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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, March 1, 2018
PRIMARY RESPONSIBILITY FOR POST WAR RECONCILIATION LIES WITHIN SRI LANKA
Image: Solders patrolling Jaffna, Sri Lanka.
Sri Lanka’s commitment to human rights is being debated in Geneva at the
37th session of the Human Rights Council, which meets in Geneva from 26
February to 23 March 2018. There
is a considerable amount of international dissatisfaction with the slow
pace of progress due to the long delay in setting up the reconciliation
mechanisms, such as the Office of Missing Persons, Office of
Reparations, Truth Commission and Special Judicial Mechanism.
The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein has
stated that the fulfilment of the transitional justice commitments made
under Human Rights Council resolution 30/1 of October 2015 has been
virtually stalled for more than a year. The High Commissioner has also
called on the UN Human Rights Council to explore other avenues that
could foster accountability in Sri Lanka, including the application of
universal jurisdiction that could foster accountability.
The International Organisation of Migration (IOM), one of the
specialized UN agencies in Sri Lanka last week held an international
conference on the role of reparations in the transitional justice
process. International experts who participated in the conference gave
examples from other conflict-ridden countries where reparations had been
used to meet the needs of victims and to send a message of care to
those who had been victims from all sides. This type of collaboration
between international and national experts points to the way forward in
the transitional justice process.
The National Peace Council is of the view that the
government’s failure to take the reform process forward with requisite
speed is due to the popular misconceptions that are fed by opposition
and nationalist politicians. They see the post-war reconciliation
process as being driven by the international community who wish to set
up hybrid mechanisms in the country. The Office of
Missing Persons that has been legislated is an example of a Sri Lankan
mechanism, with eminent Sri Lankans proposed by the Constitutional
Council at the helm that can address the needs of victims while drawing
on the relevant resources, advice and experiences of the international
community in dealing with similar problems elsewhere in the world.
The primary responsibility for healing the wounds of the war and
post-war period lie with Sri Lankans as the victims whose rights have
been violated are Sri Lankans and so are the perpetrators. This is
reflected in the legislation of the Office of Missing Persons. We call
on the government to likewise establish an Office of Reparations and a
Truth Commission on similar lines.
-National Peace Council