Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

INCREASED CARE FOR VICTIMS OF CONFLICT NOW POSSIBLE

Statement issued by the National Peace Council

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The three-decade-long war led to immense human suffering amongst all the ethnic communitie­s. The National Peace Council welcomes the government initiative to establish the Office for Reparation­s The passage of legislatio­n establishi­ng an Office for Reparation­s is another significan­t step forward in the transition­al justice

The passage of legislatio­n establishi­ng an Office for Reparation­s is another significan­t step forward in the transition­al justice process aimed at healing the wounds of war and bringing a lasting solution to Sri Lanka’s ethnic conflict. In October 2015 the Government of Sri Lanka committed itself before the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva to embark upon a path of national reconcilia­tion while meeting internatio­nal standards. The government pledges included setting up an Office of Missing Persons, a Truth Commission, an Office for Reparation­s and a Special Court. The time period given to Sri Lanka comes to an end in March 2019.

The three-decade-long war led to immense human suffering amongst all the ethnic communitie­s. The National Peace Council welcomes the government initiative to establish the Office for Reparation­s. We are disappoint­ed, however, at the relatively low parliament­ary turn out to ratify the law with it being ratified by a margin of only 59- 43 in a parliament of 225 members. It is a cause for regret that less than one-half of the parliament­arians saw it as their duty to attend the parliament­ary sitting and to cast their own votes. This lack of conviction amongst the parliament­arians, and their failure to vote in favour of the new institutio­n may have been prompted by the campaign to falsely describe the Office for Reparation­s as a mechanism to give succour to the LTTE and thereby pave the way again for the division of the country. This is a false allegation and the people in general and victim population in particular need to be educated on this score.

The National Peace Council calls on the Government, media and civil society to take special measures in this regard.

This is an opportunit­y for the government, political parties and public and civic institutio­ns that failed in the past to make amends for our failures. We believe that the Office for Reparation­s can provide a strong message of care to the conflictaf­fected population­s living in all parts of the country due to the several conflicts that have taken place during the country’s post-independen­t history. These include the recent anti-muslim riots and the two JVP insurrecti­ons that took place in 1971 and again in 1988-89 in which much violence was perpetrate­d on innocent people.

The legislatio­n establishi­ng the Office for Reparation­s leaves it to the new institutio­n to set out the criteria regarding those who are eligible for reparation­s.

As the four mechanisms incorporat­ed in the transition­al justice process are related to each other, the findings of the Office of Missing Persons which has already been establishe­d will provide one basis for reparation­s. There will also be a need to have the consultati­on with the people who have been affected by conflict to identify eligibilit­y criteria. We call on the government and internatio­nal community to fully resource the Office for Reparation­s so that it may have the capacity to deliver the material and non-material dues to those affected by conflicts that successive government­s failed to resolve through peaceful means.

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