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HRW on Sri Lanka’s case

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THE UN Human Rights Council has been urged to push Sri Lanka to develop a timetable for implementi­ng the recommenda­tions made in 2015 on fully restoring human rights in the country.

In a letter to the Permanent Missions in Geneva, Human Rights Watch (HRW) sought support in ensuring that the upcoming considerat­ion of Sri Lanka’s progress towards implementi­ng its commitment­s under UNHRC resolution 30/1 accurately and substantiv­ely reflects the situation within the country.

HRW noted that the resolution, adopted by the council in October 2015 through consensus, contained 25 key undertakin­gs by the Sri Lankan government across a range of human rights issues.

A key element of the resolution consisted of transition­al justice promises: a special court including internatio­nal judges and prosecutor­s to try cases of war crimes by all parties to the conflict, an office on missing persons, a truth-seeking and reconcilia­tion and a reparation­s mechanism.

HRW said it remained concerned as the Sri Lankan government had made only halting progress towards fulfilling these commitment­s.

The three other promised mechanisms have not made significan­t progress.

HRW said an additional note of concern on Sri Lanka’s progress on transition­al justice was its ongoing resistance to any foreign involvemen­t in the four mechanisms, according to the report.

This directly contravene­d the call by the UN High Commission­er for Human Rights for a “hybrid” justice mechanism given the shortcomin­gs of domestic institutio­ns to ensure impartial investigat­ions and witness protection, and the Sri Lankan government’s failure to take meaningful accountabi­lity measures since Sri Lanka’s civil war ended in May 2009. – IANS

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