British
Tamils Forum has published a new research paper analysing key five
areas ahead of the United Nations Human Rights council’s vote on the
proposed US resolution on Sri Lanka. The report further calls for the
resolution to be strengthened to initiate a full commission of Inquiry
(CoI)
The Executive Summary of the report can be found below and the full report can be downloaded from this link:
Two resolutions on Sri Lanka, sponsored
by the United States of America (USA), were passed and adopted at the
United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in March 2012 and March 2013
respectively. The USA is currently in the process of sponsoring a third
resolution at the UNHRC session in March 2014. Both adopted resolutions
had called on the Government of Sri Lanka (GoSL) to implement the
‘constructive recommendations’ of the Sri Lanka’s own Lessons Learnt and
Reconciliation Commission (LLRC).
However, Sri Lanka has to date failed to take any meaningful steps to implement these LLRC recommendations.
On close analysis of the past history of
Presidential Commissions in Sri Lanka and their success in resolving
issues concerning that of the Tamil people in the island of Sri Lanka,
this paper strongly attests that no domestic mechanism is capable of
delivering justice to the Tamil people who continue to face structural
genocide in the post-war scenario.
Both March 2012 and March 2013 UNHRC
resolutions on Sri Lanka were inadequate in addressing the Tamil
nation’s aspirations and grievances, given the Tamil people are the
primary victims and survivors of Sri Lankan mass atrocities committed
over nearly four decades. The LLRC report too neglected this aspect.
The research in this paper reveals the
true ground reality and urgency of justice for Tamil victims and
survivors of the mass atrocities. This paper also finds the GoSL in
serious violation of International Humanitarian Law (IHL) and
International Human Rights Law (IHRL), with a total failure and lack of
will to implement recommendations by both the LLRC as well as UNHRC
resolutions.
While external actors have focused
largely on human rights violations in Sri Lanka, genocide against the
Tamil nation has been accelerated by the Sri Lankan State in the mean
time.
The LLRC, both UNHRC resolutions and
some human rights organization have mentioned militarization of the
North as a form of human rights violations. However, all fail to
understand that the militarization process in the East is relatively
higher than the North and that the militarization process itself of the
North and East is in fact being used as a tool to execute structural
genocide of the Tamil nation.
Demographic changes, through land-grab,
military occupation, Sinhala settlements and sexual abuse on Tamil
women, have been instrumental in the ongoing structural genocide of the
Tamil people. These demographic changes also aim to dismantle the
territorial integrity of the Tamil nation. The government’s strategy of
compartmentalizing the Tamil homeland into five sections has been
executed with the intent of destroying the Tamil nation, either as a
whole or in part.
Furthermore, the State’s intentional
targeting of the territorial integrity of the Tamil homeland, economy,
unique culture, identity and security and safety of the Tamil people, to
eventually eliminate the existence of the Tamil nation from the island
of Sri Lanka have been executed under the guise of the ‘world’s largest
humanitarian operation’ and ‘post-war development’.
This has made safeguarding the Tamil
traditional homeland, culture and identity among the major collective
aspirations of the Tamil people as a whole.
This paper not only exposes the ulterior
agenda of structural genocide, but reveals and challenges the GoSL’s
latest time-buying strategy of mitigating international pressure by
introducing South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC)
discourse ahead of the upcoming 25th UNHRC session.
Post-apartheid South Africa developed
TRC for its context. It is important that Sri Lanka finds its own
solution for its own context based on credible and factual historical
understanding. Arguably, South African leaders acted with moral
convictions and their leadership was accepted by the victims and
survivors. In contrast, the Sri Lankan State while denying mass
atrocities throughout the protracted armed conflict has sunk into
triumphalism. And more importantly, despite overwhelming evidence of Sri
Lanka’s violations of IHL and IHRL, to date no genuine attempts have
been made for criminal accountability, punitive justice or prosecution
of perpetrators.
Finally, considering the disturbing
developments, this paper calls on all concerned stakeholders to take
strong actions to implement the below recommendations.
Recommendations- Independent international investigation into mass atrocities that took place throughout the armed conflict in the island of Sri Lanka.
- Immediate steps to stop the structural genocide of the Tamil nation, particularly the demographic changes through land-grabbing, military occupation, Sinhala settlements process and sexual violence against Tamil women.
- The permanent presence of a UNHRC mission or formation of an internationally monitored transitional administration in the Tamil homeland. In any such formation, capacity to ensure witness protection, political will and operational independence should be included.
- An adequate mechanism for combating impunity, criminal accountability, punitive justice and prosecution should be created in accordance with international norms and standards.
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