Wednesday, April 11, 2012

US State Dept. report on Sri Lanka's accountability

Factual Supplement to the Report to Congress on Measures Taken by the Government of Sri Lanka and International Bodies To Investigate and Hold Accountable Violators of International Humanitarian and Human Rights Law

This factual supplement explains, in greater detail, issues of international humanitarian law and international human rights law addressed in the Department of State’s March 2012 Report to Congress on Measures Taken by the Government of Sri Lanka and International Bodies to Investigate and Hold Accountable Violators of International Humanitarian and Human Rights Law. While this factual supplement draws attention to open questions regarding allegations of violations of international humanitarian law (IHL) and international human rights law (IHRL), it is not meant to be a legal determination confirming any of those allegations.

I. Legal Framework
The United States recognizes a State’s inherent right to defend itself from armed attacks, including those by non-state actors such as terrorist groups. In the context of a non-international armed conflict—that is, an armed conflict that is not between states—common article 3 of the Geneva conventions of 1949 provides basic treatment protections to all individuals not taking part in hostilities, including civilians and detained members of the Armed Forces. Its core requirements are that individuals not taking part in hostilities must be treated humanely and without “adverse distinction” based on race, religion, or similar criteria. To this end, the article prohibits murder; cruel treatment; torture; the taking of hostages; outrages upon personal dignity; and the passing of sentences without judgment by a court providing recognized guarantees. Sri Lanka is neither a party nor a signatory to the Additional Protocol II to the Geneva Conventions, which includes more detailed rules relevant to non-international conflicts than those set forth in, article 3.

As with the two previous reports, our assessment of investigations undertaken by the Government of Sri Lanka (GSL) and international bodies is mindful of Sri Lanka’s pertinent international obligations. For example, Sri Lanka is a State Party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, and the 1949 Geneva Conventions. In addition, Sri Lanka is subject to relevant customary international law obligations, which in the area of international humanitarian law include the principles of distinction and proportionality, which are intended to protect innocent civilians from harm. The principle of distinction holds that civilians and civilian objects (such as hospitals and schools) shall not be the object of direct attack, though civilians lose this immunity if they directly participate in hostilities. The principle of proportionality prohibits attacks that may cause incidental loss of life, injury, or damage to civilians that would be excessive in relation to the direct military advantage anticipated. The civilian population must not be used to shield military objectives or operations from attack, and parties must take all practicable precautions, taking into account military and humanitarian considerations, to minimize incidental death, injury and damage to civilians.

II. Efforts at Accountability
There are a variety of ways in which a government may undertake effective investigations and other accountability processes. While some international law conventions call for criminalization of certain human rights violations and serious violations of IHL, other routine administrative and special investigative processes, such as commissions of inquiry (COI), can play an important role in establishing a factual record of events. Although COIs and other investigative bodies are often implemented at the national level, in some instances governments seek international participation to bring specialized expertise into, and help foster public confidence in, so-called “hybrid” investigations. Fully internationalized processes undertaken without the relevant government’s consent have generally been pursued by the international community only when the State concerned lacks the capacity, political will, or both, to undertake an independent, credible, and effective inquiry. In the case of serious violations of IHL and human rights, including the type of atrocities alleged to have occurred in the final months of the conflict in Sri Lanka, however, such commissions do not obviate the need for criminal investigation and, if appropriate, prosecutions.
Whether domestic, international, or hybrid, investigative processes should operate consistent with best practices derived from extensive experience in order to be both credible and effective. There are several key criteria for evaluating the adequacy of a COI, including: independence and competence; adequate mandate and authority; witness and COI protection; adequate resources; a public report; and a timely and transparent government response.

A. The Panel of Experts (POE)
On June 22, 2010, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon appointed a three-member Panel of Experts (POE) to advise him on the nature and scope of allegations of violations of international humanitarian and human rights law during the final stages of the conflict, and the implementation of a commitment made in a joint statement by the President of Sri Lanka and the Secretary General on May 23, 2009, to address accountability. The POE consisted of former Attorney General of Indonesia Marzuki Darusman, former South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission Commissioner Yasmin Sooka, and American law professor Steven Ratner.

