I think there are a number of reasons why they're doing this. Obviously, at a very simple level is a degree of sexual gratification for the torturers, or psychological gratification.
Sometimes it appears to be about getting information, and they're showing photographs of other people they might be able to identify, including in the diaspora. Generally, what you hear from people who've been in detention is that the authorities already have all the information and the intelligence, and that their intelligence is now excellent, which it certainly used not to be. It's less and less about information, but I think there's an attempt to get some.
I think there are two other aspects. I think it's about money. It's a torture industry because we're talking about thousands and thousands of pounds changing hands in order to release somebody. That's the value for them to keep the person alive. What happens when they're released is often the captors say that they haven't formally been released on the books, they escaped. So, if they get picked up again, they're in trouble. Obviously, part of the branding and cigarette burns is about literally leaving marks so that the next time you're strip-searched somewhere, the authorities will know that you've already been in detention once.
Also, for the women, it's about making sure their families know they've been sexually abused because the cigarette burns are in places where—you know, their breasts, their backs, their thighs—there's no way that could happen unless they were stripped naked, and often on their genitals as well. It's about humiliating them and letting families know what's happened to them.
When they say, “Okay, you will be picked up again” sometimes they're also saying, “You'd better leave the country”. At a certain level, it's about driving them out. It's about revenge, it's about teaching them a lesson, it's about getting money out of them, it's about gathering information—if there is any—and it's a whole range of different things.
I have to say, actually, the money aspect is also interesting. I was given a so-called torture video by some diaspora Tamils who had paid for it from some policemen in Sri Lanka. It seemed to show people in police cells being beaten, tied up, and tortured—not to the full extent, but there was a woman with a plastic bag over her head with a man sitting on top of her, and it sort of suggested rape, although you didn't see that, thankfully, in the video.
I think that, basically, what was happening—with all the circumstantial evidence about it—was that the security forces in Sri Lanka were creating a torture video in order to make money. They knew there was money in war crimes videos so they thought they'd make a torture video and get lots of money from diaspora Tamils. The torture was real for the victims, but the reason for doing it was to make money, which is quite disturbing because that money now comes from Tamils abroad who are paying for fellow Tamils in Sri Lanka to be tortured.