Photo: Amantha Perera/IRIN. Thousands disappeared during Sri Lanka's 26-year long civil war
Source: IRIN
COLOMBO, 29 August 2014 (IRIN) - Sri Lanka's government has given its
strongest indication to date that it will go beyond enumerating missing
persons from it 26-year civil war and investigate the circumstances of
their disappearance. Activists, however, remain skeptical, pointing to
the administration's history of empty gestures.
In August 2013 President Mahinda Rajapaksa appointed a three-member
Special Presidential Commission to inquire into the war-time missing; in
July 2014 he supplemented the Commission with a five-member panel of international experts to guide the process; and in August 2014 he granted the Commission and the panel a six-month extension of its mandate until February 2015.
The Commission, which has to date received more than 20,000 complaints
of disappearances, is expected to submit a report in 2015 that will
include the number of missing persons and recommendations for action,
but the government has been historically tight-lipped as to its plan for
acting on this information.
When asked by IRIN during a meeting with journalists at his residence on
19 August whether the government will institute a tracing mechanism to
fully investigate missing persons once the Commission's report is complete, Rajapaksa responded: "We have to look into this, but it is tedious work."
The president's secretary, Laith Weerathunga, said the government's next
course of action on missing persons will be determined by the
Commission's report, and argued that the government was making genuine
moves to address the plight of the families of the missing. "Such
instances of missing need to be looked into and investigated," he said.
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) was granted
in August unprecedented permission to assess the needs of the missing
and ICRC officials told IRIN they too were optimistic that a tracing
mechanism would be in place after their survey is completed in early
2015.
However, activists warn, such moves come on the heels of repeated broken
promises by the government, and fresh rejection of a UN investigation
into war-time human rights abuses.
"After years of delaying tactics and false promises, it is clear the
government is both unwilling and unable to end impunity and
independently and effectively investigate its own alleged abuses,"
Richard Bennett, Amnesty International's Asia-Pacific director, told
IRIN, pointing to the government's refusal to cooperate with an Office
of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) investigation launched in March 2014.
A contentious count
The issue of missing persons, especially those who went missing during the final year of fighting, has been contentious.
The UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights has recorded
5,671 reported cases of wartime-related disappearance, not counting
people who went missing in Sri Lanka in the final stages of fighting
from 2008 to 2009.
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) says it has received
reports of 16,000 cases of missing persons dating back to the 1990s.
Sri Lanka's government-appointed in 2010 a Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC), which a year later recommended the creation of a centralized database on missing persons.
An advisory panel
set up by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, however, argued that the
LLRC response to allegations of missing persons had been insufficient.
In its 2011 report , the panel noted that "a survey of public
transcripts of testimony given by individuals having suffered personal
harm reveals that . over 80 percent of victims [who testified at LLRC
hearings] raised issues of disappeared or missing relatives."
Regardless of the numbers, activists say the process of investigating individual cases has lagged.
Local vs. international
"It has been five years since the conflict ended and the tens of
thousands of victims, at the hands of both government forces and the
Tamil Tigers, are no closer to justice," argued Bennett.
However, Rajapaksa and other officials reiterated that the government
will neither cooperate with, nor recognize, the OHCHR mission.
"We don't recognize their mandate," said Foreign Minister Gamini
Lakshman Peiris, referring to the UN investigation. "We have a duty to
strengthen the local Commission," he argued.
Rajapaksa accused the international probe and High Commissioner Navi
Pillay of being biased against the Sri Lankan government. "I don't think
anybody will take them seriously other than those who want to," he
said.
Amnesty's Bennett called the government's reluctance "entirely
predictable", explaining that the move "follows a very familiar pattern
of the Sri Lankan authorities refusing any international attempts to
bring genuine justice to the tens of thousands of victims of the armed
conflict."
Beyond allowing the ICRC to begin its survey, the government has offered
no details on its next course of action will work. Some suggest Sri
Lanka ought to replicate the tracing mechanism in Nepal
where NGOs and the Nepali Red Cross Society have been searching for
details of the over 1,400 missing persons during the 10-year civil war
that ended in 2006.
Meanwhile, the Geneva-based International Service for Human Rights on 25 August accused
the government of failing to protect local activists from "a clear
pattern of systematic reprisals against human rights defenders and
victims in Sri Lanka who seek to engage with the UN."
Bennett argued tracing missing people should come in tandem with effective justice mechanisms.
"An effective mechanism for tracing the many thousands of missing people
is urgently necessary, so is truth and justice for victims of enforced
disappearances and other abuse," he said.