Personal data

Name
Alvin Vtithusa

Date of birth
2003

Age
4

Place of birth


Biographical details
Alvin Vtithusa was only 4 years old at the time of her murder and lived in the town Padahuththurai in the Mannar district. This area is under Tamil administration.

Indcident

Date
02.01.2007

Location
Padahuththurai, Mannar

Description
On 2 January 2007, a small fishing community in Padahuththurai in Mannar district was bombed by the Sri Lankan Air Force. 15 civilians from one extended family, including six children, were killed and another 35 civilians were injured. Many among the injured were permanently maimed. The community is made up of about 40 tight knit extended families. Most are refugees displaced from Jaffna in 1995 who decided to make this location their home. The Padahuththurai location was ideal for small scale fishing which most of the men in the community did in small manual boats. A further number of families from Jaffna joined them in 2006 as the death squads began killing people who supported the LTTE in Jaffna. On 1st January 2007, the New Year was celebrated by the community as most Christians in the island do. 2nd January was a relaxed day and the community awaited the arrival of one of its families who had gone away to celebrate new-year with other relatives 10 kms away. For two hours, they heard the drone of the usual spy plane which concerned them but that was common. There was no noise of a bomber which would have send them scurrying for safety. At 9.35 am, the eagerly awaited Kuhan and his family arrived walking from the bus stand a bit further away. The entire clan, especially the children, among them Alvin Vtithusa, ran to greet, happy New Year. That was the last pleasant memory of the community. Some of the men had taken to the sea early that morning and they saw their homes in fire. They knew immediately what has happened and rushed back.

Legal situation (investigation/criminal proceedings)
No one was ever held accountable and there were no criminal proceedings in court. The Sri Lankan officers, who commanded it, and the responsible soldiers have not been convicted to this day.