Sri Lanka’s promises on human rights should no longer be accepted by
the international community, Amnesty International said as the UN
Universal Periodic Review (UPR) on 1 November highlighted Colombo’s
continued denial of the human rights crisis in the country and the need
for independent investigations into new alleged human rights violations
and past war crimes.
The UN examines the human rights situation in
each member state every four and a half years, and Sri Lanka has yet to
follow up on important commitments made during its first UPR in 2008,
when the government was engaged in armed conflict with the Tamil Tigers
(LTTE).
“Sri Lanka has been making empty promises about human
rights for decades. This was made clear by a number of countries which
questioned Sri Lanka’s lack of progress in ending human rights
violations during the review,” said Yolanda Foster, Amnesty
International’s expert on Sri Lanka.
“Three years after the end of
the civil war, the government continues to stifle dissent through
threats and harassment, and has failed to take steps to end enforced
disappearances and extrajudicial executions.”
Human rights
defenders have told Amnesty International about a climate a fear in Sri
Lanka in which the state does nothing to protect them from threats.
Following
a UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) resolution in March 2012 calling on
Sri Lanka to address violations of international law during the civil
war, government officials and state-run media lashed out at human rights
activists. They were called “traitors” and threatened with physical
harm by the Public Relations Minister, prompting the UN to denounce the
threats and call for an investigation.
The crackdown on dissent
has extended to lawyers and members of the judiciary who speak out
against abuses of power. A senior high court judge, Manjula Tilakaratne,
was on 7 October 2012 attacked and injured by armed assailants after he
had complained of attempts to interfere with the independence of the
judiciary, a concern raised by some states today.
The
authorities have continued to arrest and detain suspects for lengthy
periods without charge or trial under the repressive Prevention of
Terrorism Act (PTA), despite promises during its first UPR to bring this
and similar legislation in line with international human rights law. No
amendment has yet been made, and today Sri Lanka stressed its need to
retain the PTA. Meanwhile, hundreds of people suspected of links to the
LTTE continue to languish in administrative detention.
“Four years
after the UN’s first review of human rights in Sri Lanka, there has
been virtually no progress – as shown today - on any of the commitments
the government made to end arbitrary detentions,” said Foster.
Several
states today pressed Sri Lanka on its continued use of torture and
other ill-treatment, despite government pledges made during the first
review to address the problem. Amnesty International continues to
receive reports of torture and resultant deaths in custody, enforced
disappearances and extrajudicial executions.
On 26 July 2012, Sri
Lanka published a National Plan of Action as a gesture to the
international community that it is moving forward with addressing human
rights concerns called for in the UNHRC March resolution. However, this
plan is not comprehensive, particularly on issues relating to deaths of
civilians, arbitrary detention and enforced disappearance. Where
investigations are envisioned at all, responsibility has been given to
the army and police – the very institutions implicated in these serious
human rights violations in the first place.
A culture of impunity
persists in Sri Lanka, as the government has not investigated,
prosecuted and punished most of the perpetrators of human rights
violations.
Two glaring examples of serious human rights
violations where the perpetrators remain free from prosecution are the
alleged extrajudicial execution of five students by the Sri Lankan
Special Task Force in January 2012, and the killing of 17 Action Contre
la Faim (ACF) workers in the east in 2006, one of the worst massacres of
humanitarian workers in history.
The findings of a 2007 Presidential Commission of Inquiry into both cases have yet to be released.
“The
persistent lack of justice in these cases is shocking and flies in the
face of repeated promises by the government for the past six years that
it would investigate them properly. Victims’ families won’t believe the
government until some practical action is taken. As a very basic first
step the 2007 commission’s findings should be made public,” said Foster.
In the lead up to this UPR, Sri Lanka’s Attorney General claimed to have directed the police to investigate the two cases.
“Why
did it take so long for the Sri Lankan authorities to order an
investigation into cases this grave, and what will happen to the police
inquiry when international interest sparked by the UPR dies down?,” said
Foster.
After Sri Lanka’s UPR session in Geneva today, the UPR
panel is set to release its full report on Monday 5 November 2012. The
Human Rights Council is set to formally adopt the outcome of today’s
review at its March session next year. The international community must
use that to hold the Sri Lankan government to its repeated promises.
Amnesty International’s submission on Sri Lanka to the UN Universal Periodic Review, October-November 2012 can be found here: http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/ASA37/008/2012/en/5747cec0-7e77-486f-9859-9623ee127b20/asa370082012en.pdf
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