The GSL strongly opposed the establishment of the POE, and described it as “an unwarranted and unnecessary interference with a sovereign nation.” The POE and GSL were unable to come to agreement regarding the modalities of a visit of the POE to the country. The POE did receive written submissions in response to a set of questions provided by the POE to the GSL, and engaged with the GSL in a face-to-face dialogue.

On April 12, 2011, the POE submitted its report to the UN Secretary General, which he then shared with the GSL.[1] On April 13, 2011, the GSL issued a statement that decried the report as “fundamentally flawed” and “patently biased.” On April 25, 2011, the Secretary General’s office made the report public.
The report highlights a number of allegations of violations by the GSL it describes as credible, including: large-scale shelling of “No Fire Zones,” systematic shelling of hospitals, and summary execution, rape, and torture of surrendering LTTE cadres and civilians fleeing the conflict zone. The report also highlights a number of allegations against the LTTE it describes as credible, including: using civilians as a strategic buffer, forced labor (including of children), and summary executions of civilians attempting to flee the conflict zone.[2] The serious allegations in the report regarding the conduct of both sides, if proven, would indicate violations of IHL and IHRL.

Based on its assessment that the LLRC was “deeply flawed” and did not meet international standards as an accountability mechanism, as well as other obstacles to accountability such as “triumphalism” and the eroded independence of the Attorney General and domestic courts of Sri Lanka, the POE recommended a series of steps to implement the joint commitment on accountability between the UN Secretary General and Sri Lankan President Rajapaksa. The report recommended that the GSL should immediately commence genuine investigations into alleged violations of IHL and IHRL committed by both sides in the conflict and that the GSL should issue a public, formal acknowledgment of its role in, and responsibility for, extensive civilian casualties during the final stages of the conflict. The report also recommends that the Secretary General immediately establish an independent international mechanism to monitor and assess the extent to which the GSL carries out an effective domestic accountability process, as well as to independently investigate credible allegations.

The POE was not a commission of inquiry and thus did not undertake fact-finding, nor did it reach factual conclusions regarding disputed facts or establish culpability for alleged violations. Therefore, the work of the POE did not directly result in a process to hold accountable the individuals alleged to be responsible for violations of international human rights law and international humanitarian law. However, by undertaking an assessment of the allegations against the GSL and LTTE in the public record “[i]n order to understand the accountability obligations arising from the last stages of the war…,” the POE established a strong case that such a process is needed.

The Secretary-General transmitted the POE report to the President of the U.N. Human Rights Council and the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights on September 12, 2011. In the announcement regarding the transmittal, the UN also announced the Secretary-General selected UN Population Fund Executive Director Thoraya Obaid to undertake the review of UN actions recommended by the POE. The UN has not completed that assessment.

B. Humanitarian Operation Factual Analysis: July 2006-May 2009
On August 1, 2011, the GSL released a report produced by the Sri Lankan Ministry of Defense entitled “The Humanitarian Operation Factual Analysis: July 2006-May 2009.” The report provides a detailed analysis of the types of atrocities committed by the LTTE, describes the organization’s structure and components, and describes the various failed negotiations with the LTTE and its failure to abide by cease-fire and other agreements with the GSL. The report also describes what it characterizes as the GSL’s “civilian rescue operation” during which it defeated the LTTE. In that context, the report outlines the military procedures used to safeguard civilian lives and protect civilian rights, including institutional frameworks, training, monitoring of alleged violations and investigations/prosecutions. The report does not, however, address any of the alleged violations of IHL or IHRL identified by the POE or available in the public domain. Moreover, while the report contains a table summarizing major offenses committed by Sri Lankan security personnel between 2005 and 2010, the table identifies no recorded offenses for the year 2009, the period during which most of the allegations in the POE report fall.

