Dr. Thusiyan Nandakumar Profile picture
Mar 29 20 tweets 9 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
🧵The British government is talking of using disused ferries to hold asylum seekers.

But this was already tried by the UK once before – a cruel experiment that failed spectacularly.

This is the story of the Earl William, hunger striking Tamils and the great storm of 1987.⬇️

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In January 1987, then Home Secretary Douglas Hurd approved the use of a former car ferry to detain asylum seekers.

The Earl William was chosen as it was “unlikely to appear too luxurious or too Spartan” he claimed.

It was moored at Harwich in Essex.

/2
By May 1987, asylum seekers from Ethiopia, Iraq, Iran, Somalia, Afghanistan, Uganda and Nigeria, were detained on board.

The largest group, however, were 60 Eelam Tamils from Sri Lanka.

/3
It was the first– and so far, only – time that the UK had ever used a ship as a migrant detention centre.

With everyone on board, it became the largest detention centre in the country.

/4
Conditions were horrific.

“The cabin was claustrophobic and tiny,” said one Tamil.

“It was like a tight little tin with no windows.

"We felt seasick all the time. We never knew whose turn it was to return to certain torture and maybe even death.”

/5
There were eight women on board, including a 15-year-old girl.

No sanitary towels were provided for the first two months.

Detainees were barred from the deck because of the suicide risk.

/6
See more from Felix Bazalgette on the conditions at the time:

/7
Many of the Tamils fled the Black July pogrom in Sri Lanka.

But even in the UK, they were victims of racism. In Nov 1986, a firebomb was sent through a letterbox in East Ham, killing three Tamils.

“Flames haunted the Tamil people wherever they went”, wrote @pmillerinfo.

/8
On board, a protest soon began.

The Eelam Tamils began a hunger strike, demonstrating against the conditions in which they were being detained.

A banner over the side of the ship read “British people! Don’t let us die!”

/9
Labour MP @HackneyAbbott visited the ferry on August 6 with fellow MPs @jeremycorbyn and Harry Cohen.

“The young Tamils were completely desperate," she said.

"It seemed a barbaric ­situation and I felt very sad for them. Conditions were poor and overcrowded.”

/10
In Oct 1987, as the ship’s guards slept at night, Siva and another detained jumped off the vessel and into the freezing sea.

They swam ashore, trudged through the marshes and fled to a local church.

Siva surrendered to authorities in 1990 & later won settled status.

/11
Just 10 days later the UK, France, and the Channel Islands were hit by the Great Storm of 1987.

It was dubbed the biggest storm for 500 years, with headlines claiming it had caused the “worst devastation since the war”.

The Earl William was battered.

/12
On Oct 16, the Earl William was no longer docked at Harwich. The storm had ripped it from its moorings and thrown it into the tides.

The hull was pierced with several gashes, flooding the lower levels

All those onboard were found sheltering in the officers’ mess.

/13
The UK government was forced to release all those on board and grant temporary admission on 'compassionate grounds'.

‘For months we have been campaigning for their release,’ said an activist. ‘Now the furious hand of nature has replied.

The 6-month experiment had failed.

/14
It wasn't smooth sailing for the refugees however.

The Home Office deported many, including at least 5 Tamils to Sri Lanka. One 18-year-old was imprisoned and beaten on his return.

To this day, Tamil refugees are being detained and sent to Rwanda.

/15


And what happened to the Earl William?

It spent years circling through different owners and purposes – before becoming a floating hotel in Trinidad & Tobago.

In 2011, it hit an oil-drilling vessel off the Venezuela coast.

It sank to the bottom of the sea without a trace.

/16
So there you have it.

Appalling conditions, on board protests, and the furious hand of nature – all ensuring a swift end to a terrible policy.

That was more than 35 years ago.

Have any lessons been learnt?

/end
For more please do read this fantastic piece by Felix Bazalgette foir @newint and this revisiting of events from the @tamilguardian.

newint.org/immersive/2018…

tamilguardian.com/content/great-…
Read interviews with some of the Tamils who were on board below.

morningstaronline.co.uk/article/learn-…

mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/m…
Please do excuse any typos. Written in a rush whilst waiting for my first patient to arrive this morning.

A busy day of patients, document reviews and prescription requests ahead...

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More from @Thusi_Kumar

Sep 26, 2022
35 years ago, this 23-year-old from Jaffna decided to take a stand. It was bold.

In September 1987, in front of 100,000 people, Thileepan launched a peaceful, determined, and powerful protest.

