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, April 4, 2017
Sri Lanka - Victims of disappearance cannot wait any longer for justice
Sri Lanka will not break with its violent past until it reckons with the cruel history of enforced disappearance and delivers justice to as many as 100,000 families who have spent years waiting for it, Amnesty International said today in a new report, revealing the enduring scars of a conflict that has been forgotten by the world.
Amnesty International’s report, “Only Justice can heal our wounds”, will
be launched by the organization’s Secretary General Salil Shetty at a
meeting with families of the disappeared in the northern Sri Lankan town
of Mannar.
The report tells the story of relatives, many of them women, who have
spent years searching for truth and justice. Obstructed at every turn,
they have been misled about the whereabouts or fate of their disappeared
relatives, subjected to threats, smears and intimidation, and suffered
the indignity of delayed trials and a stalled truth and justice
processes.
Until justice is delivered to these victims, the country cannot begin to heal, let alone move towards a more promising future
“There is no community in Sri Lanka that remains untouched by the trauma
of enforced disappearance. Most people in the country suffer the
absence of a loved one or know someone who does. They have waited years,
and in some cases, decades, to learn of the fate of their relatives.
Until justice is delivered to these victims, the country cannot begin to
heal, let alone move towards a more promising future,” said Salil
Shetty, Amnesty International’s Secretary General.
Despite international commitments to end impunity for enforced
disappearance, which may amount to crimes against humanity where they
have been widespread and systematic, the authorities have failed to
investigate these cases, identify the whereabouts or fate of the victim,
or prosecute those suspected of the crimes.
A major driver of enforced disappearances has been like Sri Lanka’s
notorious Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA). Enabling incommunicado and
secret detention, the PTA places people outside the law and leaves them
vulnerable to human rights violations including torture and enforced
disappearances.
“Sri Lanka needs to put the victims at the heart of any reconciliation
process. The authorities must hear their demands and implement them. The
current government has taken encouraging steps to acknowledge the need
to end impunity, but it cannot leave the victims waiting any longer.
They have waited too long already. If Sri Lanka wants to successfully
pull away from its violent past, it must address victims’ demands for
justice, truth, reparation and guarantees of non-recurrence,” said Salil
Shetty.
An relentless search for justice
One of the cases detailed in the report is of Sandya Eknaligoda, whose
husband, Prageeth, left his on 24 January 2010 and never returned.
Prageeth Eknaligoda was a political cartoonist, known for his efforts to
expose corruption and human rights abuses by the government then in
power.
There is no community in Sri Lanka that remains untouched by the trauma of enforced disappearance. Most people in the country suffer the absence of a loved one or know someone who does. They have waited years, and in some cases, decades, to learn of the fate of their relatives
Sandya Eknaligoda’s perseverance has led to some evidence being
uncovered which indicates that military intelligence personnel may have
been involved in her husband’s disappearance. Since she filed a
complaint, she has been to court at least 90 times. Each time she
appears, she faces the prospect of harassment. She told Amnesty
International that last year, a prominent member of the Buddhist
national Bodhu Bala Sena and other monks stormed the court at Homagama
and threatened her. The same group has smeared her as a supporter of the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in posters.
In 2011, the former attorney general told the UN Committee Against
Torture that her husband had not been abducted but had fled the country.
When confronted about the claim in court, the former attorney general
said that his memory had failed him, forgetting where the claim came
from.
Sandya has pressed on with her campaign, writing repeatedly to Sri
Lankan leaders, handing out appeals in front of Parliament, organizing
vigils, and emboldening other wives of the disappeared to raise their
voices and join her demand for justice. Taking her case to the UN Human
Rights Council, she has forced slow progress. In 2015, an investigation
revealed that Prageeth had been held at army camps. But the process has
stalled since then.
A cruel history
Since the 1980s, Amnesty International estimates there have been at
least 60,000 and as many as 100,000 cases of enforced disappearance in
Sri Lanka. The victims include Sinhalese young people who were killed or
forcibly disappeared by government death squads on suspicion of
leftists links in 1989 and 1990. They include Tamils suspected of links
to the LTTE, disappeared by police, military and paramilitary operatives
during the conflict from 1983 to 2009. And they include human rights
defenders, aid workers, journalists, government critics, and prominent
community leaders.
