
About 60 people rallied outside the State Library on February 6 to demand an end to the oppression of Tamils and Muslims in Sri Lanka. A protest was also organised in Parramatta in Western Sydney.
February 4 marks the anniversary of Sri Lankaβs independence from Britain in 1948. The Tamil Refugee Council (TRC) describes February 4 as Tamil Oppression Day because the new government has introduced discriminatory laws.
βOne of the first acts of the new government was to disenfranchise more than 1 million Tamils. They later passed the Sinhala Only Act denying the Tamil language equal status and making Sinhala the country's only official language. The state became increasingly chauvinist, discriminating against Tamils in employment and education, all the while colonising Tamil lands with Sinhala-Buddhist settlers,β the TRC said that on February 3.
Peaceful protests were met with βa combination of indifference and violenceβ, according to the TRC. Tamil youth took up arms. The military conflict ended in 2009 with βa genocidal offensive by the Sri Lankan military that left tens of thousands of Tamils deadβ. Today βTamil lands remain under heavy military occupationβ. Muslims are also oppressed.
Greens spokesperson Samantha Ratnam addressed the protest and criticised successive Australian governments for βaiding and abettingβ the Sri Lankan government. She called for trade relations between Australia and Sri Lanka to be cut.
After the speakers, the crowd marched to the Park Hotel where 12 refugees remain in detention.
Former NSW Greens Senator Lee Rhiannon addressed a protest in Parramatta where she said the protest was part of four days of actions calling on the United Nations to establish an independent investigation into allegations of war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide committed by the Sri Lankan state on Tamil communities.