C. The Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC)
On May 15, 2010, President Rajapaksa issued a proclamation establishing an eight-member commission under the Special Commission of Inquiry Law of 1978. Pursuant to this law, the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission was charged to “inquire and report within six months on the following matters that may have taken place during the period between February 21, 2002 and May 19, 2009:
  • The facts and circumstances which led to the failure of the ceasefire agreement operationalized on February 21, 2002 and the sequence of events that followed thereafter up to May 19, 2009;
  • Whether any person, group, or institution directly or indirectly bear responsibility in this regard;
  • The lessons to be learned from those events and their attendant concerns, in order to ensure that there will be no recurrence;
  • The methodology whereby restitution to any person affected by those events or their dependents or to heirs, can be effected; and
  • The institutional administrative and legislative measures which need to be taken in order to prevent any recurrence of such concerns in the future and to promote further national unity and reconciliation among all communities, and to make any such other recommendations with reference to any of the matters that have been inquired into under the terms of this Presidential Warrant.”
Secretary Clinton welcomed President Rajapaksa’s establishment of the commission in her press appearance with Foreign Minister G.L. Peiris during his May 2010 visit to Washington and outlined U.S. expectations that the commission would follow established best practices.
Although initially given six months to report, the GSL extended the deadline for the LLRC report twice, each time for an additional six months. The LLRC commenced public hearings on August 11, 2010, and finished in March 2011. According to the LLRC website, the Commission held 41 field visits and 149 public sittings.
In mid-September 2010, the LLRC provided the GSL a set of interim recommendations that dealt with five topical areas: detention; land issues; law and order; administration and language issues; and socioeconomic and livelihood issues. Particularly relevant to the question of accountability were the recommendations relating to detention and administration and language issues. Although the GSL established an Inter-Agency Advisory Committee (IAAC) to facilitate the implementation of the interim recommendations, LLRC’s final report notes that the GSL has not fully implemented its interim recommendations.
On December 16, 2011, the GSL publically released the LLRC’s final report. The GSL issues the entire report in English but only the executive summary in Sinhala and Tamil. The report makes significant observations and recommendations with respect to the origins of the conflict, land reforms, restitution, and other efforts to reconcile the various ethnic communities of Sri Lanka. In particular, the LLRC calls on the GSL to enact a uniform policy aimed at the resettlement of internally displaced persons (IDPs), to take steps to prevent harassment and attacks on media personnel and organizations, to ensure their freedom of movement and, to investigate alleged crimes against journalists, to prioritize compensatory relief in addition to economic development projects, and to undertake reconciliation projects to reunite the population of Sri Lanka. The report also suggests that the government investigate specific allegations of direct attacks on civilians, launch a full investigation into reports of enforced disappearances and abductions, fund an independent investigation into the veracity of the Channel 4 videos, and investigate allegations of detainee abuse, torture, and summary execution. The Commission’s findings and recommendations regarding international humanitarian and human rights law issues are examined in greater detail in Section III.

