(August 10, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Mr. Kalappam Manoharan (32) of Ratwatte Lower Division, Ukuwela in the Matale district was illegally arrested by officers attached to the Terrorist Investigation Division (TID) branch of Kandy Headquarters Police Station on 11 August 2008. Monoharan, a casual labourer, lived in the same village his whole life. After he was arrested he was severely tortured and later forced to sign a document prepared by the police officers. Later he was produced before three Magistrate's Courts; Kandy, Matale and Dambulla accused with fabricated charges which he vehemently denied. He remains in remand even now. This case is yet another illustration of the exceptional collapse of the rule of law in the country.
According to the information received by the Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) Mr. Kalappam Manoharan (32) of Ratwatte Lower Division, Ukuwela in the Matale district was a casual labourer and is married to Ms. Yogeshwari. They have a young son.
The Terrorist Investigation Division (TID) branch of Kandy Headquarters Police Station sent a message to Manoharan to come and make a statement on the 11 August 2008 and when he went to the TID branch he was arrested as a suspect who had assisted the LTTE.
Letter he learned from his wife that a woman by the name of Anthony Chandra from Ukuwela was arrested as an LTTE suspect and when she was tortured by the TID and asked about the names of her neighbours she mentioned Monoharan. Manoharan vehemently states that he does not have any connection or knowledge about any organization in the North of Sri Lanka or any political party. Further he says that he does not have any relatives from that area either.
He was severely tortured by the TID officers in Kandy while in detention at the Kandy TID branch. Following the torture he was asked to sign documents which he did to escape being further torture.
He was then transferred to Kadugannawa Police Station where he was detained for six months and produced before the Magistrate of Kandy. He was then detained at Bogambara Remand Prison where he remains as of this date.
Later the officers attached to the TID filed three cases with fabricated charges. One case was filed in Magistrate's Court of Dambulla, another one was in the Magistrate's Court of Kandy and the third case was filed in the Magistrate's Court of Matale. Monoharan categorically denied all these cases and states that officers of the TID filed these cases to cover up the torture that they inflicted on him.
Manoharan believes that the blank papers that he signed were used by the TID officers to prove that he had made a confession. The so-called confession is written in Sinhala, a language he cannot speak read or write.
Manoharan has been languishing in the police cells and in the remand prison since 2008. Later he found out that following the TID prepared fabricated documents and the Attorney General has filed a fourth cased against him in the High Court of Kandy under the case number HC/ 52/2010 still using the confession that was extracted due to torture by the TID.
Source : Asian Human Rights Commission
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