Sri Lanka's expulsion of Pakistani refugees goes to highest court

Between Sep 3 and 11, 62 Pakistanis and 3 Iranians were arrested and 40 of them had already been deported: UNHCR


Afp September 13, 2014

COLOMBO: Sri Lankan rights activists have gone to the country's highest court in a bid to stop the government summarily deporting Afghan, Iranian and Pakistani refugees, their lawyer said Saturday.

Six human rights defenders have petitioned the Supreme Court to challenge the expulsions, which are being carried out despite warnings that Sri Lanka is in breach of its international obligations, lawyer Lakshan Dias told AFP.

"The case is coming up on September 29," Dias said. "We feel that some of the people who are being sent back face real danger. They have life-threatening conditions if they go back. That is why local rights defenders decided to file this case."

The UN High Commissioner for Refugees in a statement Friday urged Sri Lanka to stop arrests and deportations of those who have filed refugee claims with the agency's Colombo offices and sought access to those already detained.

Sri Lanka's Court of Appeal, which is one step lower than the Supreme Court, earlier this month overturned an order suspending the deportations and cleared the way for the authorities to continue expulsions.

The UNHCR said Colombo had initially responded to its appeals and released 71 Pakistanis and two Iranians earlier this month, but 102 people - 38 Pakistanis and 64 Afghans - remained in custody and fresh arrests were taking place.

Between September 3 and 11, 62 Pakistanis and three Iranians had been arrested and 40 of them had already been deported, the UNHCR said.

The refugee agency has maintained that the deportations go against the principle of no forced return, or non-refoulement, enshrined in international law.

The agency has also noted that returning an individual to a country where they face the risk of torture is prohibited under the UN's Convention Against Torture, which Sri Lanka has ratified.

Hundreds of Pakistani Christians and Afghans fleeing persecution in their countries have been arriving in Sri Lanka seeking UNHCR protection in the capital Colombo.

Sri Lanka had earlier defended the action taken against the asylum-seekers, saying that a state's responsibility to international obligations had to be "nuanced and balanced in the context of domestic compulsions".

Sri Lanka's foreign ministry also accused the UNHCR of processing asylum claims too slowly, and of not taking responsibility for repatriating those whose refugee claims were rejected.

COMMENTS (2)

Ilyas | 9 years ago | Reply

Be it Canada or Sri Lanka, America or UK, Pakistanis and Afghans are bound to spoil a nation's name by claiming refugee status. Most of the Pakistanis, however, seem to claim refugee status by pretending to be from Afghanistan. A strange irony, more so considering people from Afghanistan seek refugee in Pakistan.

vinsin | 9 years ago | Reply

If they go back to Pakistan, then they would be killed and if they stay in Sri Lanka, then they may kill non muslim or partition the Sri Lanka.

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