D. Assessment of the LLRC as a COI
The following sections evaluate the LLRC’s establishment, mandate, composition, and activities compared to standards outlined by the Department of State in its August 2010 report to Congress.[3]
Independence and Competence:
The members of the LLRC included former Attorney General C. R. de Silva, former Assistant Secretary of the Ministry of Justice Karunaratne Hangawatte, former Legal Advisor at the Sri Lankan Ministry of External Affairs Rohan Perera, former Foreign Secretary and Sri Lankan Permanent Representative to the UN HMGS Palihakkara, former Secretary to the Treasury C Chanmugam, former Deputy Legal Draftsman Manohari Ramanathan, former High Court Judge M.P. Paranagama, and senior attorney at law M.T.M. Bafiq. There was no information that indicated that the GSL consulted with affected communities in selecting the commission members. Despite the high percentage of women and Tamils among those giving testimony, only one of the eight commission members was female (also the sole Tamil commissioner), and only one was from the Muslim community.
All but one of the members of the commission previously worked for the GSL, raising concerns about their independence and impartiality. Two of the commission members were senior government officials during the last months of the conflict, one of whom, Hewa M.G.S. Palihakkara, as Sri Lanka’s Permanent Representative to the UN, publicly commented on behalf of the government on events surrounding many of the allegations raised. Meanwhile, the Chairman of the LLRC served as Attorney General during the period when the 2006-2009 Presidential Commission of Inquiry to Investigate and Inquire into Serious Violations of Human Rights was in operation. That commission was charged with investigating sixteen allegations of serious human rights violations. The International Independent Group of Eminent Persons (IIGEP) identified significant concerns regarding independence of that commission due to the role of the then-Attorney General, the later-Chairman of the LLRC. These factors have fostered the perception that commission members had an interest tied to that of the government in a particular outcome of the commission’s work.
Serious concerns have also been raised regarding the process of questioning witnesses before the LLRC. The POE report describes as “non-confrontational” the line of questioning used when dealing with members of the security forces and issues related to violations of IHL.[4] The POE report goes on to relate that in some cases, commission members appeared to lead respondents with questions that contained the answers. The POE report also claims commission members failed in some cases to pursue important lines of questioning of government officials that could have revealed specific information relating to culpability for violations of IHL and IHRL.[5]
Adequate Mandate and Authority:
In terms of addressing accountability, the LLRC’s mandate was, at least initially, unclear. Based on the phrase, “and to make any such other recommendations with reference to any of the matters that have been inquired into under the terms of the warrant” and verbal assurances by the GSL, the United States government interpreted the LLRC mandate to be sufficiently broad to allow it to address allegations of violations of human rights law and international humanitarian law. On March 4, 2011, in response to U.S. Senate Resolution 84, the Sri Lanka Ministry of External Affairs further clarified the mandate of the LLRC, stating that the Commission’s mandate included consideration of violations of international humanitarian law and human rights law. The Ministry also stated that the Attorney General would have the power to institute criminal proceedings based on the LLRC’s findings.
Witness and COI Protection:
Sri Lanka has no witness protection laws, and there is no information that indicates that the LLRC developed a discrete program for witness protection. According to the recorded testimonies on the LLRC’s website, the commission did allow and take in camera testimony at the discretion of the witness. Meanwhile, experience in other countries has shown that, absent such a program, witnesses, especially those victimized by recent conflict, are unlikely to come forward due to fears of arrest, personal harm, or harm to their families. A number of Sri Lankans informed Department of State officers that they, or people they knew, had declined to appear before the LLRC out of fear of retribution. Additionally, those that come forward publicly in Sri Lanka also run the risk of being branded LTTE sympathizers, heightening the likelihood of reprisal. Reporting by the International Crisis Group (ICG) and other international organizations appears to confirm that some individuals who testified before the LLRC have since received threats by the military. The ICG has also described other situations in which the format of the hearings and the presence of security officials could have served to intimidate individuals appearing to provide statements. The Department of State has received credible first-hand information regarding efforts by the GSL to cause witnesses to alter the retelling of events related to international humanitarian law violation allegations, as well.
Adequate Resources:
While the LLRC heard testimony a number of times and in a number of locations, those hearings may not have provided adequate opportunities for victims to testify. Although the LLRC allocated at least 56 days for sittings in Colombo and 22 days in the North and East of Sri Lanka, the State Department received several complaints from people in the North who wished to testify but were unable to do so because of the rushed sittings of the LLRC in those areas. Such persons often were told to make written submissions to the Commission, although in some cases witnesses lacked resources to do so or were illiterate. In addition, while the LLRC may have had adequate resources to conduct hearings, its staff had no investigators or lawyers with experience investigating IHL violations.
Government Response:
In submitting the LLRC report to Parliament, Leader of the House Nimal Siripala de Silva, on behalf of the government, stated that the proper way to respond to the report was to establish a mechanism to gather information, investigate accusations, and refer possible charges to the Attorney General. President Rajapaksa has not publicly commented on the LLRC Report. However, the GSL has informed the Department of State of three entities within the government created to respond to the LLRC. The first is a cabinet sub-committee created to address the recommendations within the LLRC report regarding demilitarization, land reform, and freedom of expression. The second group is a board of inquiry within the Sri Lankan Army (SLA) that will address demilitarization of the North and other general reforms to the military. Finally, a five-member court of inquiry led by a Major General in the SLA has been established to investigate the specific allegations of serious violations identified in the LLRC report. News reports have indicated that this court will also investigate the Channel 4 video. This court will refer any cases it finds credible to the Attorney General for prosecution. Sri Lankan officials also made clear to Department of State officials that individuals can bring additional allegations to the SLA court of inquiry or the Attorney General. The Department of State is not aware of any formal action plan to implement the LLRC’s final recommendations from November 2011 or its interim recommendations from September 2010. In its report, the LLRC expressed its fear that its recommendations would suffer the same fate as past recommendations by Sri Lankan COIs and go unanswered by the GSL. The LRRC concluded that its recommendations should be “implemented expeditiously.”[6]
