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Over 200 Tamil prisoners stage protest in Sri Lanka
5/21/2012 1:38:00 PM

Colombo, May 21 (Xinhua-ANI): Over 200 minority Tamil prisoners in Sri Lanka, most of them former Tamil Tiger rebels, continued a hunger strike for the fifth day on Monday, officials said.

The inmates of three prisons located in the capital Colombo, the southern town of Kalutara and in the northern town of Vavuniya are demanding that they be charged for their crimes or be released.

The fast began last week with the participation of 80 inmates of the Colombo prison but the number rose to 234 over the weekend with prisoners from two others prisons also joining the protest.

Tamil National Alliance (TNA) legislator M.A. Sumanthiran said that most of the prisoners have been in jail for over three years without being charged.

He said that a special discussion will be held on Monday with the prison authorities regarding the long term detainees.

The European Union had earlier this month called for a fair trial for long term detainees in Sri Lanka.

Chair of the European Parliament Delegation for Relations with countries in South Asia, Jean Lambert, had told Xinhua that the EU parliament's position on long term detainees in Sri Lanka is that they should be either charged or released.

Hundreds of suspected Tamil Tiger rebels and other political prisoners are in Sri Lankan prisons, some of whom have not faced trial or a charge for years or months after they were arrested, the minority Tamil political parties in Sri Lanka have said.

Most of the prisoners were arrested while emergency regulations were in place during the war between the rebels and the military.

The war ended in May 2009 with the defeat of the rebels. Most of the emergency regulations were also subsequently lifted. (Xinhua-ANI)

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