India TV: Colombo: Wednesday, July 25, 2018.
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| File photo of Sri Lankan Tamil refugees in India |
The Sri
Lankan government has rehabilitated and integrated into society nearly 12,186
former LTTE members, including 594 child soldiers, according to a Right to
Information (RTI) reply.
The
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) had run a military campaign for a
separate Tamil homeland in the northern and eastern provinces of the island
nation for nearly 30 years before its collapse in 2009 after the Sri Lankan
Army killed its supreme leader Velupillai Prabhakaran.
Nearly 4,156
of the rehabilitated former LTTE members were between the age of 20-29 years
and 1,084 of them were female cadres. The highest number of 5,586
rehabilitation took place in 2010, the figures revealed.
The RTI
application was filed at the Commissioner General of Rehabilitation by a
journalist, Tharindu Jayawardena. The application was initially rejected on the
grounds of privacy of the rehabilitated LTTEs and that it might endanger national
security.
However,
arguing that the information only related to statistics and pose no danger for
national security or privacy, he moved the RTI Commission, the legal body which
is set up to hear cases where information requests are rejected or ignored,
according to Daily News.
The
Commission ordered that all the information which Jayawardena had sought, be
released, it said.
There were
594 child soldiers among those rehabilitated during the period from 2008 to
2018, the RTI reply said.
Sri Lanka's
RTI Act came into force in February 2017.
