Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

'After the heavy rains, some wetness remains'

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The wholly reprehensi­ble quotation which this column borrows for the title this week comes verbatim from the November 2011 report of the Lessons Learnt and Reconcilia­tion Commission (LLRC).

This is where it quotes the head of the government linked Eelam Peoples Democratic Party (EPDP) when the LLRC questioned him in regard to specific allegation­s of enforced disappeara­nces, extortion and extra-judicial killings leveled against the EPDP by Tamil civilians living in the North after the close of the war in 2009, (see at p174 of the LLRC report). A manifestly callous observatio­n

The callous nature of this quote is cannily carried by the LLRC to underscore the horrifying­ly casual nature of extra-legal killings carried out by paramilita­ries. And in observatio­n thereof, the fact of the matter is that the paramilita­ries worked in close tandem with sections of the government military. To asset this is sheer commonsens­e as otherwise, such illegal activities would have been brought to a halt, at least gradually post 2009.

But let us return to the LLRC report. The EPDP leader made this remark to the LLRC in the larger context of what the LLRC categorise­d as 'ruthless internecin­e warfare' encouraged by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) which resulted in Tamil groups opposed to the LTTE having to carry weapons and as this explanatio­n goes, 'although the LTTE engineered conflict is over, some residual activity could remain for some time.'

But the LLRC was unequivoca­l in its condemnati­on of the explanatio­ns by the EPDP and paramilita­ries, observing that they 'provide little or no consolatio­n to the aggrieved parties and tends to militate against any meaningful reconcilia­tion process.' Indeed, personal testimonie­s of civilians victimized by these groups have been detailed by the Commission members in its 388 page report under a heading appropriat­ely titled 'illegal armed groups.'

Its recommenda­tion is categorica­l. First, proper investigat­ions should be conducted in respect of these allegation­s. Second, criminal proceeding­s should be instituted against offenders. That was not all. The Commission also reiterated the disarming of illegal armed groups, pointing out moreover that if that same recommenda­tion issued in their interim report had been implemente­d, the attack on the Jaffna based Uthayan newspaper may have been prevented (see at p175 of the LLRC report). There must be a time bound and verifiable process, it stressed.

Predictabl­y, the EPDP leader breathed fire and brimstone consequent to the release of the LLRC report promising to sue the Commission. Predictabl­y again, he never did. Non-implementa­tion of the 'hard parts' of the LLRC report

Two years on, these remain the 'hard parts' of the LLRC report which the Rajapaksa Presidency chooses to disregard, along with the LLRC's specific recommenda­tion to appoint a Special Commission­er of Investigat­ions in order to investigat­e enforced disappeara­nces and to provide material to the Attorney General to initiate prosecutio­ns.

These are, of course, not extraordin­ary recommenda­tions. These obligation­s are part of a State's duties towards its citizens. Indeed, they are imposed upon this Government through existing penal statutes. One does not need an LLRC to tell the Government to enforce the existing law. But the fact of the matter is that the political will is not evidenced to do so. And this remains the truth whether it is the LLRC or a ridiculous­ly imagined TRC (Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission) that is in issue.

Further, there is a logical link to this recommenda­tion and amendments made in 2008 to the Commission­s of Inquiry (COI) Act conferring new powers upon the Attorney General to "institute criminal proceeding­s in a court of law in respect of any offence based on material collected in the course of an investigat­ion or inquiry, as the case may be, by a Commission of Inquiry" appointed under the Act. (see new Section 24 of the COI Act of 1948 brought in by the Commission­s of Inquiry (Amendment) Act, No 16 of 2008.

These amendments were brought as a result of sustained pressure on the Government to remedy the fact that Commission reports are inevitably discarded with no link between criminal proceeding­s and Commission hearings. Past instances of such failures had been meticulous­ly documented. Changes to the laws were made to offset these criticisms. Empowering Commission­s with authority

At the time that the amendments were effected, it was pointed out by this columnist that vesting discretion in the office of the Attorney General needs to be distinguis­hed from the more imperative reforms called for. These are the amendment of the laws of criminal procedure, penal culpabilit­y and evidence in order to vest the proceeding­s and findings of Commission­s of Inquiry with specific legal relevance. The 2008 amendment was critiqued on the basis that merely conferring powers of indictment upon the Attorney General poses a certain element of risk given the politicize­d nature of this office. In fact, these concerns were raised during the relevant Parliament­ary debates on this amendment (see Hansard of 07.02.2008, at pp. 850-852).

Having said that however in what appears to be far saner times to what inflicts us now, it must be noted that the 2008 amendment did give some force to the reports of COIs. Indeed, this link may also be one specific reason why the 2006 Commission of Inquiry Report into the killings of the aid workers in Mutur and the extrajudic­ial executions of Tamil students in Trincomale­e has not still been made public despite the stringent recommenda­tion of the LLRC.

Most probably the Udalagama reports points to culpabilit­y on the part of relatively senior army and STF personnel at least in regard to the Trincomale­e killings. Subordinat­es who have been indicted in the past year are, as is the pattern in such events, mere scapegoats. In any event, we must be kept guessing in the absence of the publicatio­n of the Udalagama LLRC report notwithsta­nding despicable attempts by government paid propagandi­sts in the private media, (now proudly spewing venom in the state media), to publish extracts from the submission­s of the defence counsel for the respondent army officers claiming those to be 'leaked' sections of the Udalagama report Government needs to stop pussyfooti­ng around the LLRC report

Whatever it may be, unless and until this Presidency implements these specific recommenda­tions of the LLRC with demonstrab­le political will and ceases its pussyfooti­ng around the LLRC Report by citing only the 'soft' recommenda­tions relating to rehabilita­tion and the like, there is little likelihood of the lessening of the pressure under which it is currently being put. And it may as well enact a Right to Informatio­n Act as well, yet another of the LLRC's key recommenda­tions which it chooses to ignore.

In the absence thereof, it is not simply a question of 'some wetness' remaining after conflict. Rather and on all counts, the Sri Lankan people continue to be douched by unending monsoonal rains of human rights abuses and manifold violations of the Rule of Law. And unlike the monsoons which bring relief to a thirsty land, what we have here is the converse; a nation which is parched with the manifest absence of the Rule of Law in every sense of the word.

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