Sri Lanka: Killing Of Children & Sri Lanka's Bloody Legacies
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
AHRC-FAT-012-2013
March 4,
2013
An article from The Sunday Times forwarded
by the Asian Human Rights Commission
Sri Lanka: The Killing Of Children And Sri Lanka's Bloody Legacies
The mass grave in Matale uncovered late last year and the ongoing demands for independent and credible investigations into the fate of disappeared persons during the last days of the fighting between government forces and the LTTE in 2009 have at their core, the common element of impunity and a common cry for justice.
Pitiful legacies of future
generations
So when pictures circulate of the
late LTTE leader's twelve year old son looking
apprehensively at his captors, being given a snack inside
what appears to be an army bunker with the concluding
photograph being of his being shot, (whether the pictures
are doctored or not), the sheer inhumanity of what Sri Lanka
has been reduced to, should surely grip us all?
These
pictures should be ranked alongside the grisly photographs
of child monks butchered at Arawantalawa by the LTTE in 1987
and the thousands of children killed by state and non state
actors during the Southern insurrection and the Northern
war. These are the pitiful legacies of our future
generations.
Killings are permitted in times of
emergency
Certainly Sri Lanka's legal framework
has permitted and indeed, actively encouraged crimes such as
extra judicial executions and enforced disappearances. In
view of state complicity in acts of terror, it was not
surprising that when national and international pressure
intensified in the 1990's in regard to taking action in law
against perpetrators of abuses during the second JVP
insurrection, good investigations and prosecutions were rare
and, if at all only against junior officers.
The rationale was that even if grave crimes were committed, these were in situations of extraordinary stress for the average soldier/police officer and therefore should not be measured against a high standard of accountability. Correspondingly, the lack of political will in pursuing such cases to a logical conclusion was clearly seen, whether they concerned enforced disappearances in the South or in the North and East.
Even in instances where political will was manifested at the highest levels, the obduracy of the military establishment prevented it being translated into concrete action. A good example of this was in January 1996 when then President Kumaratunge directed the Army Commander to place 200 service personnel on compulsory leave, following their repeated involvement in gross human rights abuses as evidenced in the Disappearances Commissions Reports. However, the order was not implemented.
Total failure of the legal
system
Generally state apathy predominates from
investigations to prosecutions of enforced disappearances
and extra judicial killings. Under the Rajapaksa Government,
this apathy has been transformed into deliberate state
policy. Where a non summary is required, the police
generally prosecute with state counsel appearing only in
rare cases judged to be of special significance. The
non-summary inquiry proceeds at a lackadaisical pace, taking
up to several months if not more and the vital task of
gathering evidence and conducting good investigations is
left entirely in the hands of the police with no stringent
supervision either by the magistrate or by the officers of
the Attorney General.
Interminable delays in filing indictments, delays in the non-summary inquiry and further delays in the substantive trial proceedings are common factors. It is common for example for the lapse of several years to pass before the first step of filing indictment is taken and for delays to be present thereafter in the trial process. This pattern is also commonly seen in the cases of torture of ordinary persons in the South; in cases filed under the Convention Against Torture and other Inhuman and Degrading Punishment Act No 22 of 1994 (hereafter Anti-Torture Act of 1994, indictments have been pending for almost two years in the relevant High Court without being served on the accused. The defence advanced is that the delay is due to the backlog of cases in the Court. Lawyers appearing for the victims complain of a lack of interest on the part of the state in conducting prosecutions and point to non-appearances in court on the days that the trial is due to be conducted and frequent applications for postponements as manifesting this lack of interest
Continuation of mass graves from the
nineteen eighties
The Matale mass grave
consisted of skeletal remains of more than 150 people
discovered by chance by workers building a facility for a
hospital. Initial forensic tests suggested that this was the
scene of a crime due to the injuries found on the remains.
Commonsense led many to the inevitable conclusion that this
was a burial site for persons extrajudicially executed and
disappeared by the Government of the United National Party
during the second JVP insurrection (1987-1991).
It is striking that even after two decades following the insurrection, the question of mass graves in regard to that period continue to be uncovered. Requests have been made for proper forensic examination and documentation of these remains but these calls will of course, not be heeded to. In the case of disappearances of Tamil civilians during 2009, the very fact of this is denied at point blank range by the current Government.
Common cry for
justice
It does not matter that the victims of
the Matale mass grave were Sinhalese or that those who
disappeared in 2009 were Tamil. They both share a common
fate. Their cries are intertwined with the cries of
thousands of others who have shared this same fate
throughout past decades, at the hands of all governments. It
is this commonality that needs to be centered within the
accountability debate concerning Sri Lanka, both within
these shores and beyond. The brutalities committed by each
Government in Sri Lanka has merely been an extension of the
brutalities committed by previous Governments but with even
less humanity.
And indeed, these barbarities are also a
reflection of what non-state actors, particularly the JVP
and the LTTE did themselves, to those who offended them or
were considered as traitors. No single party, state actor or
non-state actor, President or Opposition Leader has a
monopoly on responsibility for innocent blood spilled in Sri
Lanka.
It is only when we free ourselves from these
bloody political legacies that the killing of children in
Sri Lanka will stop.
# # #
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