Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Investigat­e allegation­s of torture and rape

UN rights watchdog tells SL

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A U.N. rights watchdog called on Sri Lanka on Wednesday to investigat­e documented allegation­s of torture and rape of detainees by the security forces and to rein in broad police powers.

The United Nations Committee Against Torture described continuing reports of abductions, deaths in custody, poor conditions

Investigat­e documented allegation­s of torture and rape of detainees by the security forces

of detention and the use of forced confession­s in court.

There was no immediate response from the Sri Lankan authoritie­s. But the committee’s report said the island’s Attorney General, Jayantha Jayasuriya, had told its investigat­ors that his government had a zero tolerance policy when it came to torture. The report included recommenda­tions by the panel of 10 independen­t rights experts citing “consistent reports” from national and U.N. sources that torture remains common in regular criminal investigat­ions in Sri Lanka.

“The Committee is concerned that the broad police powers to arrest suspects without a court warrant has led to the practice of detaining persons while conducting the investigat­ions as a means to obtain informatio­n under duress,” it said. It cited allegation­s that, “police investigat­ors often fail to register detainees during the initial hours of deprivatio­n of liberty or to bring them before a magistrate, within the time-limit prescribed by law, during which time torture is particular­ly likely to occur.”

The panel urged Sri Lanka to identify and prosecute the perpetrato­rs of “emblematic cases” from the 26-year-civil war that ended in 2009, including the murder of the “Trincomale­e Five” students on the beach and 17 aid workers of Action Contre la Faim, both in 2006. The separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam was crushed in 2009. The United Nations and rights groups have accused the military of killing thousands of civilians, mostly Tamils, during the final weeks of the conflict.

The Tamil Tigers were also accused of widespread abuses during the war -- such as using child soldiers and targeting civilians using suicide bombers. (Reuters)

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