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Collective deportation of Tamils to Sri Lanka met with outrage

Twenty-four Tamils have been deported from Germany to Sri Lanka. Citing the danger returnees face, a refugee support organization and a Catholic priest condemned the action. According to Germany's federal police, a flight with 24 Tamils took off from Düsseldorf airport on Tuesday (March 30) evening. On board were 24 Tamils, who were brought to the airport from a deportation detention center in Büren in the German state of North-Rhine Westphalia (NRW).

German public broadcaster Westdeutscher Rundfunk (WDR) reported on Tuesday that the affected persons lived and worked across NRW, Germany's most populous state.

According to WDR, some 50 people gathered at the airport with posters to demand a stop to the deportation. On Sunday, nearly 200 people had already protested against the measure in front of the deportation detention center in Büren, WDR reported. 'Deteriorating situation' in Sri Lanka

"Deportations to Sri Lanka were all but banned in recent years for good reasons," Birgit Naujok, managing director of the refugee council of NRW, said in an online statement.

It was inhumane to return the Tamils there, she said, especially since people with Tamil roots were subject to human rights violations in Sri Lanka.

Last week, the Human Rights Council of the United Nations (UN) confirmed this view. In a resolution, it spoke of a "deteriorating situation" in Sri Lanka and criticized "the erosion of judicial independence, marginalisation of minorities and impunity."

It further called on the Sri Lankan government to change the "law on the prevention of terrorism," which rights groups say the government uses "as a weapon targeting dissidents and minorities".

un results

On March 23, the UN council announced it would "collect and preserve information and evidence of crimes related to Sri Lanka's 37-year long civil war".

The civil war between the government and the insurgent Tamils ended in 2009. According to the UN report, the government committed several war crimes, including against its own citizens. They have not been dealt with sufficiently though, the UN said. Letter to Seehofer

Albert Koolen, a Catholic priest from Krefeld, also in NRW, has spoken out against the deportation last week. In an open letter to German Interior Minister Horst Seehofer, he called the deportation flight a "fatal signal" and asked Seehofer to stop it. The deportees could face prison, torture and death, Koolen said.

Tamils are a ethnic minority in several Asian countries. In Sri Lanka, they make up around 15% of the population. There are more than 70 million Tamils globally. (Source: infomigrants.net)

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