III. Evaluation of the LLRC Findings & Recommendations Regarding Accountability
A. Civilian Casualties
The LLRC report recognizes that significant civilian casualties occurred during the final stages of the conflict. In particular, the report details the testimony of witnesses reporting eight attacks by GSL Security Forces against civilians that the witnesses describe as intentional. Those allegations include: three reports of shelling civilians; two reports of the Navy targeting civilian boats; one report of the Army forcing civilians to retrieve the body of an Army soldier while under fire; one report of 35-40 civilians dying when a food line was shelled; and one report of the Army shelling 40-45 expectant mothers. Regarding these specific instances, the report states, “[T]he Commission stresses that there is a duty on the part of the State to ascertain more fully, the circumstances under which such incidents could have occurred, and if such investigations disclose wrongful conduct, to prosecute and punish the wrong doers.”[7] However, the Commission’s final recommendations only call for further investigation into “observation 4.359 vi. (a) and (b) and any reported cases of deliberate attacks on civilians.”[8] The relevant sections of 4.359 to which this recommendation refers list two reported attacks by the navy and the incident involving the forced retrieval of an Army soldier’s body, meaning that the report does not ultimately recommend investigation into the other five instances reported by the Commission.
The LLRC’s recommendations fall short of fully acknowledging all credible allegations of intentional attacks on civilians by the GSL and LTTE. The LLRC report does not call for investigations into allegations of deliberate attacks on civilians in the Vanni other than the three instances briefly discussed in the report. For other civilian casualties, the report concludes that they “appear to be due to cross fire, the LTTE’s targeted and deliberate firing at civilians, as well as due to the dynamics of the conflict situation, the perils of the geographical terrain, the LTTE using civilians as human shields and the LTTE’s refusal to let hostages get out of harm’s way.”[9] The LLRC report details the technological capabilities of the GSL to detect and distinguish civilians from the LTTE, including GPS and special reconnaissance missions into the Vanni, and concludes that the “the military strategy that was adopted to secure the LTTE-held areas was one that was carefully conceived, in which the protection of the civilian population was given the highest priority.”[10]
This conclusion, however, does not consider whether the government security forces properly used the capabilities examined in the report, whether attacks were directed at LTTE forces rather than civilians, or whether those attacks were proportional. The report also calls for a professionally-administered household survey in all parts of the island to determine the full scale and circumstances of death and injury to civilians in order to resolve the “unverified sweeping generalization of a highly speculative nature as regards casualty figures.”[11] In late February 2012, the GSL Department of Census and Statistics published “Enumeration of Vital Events, 2011, Northern Province, Sri Lanka,” a report of a census the department conducted in June and July 2011 of households in the former conflict region. Amongst many figures on population statistics during the last five years of the conflict, the report noted 7,934 deaths in the Northern Province in 2009 due to non-natural causes, with an additional 2,635 persons reported as untraceable. These figures, however, have been widely criticized by international non-governmental organizations, such as the International Crisis Group, as misrepresentative and not in conformity with professional standards.
The handful of incidents noted in the LLRC report stands in stark contrast to the vast number of credible allegations examined in the POE report. While the GSL’s public statements indicate it maintained a policy of “zero civilian casualties” and the only civilians killings occurred during crossfire, the POE estimated that civilian casualties range from 10,000 to 40,000 for the final months of the conflict.[12] Based on verified reports from civilians, seasoned aid workers, and doctors in the conflict zone, the POE concluded that in many cases, GSL security forces shelled areas it knew to be principally occupied by civilians.[13] In addition, the Department of State’s 2009 Report to Congress listed 208 instances of harm to civilians or civilian objects, which strongly suggests that the LLRC’s conclusion that only three allegations of attacks against civilians deserve further investigation is a gross underestimation. These instances, as well as those allegedly perpetrated by the LTTE in both the LLRC and POE reports, merit further investigation. Hence, the notable gap between LLRC and POE findings regarding civilian casualties suggests that the GSL should establish an accountability mechanism to ensure that all allegations, not just the three identified in the LLRC report, are fully investigated.
With respect to LTTE attacks against civilians, the LLRC concluded that the LTTE was guilty of “grave violations of core Principles of IHL.”[14] Specifically, the Commission found that LTTE cadres used civilians as human shields, shot at civilians attempting to escape to safe areas, forced civilians to provide support services, used military equipment in civilian areas, and forcibly conscripted child soldiers.[15] The POE report found credible allegations for all of these same crimes.[16] The LLRC report contemplates “framing charges against LTTE cadres,” but fails to make specific recommendations about investigating and prosecuting LTTE crimes.[17] Accountability for violations of IHL and IHRL by both sides of the conflict is important to ensure justice for victims, to prevent a resurgence of violence, and for rebuilding Sri Lanka. The GSL should therefore fully investigate abuses committed by the LTTE and hold individuals accountable for such crimes.

