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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, December 1, 2014
Sri Lankan General To Be Arrested In South Africa For Crimes Against Humanity
December 1, 2014
A retired Sri Lankan army general allegedly responsible for a spate of
extrajudicial killings in the Tamil dominated Northern Province in the
mid-1990′s has come under the scrutiny of activists and international
lawyers in South Africa, Colombo Telegraph reliably learns.
General Srilal Weerasooriya is
believed to have arrived in South Africa on November 30, 2014 to attend
a conference hosted by the Association of Military Christian
Fellowships, in which Weerasooriya is leading organiser.
Lawyers and activists are particularly concerned over Weerasooriya’s involvement in the Chemmani mass graves – a mass grave in which victims of a spate of killings by the military targeting Tamil civilians were dumped.
A recent decision by the Constitutional Court of South Africa affirmed
the responsibility of the state in prosecuting crimes against humanity
in Zimbabwe, under South Africa’s universal jurisdiction laws. A team of
lawyers and activists are believed to be pressing for the arrest and
trial of Weerasooriya in South Africa for alleged crimes against
humanity. The move comes in the aftermath of an informal fact-finding
process that lasted over two years, in which evidence linking
Weerasooriya to the Chemmani mass murders was systematically documented
by activists and lawyers.
Related story
30 October, 2014
Johannesburg – In a ground-breaking judgment, the South African
Constitutional Court has unanimously ruled that the South African Police
Service (SAPS) must investigate crimes against humanity perpetrated in
Zimbabwe in 2007.
The so-called ‘Zimbabwe torture case’ was brought by the Southern Africa
Litigation Centre (SALC) and the Zimbabwean Exiles Forum (ZEF) to
compel South Africa to abide by its domestic and international legal
obligations to investigate and prosecute high level Zimbabwean officials
accused of crimes against humanity.
“South Africa’s highest court has set an important precedent: South
Africa will not be a safe haven for perpetrators of the world’s worst
crimes” said Nicole Fritz, SALC’s executive director. “The judgment
represents a clear appreciation for the role of international criminal
law and its importance to our domestic justice system.”
In 2008, ZEF and SALC submitted a dossier of evidence to the South
African National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) and SAPS, which detailed
state-sanctioned torture in Zimbabwe. SALC and ZEF hoped the authorities
would initiate investigations but turned to the courts after SAPS and
the NPA refused to investigate.
In May 2012, the North Gauteng High Court set aside the decision of the
NPA and the SAPS not to initiate an investigation into state-sanctioned
torture in Zimbabwe. The High Court ruled that the South African
authorities had not acted in compliance with their obligations and held
that the decision was unlawful and unconstitutional.
On appeal, at the Supreme Court of Appeal in November 2013, the Court
agreed with SALC and ZEF and ordered the authorities to investigate the
crimes against humanity detailed in the dossier. SAPS alone launched an
appeal at the Constitutional Court which ruled that investigations must
be initiated.
“After eight years of legal wrangling, we are thrilled that victims of
torture in Zimbabwe now have some prospect of seeing justice served,”
said Gabriel Shumba, ZEF Chairperson, “But the case doesn’t just hold
out promise for victims of torture in Zimbabwe. Should it be reasonable
and practicable for South African authorities to investigate
international crimes committed elsewhere – for instance, the Democratic
Republic of Congo – potentially the victims of those crimes might
approach South Africa’s investigating authorities for assistance.”
Having exhausted all legal appeals, all eyes will turn to the SAPS who have been ordered to commence investigations.
SALC and ZEF were represented by Lawyers for Human Rights (LHR), Wim Trengove, Gilbert Marcus and Max du Plessis.
For more information:
Nicole Fritz, Executive Director SALC, Office + 27 10 596 8538; Cell +27 82 600 1082; NicoleF@salc.org.za
Angela Mudukuti, SALC International Criminal Justice Project Lawyer,
Office + 27 10 596 8538; Cell +27 76 762 3869;AngelaM@salc.org.za
Gabriel Shumba, ZEF Chairperson: Cell +27 84 664 9798