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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, November 23, 2019
A Decade of Impunity: unlocking accountability for the victims of Sri Lanka’s killing fields
Nov 14, 2019
This Saturday, Sri Lankans will head to the polls to select a new
President: the culmination of a high-stakes election battle dominated by
questions of national security and economic development. Strikingly
absent from the campaign trail has been any meaningful discussion of the
enduring legacy of Sri Lanka’s bitter civil war in 2009, and the
concerns of those most affected by it.

Today we publish a major new report that aims to redress that imbalance. A
decade after the war’s end, we speak to ten Tamils who lived through
and survived the final stages of the armed conflict in 2009, re-tracing
allegations of serious human rights violations through the eyes of those
who witnessed them first-hand, and asking the vitally important (but
largely neglected) question of what can be done to ensure that those
responsible for some of the worst atrocity crimes of the 21st century are one day held accountable.
As the current candidates vie, in the words of one front-runner, to become “the president of the future of
Sri Lanka”, our findings underscore that many of those most affected by
the war are yet to be allowed to move on from the past. Today,
nearly five years after Sri Lanka’s incoming coalition government
promised change – and four years since it pledged before the
international community to confront allegations of war-time abuses –
many survivors feel angry and let down about the shocking lack of
progress in bringing perpetrators of grave human rights abuses to
justice.
While Sri Lanka’s political leaders are the principal target of blame for this failure, our research reveals a clear and growing sense of frustration directed towards the international community – an
international community who, despite previously placing the concerns of
war-affected communities firmly on the agenda, are perceived as having
failed to apply the pressure needed to bring about decisive change. And
yet notwithstanding this sense of missed opportunity – and the dismay
with which activists have observed the government of Sri Lanka’s recent
efforts to position itself as a champion of human rights on the world
stage – many do still retain a belief that members of the international
community are, or can be, important and effective players in the fight
for justice.
Where there is disappointment, so
too there is fear. Several of those whom we spoke to signaled a sense
of alarm about what the possible return of members of the former regime,
including those implicated in serious human rights abuses, could spell
for the immediate future. While many victims and survivors have
seized the modest increases in democratic space since 2015 to speak up
for their rights, there is now concern that this openness could leave
some exposed to the risk of reprisals. There is an overarching worry,
too, that Sri Lanka’s unaddressed culture of impunity for war-time
violations could provide fertile soil for further ethnic violence down
the line.
As
a non-partisan organisation, we take no view as to how, or whether, Sri
Lankans should vote this Saturday. But whichever candidate succeeds, it
is clear that war-affected communities and members of the international
community will face huge challenges to ensure that the grave abuses of
the past are not ignored by Sri Lanka’s newly elected President.
Survivors have not forgotten, and nor should we.
That is why we have set out a blueprint for action by members of the international community in our report, one
that must begin with a frank acknowledgement of the failure of recent
attempts to lay the foundations for sustainable peace in Sri Lanka, and a
re-focusing of minds on the issue of accountability. To that end, we
highlight some of the options available to policy-makers in the context
of limited domestic political will to tackle impunity. We look, in
particular, at ways in which accountability-seeking efforts can be
enhanced – including through the establishment of mechanisms (already in
place in other contexts) for collecting and preserving evidence of
atrocity crimes, as well as the pursuit of justice beyond Sri Lanka’s
borders via universal jurisdiction. We also consider the need for forms
of engagement which deprive alleged perpetrators of legitimacy and
material support, and which ensure that the government of Sri Lanka’s
participation in global human rights and peacebuilding bodies is
commensurate with its record on these issues at home.