B. Shelling of the No Fire Zones (NFZs)
At the end of the conflict with the LTTE, the GSL created a series of “No Fire Zones” (NFZs) aimed at providing civilians trapped in LTTE territory a safe haven into which government forces would not fire. On January 20, 2009, the GSL unilaterally declared the first NFZ (NFZ-1) located about 800 meters from the frontline. Even though the LTTE did not recognize any of the NFZs, the government claimed that it would continue to recognize the humanitarian spaces. Within days of establishing NFZ-1, however, government forces began shelling within the safe area, reportedly because they had taken fire from LTTE forces within NFZ-1. A pattern soon developed in which the LTTE would use NFZ-1 to fire on GSL forces, and then GSL forces would respond with heavy shelling into NFZ-1. Once it realized that NFZ-1 was not protecting civilians and was being used by the LTTE for cover, the GSL created a second NFZ (NFZ-2) on February 12, 2009. The same pattern of violence emerged in NFZ-2, however, and the government established a significantly smaller third NFZ (NFZ-3) on May 8.
The LLRC report concludes that Sri Lankan security forces did not deliberately target civilians in the NFZs. The report states that although civilian casualties occurred “in the course of crossfire,” “there appears to have been a bona fide expectation that an attack on LTTE gun positions would make a relevant and proportional contribution to the objective of the military attack involved.”[18] The LLRC concluded that returning fire into the NFZs was not a violation of the IHL principles of distinction or proportionality because “Security Forces were confronted with an unprecedented situation when no other choice was possible and all ‘feasible precautions’ that were practicable in the circumstances had been taken.”[19] According to the LLRC, making determinations about the units responsible for the contested shelling would be nearly impossible.[20] Despite the purported impossibility of investigating shelling in the NFZs, the LLRC nonetheless concluded that the LTTE was responsible for the majority of civilian deaths in the NFZs. The LLRC did not make any recommendations to investigate who was responsible for the shelling of civilians in the NFZs, but does call for compensation to be provided to all affected parties.
Reports from the POE and the UN directly contradict the conclusions of the LLRC with respect to civilian casualties in the NFZs. The POE report concludes that credible allegations suggest that the GSL deliberately or negligently targeted civilians within the NFZs.[21] For instance, in one incident on January 24, 2009, civilians and medical workers reported that hundreds of civilians died at a UN hub amidst intense shelling coming from government positions. LTTE cadres reportedly never fired within 500 meters of the UN hub, and because of GPS and reports to the GSL by the UN and ICRC, the government security forces were aware of the hub’s location. In other reported incidents, GSL forces shelled food distribution lines, hospitals, and IDP encampments known to the GSL.[22] In another incident, the POE report found that 140 civilians were killed on March 26 in Ambalavanpokkanai by artillery fire from government positions.[23] The report also states that the civilians were capable of being identified by Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) often used by the GSL. Furthermore, the POE report states that the Sri Lankan Security Forces repeatedly used Multi-Barrel Rocket Launchers (MBRLs) and other large artillery, which are used to shell large areas of land rather than return fire on specific locations, against targets in the NFZs.[24]
Another report done by the UNITAR Operational Satellite Applications Programme (UNOSAT) for the Panel of Experts used satellite time-series imagery to conclude that the Sri Lankan Army (SLA) established and maintained capabilities to fire substantial quantities of artillery munitions into areas heavily populated with IDPs, specifically NFZ-2 and NFZ-3. The UNOSAT report found that that the SLA repeatedly rotated the fire bearing of heavy caliber howitzers towards NFZ-2 and later NFZ-3. The report also states that the SLA erected mortar batteries along the western shore of Nanthi Lagoon without viable military targets except for locations clearly falling with NFZ-2 and NFZ-3, both of which remained populated with tens of thousands of IDPs. UNOSAT also found over ten specific air strike impact craters identified immediately adjacent to IDP tent concentrations, a functioning hospital, and within NFZ-2, contrary to denials by the Sri Lankan Air Force.