He vowed he would have no food. And not a drop of water.
As a former medical student, Thileepan already knew what his body would endure.

He had already left university to join the struggle.

And at 23-years-old, he was prepared to give his life, in a non-violent act of protest, for his peoples’ freedom.
The process of starvation is excruciating.

Each passing moment that his body began to shut down was a courageous - yet tragic - act of resistance.

It lasted 12 days.
Read 5 tweets
Sep 25, 2022
Everyone who has visited Jaffna has probably walked past this mound of concrete.

Opposite Nallur Temple, just in front of Rio’s Ice Cream parlour, stands the now destroyed memorial to Lt. Col. Thileepan.

🧵A thread on rebuilding and resisting.

#tamil #eelam #srilanka

/1 ImageImageImage
35 years ago, 100,000 people flooded the streets as he launched a hunger strike for Tamil rights.

He was a medical student before becoming political leader with the LTTE. And he was just 23 years old.

His hunger strike lasted for 11 days. He died on September 26th 1987.

/2 Image
The next year, a monument was constructed to honour Thileepan and his sacrifice.

As with many memorials to figures from the liberation struggle, it was revered by Eelam Tamils.

/3 Image
Read 9 tweets
Jun 7, 2022
What this article misses is how many of these very same cricketers were backers of the Rajapaksa regime – some overtly.

Many were criticised by Sri Lankans for their silence or support for the regime and only recently made complete U-turns.

I’ll give a few examples.

🧵
Sanath Jayasuriya was an SLFP MP, who campaigned fervently for Gotabaya Rajapaksa, claiming he is “the only leader who can create a better tomorrow”.

In the wake of Rajapaksa’s victory, Jayasuriya tweeted “be assured of my commitment to strengthening your hands all the way”.

/2
Mahela Jeyawardena came under fire for a perceived lack of support for Sri Lanka’s anti-government protests.

He even hit back on Twitter with a set of tweets about “balls”.

More than a month after protests began he finally tweeted that all of parliament should resign

/3
Read 8 tweets
Apr 14, 2022
🧵 As Sri Lankans continue to protest at Galle Face, a look back at what happened when Tamils tried to do the same in 1956.

Tamil politicians protested peacefully outside Sri Lankan parliament in Colombo, condemning efforts to pass the Sinhala Only Act on June 5, 1956.

/1
Hundreds led by SJV Chelvanayakam, staged a satyagraha on Galle Face Green.

They were set upon by a Sinhala mob.

“Hooligans, in the very precincts of Parliament House, under the very nose of the PM of this country, set upon those innocent men seated there," wrote S Nadesan.

/2
Stones were pelted at the Tamil protestors. Tamil MPs were hospitalised.

One man had an ear “bitten and torn off”.

Another was thrown into Beira Lake, near the Parliament House.

The violence spread.

/3
Read 8 tweets
Sep 15, 2021
On Sunday night, Sri Lankan minister Lohan Ratwatte got drunk and flew in a helicopter to Anuradhapura Prison.

He entered the cells of Tamil prisoners, pulled out his pistol and forced them to kneel down at gunpoint.

He threatened to kill them on the spot.

/1
The day before, Ratwatte and his entourage, including a former Sri Lankan ‘beauty queen’, got drunk and walked into Welikada Prison in Colombo, demanding to view the prison’s gallows and threatening prison officers.

Sri Lanka’s Prisons Department claimed they knew nothing.

/2
This is not new behaviour from Ratwatte. In 2001, ten Muslim youths were gunned down allegedly by Ratwatte and his supporters.

All those accused were acquitted of the killings.

bbc.com/sinhala/news/s…

/3
Read 6 tweets
Jul 9, 2021
Last month, this photo of former Sri Lankan president Chandrika Kumaratunga casually strolling through London were shared widely.

Today - the anniversary of the Navaly Church bombing - is a reminder of how, for many, she remains one of Sri Lanka’s most notorious war criminals.🧵
26 years ago, Kumaratunga launched Operation Leap Forward - a massive assault on the Jaffna Peninsula.

The air force dropped leaflets instructing Tamils to seek shelter at churches and temples.

Hours later bombs were dropped on St Peter's church. More than 140 were killed.

/2
Initially the government tried to blame the LTTE, claiming that "the army was firing artillery shells in a completely different direction".

"Only a few tiles of the roof were damaged by an explosion in the vicinity and the church building stands unscathed," CBK stated.

/3
Read 9 tweets

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