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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, March 7, 2017
CEDAW EXPRESSES CONCERN ON CLIMATE OF INSECURITY, PARTICULARLY FOR WOMEN IN CONFLICT AFFECTED ZONES.

Image: 15 women activists participated at the recently concluded CEDAW- Sri Lanka session.
In its concluding observations of the recently concluded consideration
of the 8th Sri Lanka report, Convention on the Elimination of All Forms
of Discrimination against Women” (CEDAW) has expressed its concerns
on many unresolved issues including difficulties faced by the war
affected women.
The [ CEDAW] Committee welcoming the progress achieved since the
consideration in 2011 of the State party’s combined fifth to seventh
periodic reports in undertaking legislative reforms has listed
following steps:
(a) The Nineteenth Amendment to the Constitution, which restored the
Constitutional Council to recommend appointments to the senior
judiciary and key independent institutions, including the appointment of
reputed members to the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka, in 2015;
(b) The Assistance to and Protection of Victims of Crime and Witness
Act No. 04 of 2015, which created the National Authority for the
Protection of Victims of Crimes and Witnesses; and,
(c) The Amendment of the Local Government Elections Act to include a
25% quota for women in Local Government bodies, in 2016.
The committee empresses its concern Conflict related sexual and gender-based violence against women thus:
24. The Committee notes with concern:
(a) The continuing climate of insecurity, particularly for women in conflict affected zones;
(b) Serious allegations that the military and police perpetrated
harassment, violence, including rape, abductions, torture, sexual
bribery, sexual slavery, and unjustified surveillance, including home
invasions, especially of women in the Northern and Eastern provinces,
and specifically targeting Tamil women, women heads of households, and
former combatants, war widows and women family members of the
disappeared who search for truth, justice and accountability, as well as
women human rights defenders; and,
(c) That the State party has been unable to provide the Committee
with requested data on the number of investigations, prosecutions,
convictions and the sentences imposed for acts of sexual and
gender-based violence against women perpetrated by the armed forces and
the police.
Under the Militarisation of Land it says:
42. The Committee is concerned about the ongoing militarization of
large areas of private land in the conflict-affected areas of the
country, the usurpation of civilian administration responsibilities by
the military, and the resulting large scale displacements of women and
men in the State party, where 32 camps for internally displaced persons
continue to exist. It is particularly concerned that such militarization
constitutes a barrier to the resettlement of internally displaced
women, durable solutions for their housing, and their ability regain
their livelihoods.
Read the full report as PDF:CEDAW Concluding observetion on Sri Lanka
