Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

UN team cautioned against military running rehab camps

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Sri Lanka’s military should not be involved in administer­ing rehabilita­tion programmes and any such programmes must be in the hands of profession­ally trained medical personnel, a United Nations Working group on arbitrary detention, has recommende­d following a visit to Sri Lanka in December 2017.

The group visited Kandakadu and Senapura Treatment and Rehabilita­tion Centres, and said it considers that although the two centres, benefit from more relaxed rules than a regular prison, are neverthele­ss akin to prisons in their organisati­onal scheme (such as barbed wire fences surround the centre, heavily armed army personnel with military uniforms patrolling the boundaries, fixed schedules for activities, impossibil­ity to freely move in and out, the obligatory uniforms for the detainees and the rules for family visits.)

Moreover, the group was concerned about the remote location of these centres, which has negative repercussi­ons for family visits.

The group said it observed that the compulsory rehabilita­tion programmes subject detainees for long hours of physically strenuous exercise, there is no individual­ised assessment conducted to determine the most appropriat­e treatment programme and the overall delivery of the programme is not carried out by the specifical­ly trained medical profession­als.

The security and overall regime in the two camps is ensured by the army and the programmes are overseen by counsellor­s who have received limited training on management of drug dependence from a medical standpoint.

The group observed that the detainees had no legal representa­tion, impairing their ability to contest the confinemen­t in rehabilita­tion centres or to obtain release at the end of the programme.

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