A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, April 21, 2013
Sri Lanka: US Country Reports on Human Rights Practices For 2012
April 21, 2013
“The major human rights problems were
attacks on and harassment of civil society activists, persons viewed as
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) sympathizers, and journalists by persons
allegedly tied to the government, creating an environment of fear and
self-censorship; involuntary disappearances as well as a lack of accountability
for thousands who disappeared in previous years; and widespread impunity for a
broad range of human rights abuses, particularly involving police torture, and
attacks on media institutions and the judiciary.” says US state
Department.
We
publish below the latest Department of State’s Country Reports on Human
Rights Practices for 2012 transmit to the United States Congress
by Secretary of State John F. Kerry.
Executive
summary – Sri Lanka
Sri
Lanka is a constitutional, multiparty republic. President Mahinda Rajapaksa, who
was reelected to a second six-year term in January 2010, and the parliament,
which was elected in April 2010, share constitutional power. The government is
dominated by the president’s family; two of the president’s brothers hold key
executive branch posts as defense secretary and minister of economic
development, while a third brother is the speaker of parliament. A large number
of other relatives, including the president’s son, also serve in important
political or diplomatic positions. Independent observers generally characterized
the presidential, parliamentary, and local elections as problematic. Elections
were fraught with violations of the election law by all major parties and were
influenced by the governing coalition’s use of state resources. Civilian
authorities maintained effective control over the security forces.
The
major human rights problems were attacks on and harassment of civil society
activists, persons viewed as Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE)
sympathizers, and journalists by persons allegedly tied to the government,
creating an environment of fear and self-censorship; involuntary disappearances
as well as a lack of accountability for thousands who disappeared in previous
years; and widespread impunity for a broad range of human rights abuses,
particularly involving police torture, and attacks on media institutions and the
judiciary.
Other
serious human rights problems included unlawful killings by security forces and
government-allied paramilitary groups, often in predominantly Tamil areas;
torture and abuse of detainees by police and security forces; poor prison
conditions; and arbitrary arrest and detention by authorities. Lengthy pretrial
detention was a problem. Denial of fair public trial remained a problem, and
during the year there were coordinated moves by the government to undermine the
independence of the judiciary. The government infringed on citizens’ privacy
rights. There were restrictions on freedom of speech, press, assembly,
association, and movement. While citizens generally were able to travel almost
anywhere in the island, there continued to be police and military checkpoints in
the north, and de facto high-security zones and other areas remained off limits
to citizens. Authorities harassed journalists critical of the government and
self-censorship was widespread. The president exercised authority under the 18th
amendment to maintain control of appointments to previously independent public
institutions that oversee the judiciary, police, and human rights. Lack of
government transparency was a serious problem. Violence and discrimination
against women were problems, as were abuse of children and trafficking in
persons. Discrimination against persons with disabilities and against the ethnic
Tamil minority continued, and a disproportionate number of victims of human
rights violations were Tamils. Discrimination against persons based on their
sexual orientation and against persons with HIV/AIDS were problems. Limits on
workers’ rights and child labor remained problems.
The
government prosecuted a very small number of officials implicated in human
rights abuses but had yet to hold anyone accountable for alleged violations of
international humanitarian law and international human rights law that occurred
during the conflict that ended in 2009.
During
the year unknown actors suspected of association with progovernment paramilitary
groups committed killings, kidnappings, assaults, and intimidation of civilians.
There were persistent reports of close, ground-level ties between paramilitary
groups and government security forces.
Read the full report on Sri Lanka here

