Tamils speak out on Oppression Day

February 10, 2023
Issue 
Tamil Oppression Day rally outside the Sri Lankan High Commission. Photo: Zebedee Parkes

The Australian Tamil community and supporters rallied outside the Sri Lankan High Commission on February 4 to mark the 75th anniversary of Tamil Oppression Day, when Sri Lanka gained independence from the British Empire.

The protest was organised by the Tamil Refugee Council, and聽contingents travelled聽from Sydney and Melbourne. They chanted聽鈥淓elam! Freedom!鈥 and 鈥淪top, Stop genocide!鈥 while聽also condemning the Sri Lankan government鈥檚 continuing genocide of Tamil people in their聽historic homeland in Eelam, in the north and east of Sri Lanka.

For Tamil people, this date聽marks聽the beginning of years of oppression by the then newly-independent government, controlled by the Sinhalese ethnic group, which launched a campaign of discrimination, backed by armed force and anti-Tamil pogroms.

Renuga Inpakumar, a leader of the Tamil Refugee Council and organiser of the protest told 麻豆传媒 that February 4 鈥渞epresents the day that power was handed from one oppressor to another鈥.

Since 1948, Tamils have been 鈥渢argeted鈥 by economic blockades on Tamil majority areas and 鈥渉orrific pogroms鈥.

鈥淥ur own land Tamil Eelam has been targeted since 1948. Our own land has been used to promote Sinhala chauvinism to remove our identity.鈥

She said the Tamil Council鈥檚 mission is 鈥渢o ensure that there is an understanding that Eelam Tamils will not stop until there is accountability of the ongoing genocide鈥.

Since 2011 the Tamil Refugee Council has been amplifying the 鈥渧oices for refugees and witnesses of genocide鈥, Inpakumar said.

鈥淲e are calling on the Sri Lankan government to give our land back,鈥 she continued. 鈥淲e want Tamil Eelam 鈥 given back to the rightful owners.

鈥淲e want an acknowledgment of the ongoing genocide since 1948 and also the Sri Lankan state leaders and individuals responsible for war crimes and genocidal acts must be tried for their crimes.鈥

Inpakumar said Sri Lanka continues to promote the false idea that the island is 鈥渟afe鈥 and that 鈥渘o genocide is being committed鈥. This allows the Australian government to prioritise resources and relations with Sri Lanka.

Tamil community leaders, refugee activists and eyewitness accounts from survivors addressed the protest. At one point, it was interrupted by guests leaving the High Commission鈥檚 Independence Day celebration that physically confronted the rally and shouted Sinhalese nationalist slogans.

Refugee campaigner and Professor Emeritus of Politics and International Relations at the Australian National University John Minns said nine out of 10 Tamil asylum applications are denied because the government will not acknowledge the Sri Lankan government鈥檚 campaign of genocide against them.

He said Canberra is complicit in the war on the Tamils because it wants the Sri Lankan government to support the US-led campaign to contain China.

Marathon spoke about the parallels between the Tamil struggle and that of First Nations peoples. 鈥淭here can be no justice on stolen land,鈥 he said, calling for 鈥淭reaty now!鈥. He said the Tamil movement was raising four demands: an end to the 75-year genocide of Tamil people; an end to legal discrimination against Tamils in Sri Lanka; justice for those 鈥渄isappeared鈥 by government violence; and freedom for Tamil Eelam.

Rita, a survivor of the Sri Lankan Army and Sinhalese militias鈥 violence, spoke about organising with the families of victims of Sri Lankan Army violence and called for justice for them.

Iyngaran spoke about the more recent multi-ethnic coalitions in Sri Lanka which have joined together to challenge government corruption. He called on Sinhalese people in Sri Lanka to show solidarity with the Tamil people.

Manoharan, a refugee, recounting his experience and the difficulties he has faced since arriving in Australia in Tamil.

The Tamil Refugee Council is campaigning for聽Australia's聽government to end its aid to Sri Lanka and provide 鈥渘ot just Tamil refugees but all refugees, permanent protection. The Australian Government should not deport Tamil refugees back to danger.鈥

She called on people to 鈥渁ttend our rallies, stand alongside Eelam Tamils through their pain and resistance and help amplify our voice鈥.

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