a Presidential Commission to investigate the incidents at Batalanda. The commission probed the running of the illegal detention centre and torture chamber at the Batalanda housing complex from January 1, 1988 to December 31, 1990. The Commission began its sittings under Appeal Court Judge Justice Dharmasiri Jayawickrema at the Colombo High Court on September 21, 1995. The other Commission member was Appeal Court Judge, Justice Nimal Dissanayake. Sri Lanka Bar Association's Human Rights Committee Chairman (1996) R.I. Obeysekera participated in an advisory capacity.

The public hearings began on January 16, 1996 and the commission met on 127 days. Eighty-two persons were summoned to give evidence before the commission. The sittings continued till October 1997. Its 6780-page final report was in 28 volumes which were handed over to the President on March 28, 1998.

Presidential Commissions are empowered by Commissions Act No 17 of 1948. Accordingly the President has the power to appoint commissions, dissolve them, issue orders and publicise their reports or not. The history of commissions goes back to the time when Governor-General William Gopallawa appointed the S.W.R.D. Assassination Commission chaired by Justice Samuel Fernando on June 18, 1963.

The Sansoni Commission headed by Justice M.C. Sansoni was appointed on November 9, 1977 to probe the communal riots of the same year. A commission was also appointed in January 2004 to investigate the massacres which occurred in Kokkadicholai, Batticaloa on June 21, 1991. On January 11, 1991 President Premadasa appointed the first commission to probe disappearances of individuals after 1991. President Wijetunga appointed three commissions on August 23, 1993 to investigate such disappearances. Among the other commissions were those appointed in connections with the assassinations of Vijaya Kumaratunga, Denzil Kobbekaduwa and Lalith Athulathmudali.

Ranil Wickramesinghe.

The main suspect in the Batalanda case was ASP (Kelaniya Division) Douglas Peiris whose ASP appointment had not been confirmed since he had failed to pass the necessary examination. On November 25, 1989 Senior SP Nalin Delgoda recommended that Peiris be promoted SP. The letter of recommendation stated that he successfully dealt with subversives during the second JVP insurgency.

On February 6, 1990 the Cabinet approved two salary increments to Peiris. His appointment on July 20, 1988 was made with retrospective effect. This resulted in him being appointed above 130 other police officers in seniority. It was the first time in the Police Department's history that such a ‘long jump' in promotions happened.

During this time ‘removing' was the code word for murder. These killings were called as 55FF deaths. Douglas Peiris admitted that these words meant elimination or destroying. The then IGP Ernest Edward Perera too admitted before the commission that these were extra-judicial killings of subversives. Burning bodies after setting fire to tyres placed on them were called tyre pyres.

Douglas Peiris suddenly vanished and did not appear before commission thereafter. It was later revealed that he had fled the country with a false passport under the name of Thalpawila Kankanamge Wimalasena. Police Inspector P. Nissanka committed suicide by shooting himself shortly before he was to be summoned before the commission to give evidence.

According to the Batalanda Commision report, in addition to Douglas Peiris, Inspector Keerthi Athapattu of the Sapugaskanda Police, SSP Nalin Delgoda (Kelaniya Divsion), DIG Merril Gunaratne (Kelaniya Division), Ranjith Wickremasinghe Officer in Charge of the Anti-Subversion Unit, Kelaniya and Gampaha District MP and Youth Affairs and Employment Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe figured prominently in the Batalanda case.

According to the evidence of DIG Merril Gunaratne special measures had to be taken to deal with the unsual situation which had arisen in the country. It was in 1987 that anti-subversive units were setup in headquarter stations in police divisions. Officers were given the power to travel in mufti in civilian-type vehicles some of which had no registered number plates but only garage numbers. These groups were identified by such names as PRAA (People's Revolutionary Red Army), Geen Tigers, Black Cats, Yellow Cats and Tarantulas. Their main task was to arrest subversives and destoy them.