The evidence gathered by the POE and UNOSAT indicates that the LLRC report does not adequately address the responsibility for shelling in the three NFZs. While the LLRC report concludes that it is difficult to ascertain the origin of artillery attacks, the government nonetheless has a duty to investigate the alleged abuses committed by Sri Lankan armed forces in the NFZs. Experiences in other post-conflict settings in relation to the use of force demonstrate that ascertaining the origin of shelling in the NFZs is not as impracticable as the LLRC suggests. A more thorough investigation potentially could determine what violations, if any, occurred, who committed them, and the extent to which officials in the government knew about or authorized such violations.

C. Attacks Against Humanitarian Objects
The LLRC report concludes that the Sri Lankan security forces did not deliberately target hospitals and other humanitarian objects in the NFZs. For instance, the report examined an attack against the Vallipunam Hospital and IDP camp nearby on January 21, 2009, which killed over 40 civilians. The LLRC concluded that the origin of the shells could not be accurately determined, but did note that the LTTE were positioned 500 meters away from the hospital.[25] The Commission also believed GSL statements that all patients had been moved from the Anandapuram Hospital before being fired upon by SLA forces, even though reports from aid workers and doctors indicated otherwise.[26] Finally, the LLRC found no definitive evidence that the GSL was responsible for the shelling of Puthukkudiyiruppu Hospital (PTK). The report relies on the testimony of two doctors from PTK stating that no shells hit the hospital and that they did not know from where the shells came. On the other hand, the report also mentions the testimony of a government official being treated at PTK who testified that he and his father-in-law were injured in a direct hit to the hospital and the shell likely came from government forces.[27]
The LLRC report nevertheless concludes, “The Commission is satisfied, on a careful consideration of all the circumstances, that shells had in fact fallen on hospitals causing damage and resulting in casualties. However, the material placed before the Commission points to a somewhat confused picture as to the precise nature of events, from the perspective of time, exact location and direction of fire.”[28] The Commission called for “expeditious grant of appropriate redress” but only as a “humanitarian gesture” to “instill confidence in the reconciliation process.”[29]
In contrast to the LLRC report, the POE report concludes that “Virtually every hospital in the Vanni, whether permanent or makeshift, was hit by artillery.”[30] The Panel found that the PTK Hospital was shelled every day from January 29 to February 4 most likely by the 55th Division of the SLA. The GSL claimed that no hospitals remained in the Vanni, but the POE report found that the UN and ICRC continuously updated the government on the whereabouts of medical facilities and make-shift hospitals in the region. The POE report also mentions that testimony by government doctors from these hospitals may not be accurate because they initially claimed that government forces repeatedly fired on their facilities but later changed their stories to reflect the GSL’s position.[31]

