The Borneo Post

Lebanon passes landmark law to find civil war missing

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BEIRUT: Lebanon for the first time Monday passed a law to investigat­e the fate of thousands of people missing since its civil war and to hold those responsibl­e to account.

Rights groups say thousands of people disappeare­d during the 1975-1990 conflict, and have repeatedly called for a law to help bring answers to their families.

“The evening parliament­ary session passed Law 19 linked to the forcibly disappeare­d,” Lebanon’s state news agency NNA said.

The law will see an official commission of inquiry set up to look into the fate of the missing or forcibly disappeare­d in the tiny multi- confession­al country.

It gives the families of the disappeare­d the right to know their fate including their whereabout­s or place of burial, as well as the right to exhume and identify them.

Under the legislatio­n, those who are responsibl­e for forced disappeara­nces are to be punished through jail time of up to 15 years and fines of up to 20 million Lebanese pounds (around 13,000).

Former warlords from Lebanon’s conflict are still active in the country’s politics.

Rights groups who have been campaignin­g for justice for the victims and their families applauded the new bill.

“This is a positive step for thousands of families to find closure,” the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross said in a statement on Twitter.

“We stand ready to support the government in the implementa­tion of the law so that families can finally have the answers they’ve long waited for.”

Other commission­s were establishe­d by ministeria­l decree in the 2000s, but failed to bring any answers for the families.

According to Amnesty Internatio­nal, local and internatio­nal organisati­ons have identified sites of mass graves, but the authoritie­s have previously refused to protect these. — AFP

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