In June 2016, former President Chandrika Bandranaike Kumaratunga, who
was in office from 1994 to 2005, acknowledged receiving at least 65,000
complaints of disappearance. The true figure could be as high as 100,000
people, Amnesty International estimates, as communities who have lived
and continue to live under a pall of fear and without confidence in the
authorities have not reported other cases.
Under international law, an enforced disappearance is where a person is
arrested, detained, abducted or otherwise deprived of their liberty by
agents of the state, or by persons or groups of persons acting with the
authorization, support, or acquiescence of the state, followed by a
refusal to acknowledge the deprivation of liberty or by concealment of
the fate or whereabouts of the disappeared person, which places them
outside the protection of the law. In Sri Lanka, many “abductions” or
“disappearances” have also been carried out by non-state actors,
including armed groups.
In Sri Lanka, enforced disappearance have varied in time, scale and
intensity at various points in the conflict. Having ratified the
Convention, Sri Lanka has an obligation to investigate all allegations
of disappearance and, where sufficient evidence exists, to prosecute
those suspected of the crimes at all levels in proceedings which should
be fair and without recourse to the death penalty. The government must
ensure that victims and their families are told the truth and that they
are provided with full and effective reparation to address the harm they
have suffered.
A way forward: truth, justice, reparation and non-recurrence
In October 2015, the Sri Lankan government committed to develop
mechanisms and institute other reforms aimed at delivering truth,
justice, reparation and ensuring non-recurrence for past human rights
violations and abuses. In public communications, the government of Sri
Lanka refers to the overall process as “reconciliation.”
If Sri Lanka wants to successfully pull away from its violent past, it must address victims’ demands for justice, truth, reparation and guarantees of non-recurrence
The determined activism of families of the disappeared and widespread
public familiarity with the issue has pushed the government to address
disappearances first, the process has been stalled. Last year, the Sri
Lankan Parliament ratified the International Convention for the
Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance. But a bill to
implement the Convention by criminalising enforced disappearance in the
Sri Lankan Penal Code has yet to be debated.
Also in 2016, Parliament passed a bill to establish the “Office of
Missing Persons”. While a laudable step, the government failed to
consult with victims and civil society or address their concerns about
the bill, including ambiguous provisions on whether evidence of
responsibility for disappearance gathered by the Office would be
submitted to prosecuting authorities, undermining public confidence in
the initiative. The President has yet to sign the bill into law.
Where the government has reached out to victims, it has ignored what
they have to say. Public consultations on the design of justice, truth
and reparation mechanisms attracted more than 7,000 submissions,
including many from families of the disappeared. But officials have
shown little interest in the findings and even denigrated the Task Force
that organized it.
To move forward, the Sri Lankan government should:
- Enact legislation making disappearance a crime under national law in
accordance with the Convention for the Protection of All Persons from
Enforced Disappearance.
- Amend and enact the Office on Missing Persons Act to ensure that the
Office is established effectively without further delay to investigate
all allegations of disappearance; ensuring its effectiveness by seeing
that it is fairly, transparently and adequately staffed and resourced;
ensure that it submits evidence of responsibility for disappearances to
prosecuting authorities;
- Where sufficient admissible evidence exists, prosecute those
responsible for disappearances promptly before civilian courts in fair
trials without recourse to the death penalty;
- Preclude the application of amnesties, immunities and other measures of impunity to persons suspected of committing crimes under international law;
- Formally acknowledge and prioritize the findings and recommendations of the Consultation Task Force;
- Ensure that victims, including families of the disappeared, are
provided with full and effective reparation to address the harm they
have suffered, including restitution, compensation, rehabilitation and
satisfaction;
- Repeal the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) and end its use
immediately; abolish Sri Lanka’s system of administrative detention and
ensure that any future legislation meant to replace the PTA meets
international standards;
- Release all individuals held under the PTA or other forms of arbitrary
or secret detention unless they are charged with recognizable criminal
offences and remanded in custody by an independent, regularly
constituted court.