Cabinet Minister and UNP MP John Amaratunga told the Commission that in his opinion Black Cats were a police unit. But his Cabinet colleages Ranil Wickremesinghe and Joseph Micheal did not agree with Amaratunga's view. The words ‘Black Cats' had been written on the walls of the house occupied by security officers opposite the residence of Douglas Peiris. On Government politician's intructions about seven housing units of the Batalanda Complex were given for his use, his bodyguards and his office. The rest were occupied by police officers, three of them women – Padmini Premalatha, Kanthi Fernando and Sepalika.

The three escapees from detention at Batalanda, T.M. Bandula, Sugee Perera and Ajith Jayasinghe identified the houses where they had been kept. None of these houses had been acquired by the police following proper procedures. Only the water and electricity bills been paid. These houses had been given to the police on a request Douglas Peiris had made to Ranil Wickremesinghe. Peiris had allowed the police to use the houses the way they wanted.Although the Senior DIG (Adminsitration) had ordered by a circular issued on February 13, 1990 that the houses be given back to their rightful owners it was not done until the end of 1994.

Most cruel and inhuman tortures were inflicted on JVP suspects at Batalanda. These were revealed at the commission hearings by escaped detainees Earl Sugee Perera, People's Bank Clerk Wasala Jayasekera, Electrician Mudalige Bandula and a Buddhist Monk Bhikku Palipana among other witnesses and Ayurvedic Physician Nimal Attanayake who treated the torture victims.

Evidence revealed that the suspects were blindfolded before being taken to Batalanda where they were stripped and hung by their feet with heads down. They were assaulted mercilessly, chillie powder was put into their eyes and their fingers were pierced with needles. The blindfold and the chains which bound their hands and feet were removed only when they went to the toilet or were given food. At other times they were chained to an item of furniture. They were allowed only one meal a day which was given at 10.00 a.m. On most occasions it was unfit for human consumption. The screams of those who were being tortured were heard continuously. The detainees were lying naked on ground and moaning. Blood was coming out of their wounds caused by being beaten. Some were passing urine with blood.

Some suspects were hung by their hands from the roof. Thereafter they were beaten with clubs. When the victim was screaming in pain pieces of cloth were pushed into his mouth. The beating then resumed.

Then IGP Ernest Perera, Senior SP Nalin Delgoda (then a sub-inspector), SSP Douglas Peris and Attorney Wijedasa Liyanarachchi who died after hospitalization when he in the custody of the Sapugaskanda Police.

According to the witnesses some of the victims' wounds had festered and maggots were found in them. Some had their mouths burnt. A couple of suspects had their hands and legs tied together after making them bend over a pole fixed horizontally. The victim was then turned like a wheel while being hit on his toes with clubs. This was euphemistically called the ‘Dharma Chakra' treatment. Others were burnt with cigarette butts.

Some were taken out along roads in the surrounding areas after forcing them to wear hoods to prevent identity. They were then ordered to show JVP suspects. Others were ordered to do the same after forcing them to wear female attire and wigs. The hooded men were called ‘goni billas.' At any given time over 100 persons were detained at the Batalanda complex. The persons taken out were never brought back to the housing complex. Some detainees had been released only after a bribe of around Rs.50,000 had been paid by his relatives to a person whom the torturers had named.

Bhikku Palipane of Manelwatte Vihara was arrested on January 31, 1989 and detained at Batalanda where he was stripped before being kicked and made to suffer burns. Testifying before the Commission he identified Woman Police Sub-Inspector Padmini Premalatha as one of those who tortured him.

JVP activist Attorney Wijedasa Liyanarachci was tortured at the residence of Tangalle SP Karawitage Dharmadasa after being abducted at Nugegoda on August 25, 1988 at 4.00 p.m. Following protests by his associates he was brought to Colombo on September 1, 1988 at 11.30 a.m. and detained at the Sapugaskanda Police station under the custody of the Kelaniya special police unit operating from Batalanda.

The judicial inquiry into his death began in December 1989 before a bench of three High Court Judges. Before the verdict was delivered in 1991 the accused unexpectedly admitted they were guilty of abducting and illegally detaining Liyanarachchi. They were given only suspended jail sentences. Later it was revealed that Liyenarachci had been tortured to death at an undsclosed location. The Batalanda Commission's view was that only those responsible for the crime would have the answer to the question whether he was actually killed.

The JVP's armed wing attacked the Sapugaskanda Police Station on July 16, 1989 at 2.55 a.m. and escaped with several weapons. However the police killed two of the attackers. One of the dead was Sumith Perera alias Kaluwa. The following year on February 20 at 8.30, OIC (Crimes) Sapugaskanda Police Rohitha Priyadarshana dissappeared. His body was found floating in the Kelani River on February 23. The OIC, Sapugaskanda Police at the time was Keerthi Athapattu. When Sub-Inspector Ajith Jayasinghe of the Ja-ela Police opposed abductions he himself was abducted under the direction of Douglas Peiris near the Dematagoda Railway Crossing on February 24, 1990 and detained illegally.

Two brothers Udayachandra and Ratnachandra who resided at ‘Amba Sewana' Kanduboda in Delgoda were abducted on July 7, 1989 and detained at the Batalanda Housing Complex. This resulted in a Habeas Corpus to the Appeals Court. Ratnachandra had been killed under detention. Udayachandra who escaped from the custody of his abductors gave evidence at the judicial inquiry. Gampaha High Court Judge Saman Wickremarachchi who heard the case sentenced Douglas Peiris and four other police officers on August 26, 2009 to five years rigorous imprisonment.

According to the Batalanda Commission the only conclusion one could arrive at about the matters discussed at Batalanda was that they were illegal. Noting that Ranil Wickramesinghe had advised the police on dealing with public meetings convened without permission, the Commission stated that he had no legal authority to give such instructions to the police and therefore he had abused his position. The Commission was of the view that this issue was connected with the running of illegal detention centres and torture chambers at the Batalanda.

There was no question that ASP Douglas Peiris, Chief Inspector Ranjit Wickremasinghe and other officers of the Kelaniya Anti-Subversive Unit were directly responsible for the running of illegal detention centres and torture chambers, as the Commission stated.

How JVP strongly demanded the implementations of Batalanda Commission.(photo courtesy: The Internet)

Wasantha Kulatunga of the Presidential Media Unit, who first videoed the Batalanda Torture Chamber, had handed over the video tape to the President Chandrika Kumaratunga's media advisor. But when the Government Analyst visited the scene all the blood stains on the floor and walls of the torture chamber had been wiped off.

The Commission had further stated that no matter the violence the JVP unleashed in an attempt to cripple the state the government should have acted with responsibility. The Government should have responded in accordance with the law and accepted rules of governance.

The Batalanda events is only one example of political meddling during the period in question, going by the relevant report, according to the Commssion. Some politicians of the ruling party not only actively participated in police operations but had also directed them.

The Commission also recommended in its report that the Supreme Court be given additional powers to deprive the civil rights of persons – including a Government politician – identified as those who repeatedly violated fundamental human rights. The Commission stated that judicial procedures had been repeatedly violated with impunity. Some individuals representing the Executive had continued to violate fundamental human rights without fear of punishment.

The Batalanda Presidential Commison's Report was handed over to President Chandrika Kumaratunga on March 27, 1998. Although the the time for handing over the report had been fixed 5.30 p.m. the President arrived only at 8.30 p.m.

If anyone asks why was there no follow up action on the recommendations made by special commissions appointed by six Presidents the answer would be that the commissions were meant to politically hoodwink the public. The past Presidents referred to had wittingly or unwittingly shirked their responsibility of enforcing the law on the recommendations made.

By Dharman Wickremaratne

(The writer is a senior journalist who could be reached at ejournalists@gmail.com)

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