Ultimately, both the LLRC and POE reports indicate that much uncertainty surrounds the extent and origin of shelling against hospitals and other humanitarian objects during the finals months of the conflict. The LLRC did investigate several instances of such shelling, but its conclusion that attacks against hospitals simply represented a “confused picture” neglects the fundamental need to fully investigate potential violations of IHL.[32] As these allegations implicate grave breaches of IHL, they merit full investigation and, if appropriate, prosecution of the responsible individuals.

D. “White Flag” Incident
The LLRC Report also fails to critically analyze or investigate the “white flag” incident, in which high level LTTE leaders were allegedly shot despite assurances from the GSL that they could safely surrender. While the circumstances surrounding the incident remain uncertain, the POE concluded that the LTTE leadership intended to surrender.[33] However, the LLRC only mentioned the above incident in a few short paragraphs, citing testimonies from a general and a government agent dismissing the allegations.[34] The Department of State does not take a position regarding the allegations concerning the “white flag” allegations but notes that the discrepancy between the POE and LLRC reports merits further investigation.

E. Sexual and Gender-Based Violence
The POE Report briefly discusses allegations of sexual and gender-based violence by GSL security forces during the final days of the conflict. The Panel pointed to several videos that strongly suggest that women were raped or otherwise sexually assaulted before being executed, but did not make any definitive conclusions due to a lack of evidence.[35] The POE indicated that this lack of evidence is likely partially due to strong cultural stigmas in Sri Lanka that cause reports of sexual violence to go underreported.[36]
The LLRC report does not address allegations of sexual and gender-based violence at the end of the war.

F. Supply of Humanitarian Relief
The LLRC acknowledges that food and medical supplies became scarce with the intensification of the conflict, but does not surmise that the GSL purposefully underestimated the number of civilians trapped in various combat zones “for the purpose of starving the civilian population as a method of combat.”[37] The report states that amounts of food aid were determined by the government in consultation with the World Food Program (WFP) and other humanitarian organizations and, therefore, these circumstances do not “warrant any possible inference that there was a deliberate intention to downplay the number of civilians in the NFZs for the purpose of starving the civilian population as a method of combat.”[38] However, the LLRC report also concludes that “the issue of medical supplies to civilians in the conflict areas during the final days of the conflict is a matter that requires further examination, given the humanitarian considerations involved.”[39]

The LLRC’s characterization of the government’s role in food distribution contrasts with allegations that the POE found credible. According to the POE report, the GSL purposefully underestimated the number of civilians that remained in the conflict zone so as to justify sending less food and medical supplies into the zone (e.g. the government estimated that only 10,000 civilians remained in NFZ-3, whereas the UN estimated that 100,000 remained). The POE report also states that the Ministry of Defense systematically deprived persons in the conflict zone of humanitarian assistance by imposing extensive restrictions on convoy participants.[40] The GSL based its restrictions on the belief that the materials would be used to benefit the LTTE, but denial of items such as surgical equipment would have increased the suffering of wounded civilians and wounded LTTE belligerents and could only have had a humanitarian purpose, according to the POE.
While the circumstances surrounding the distribution of food and medical supplies into the conflict zone remain uncertain, the civilians who perished or were otherwise harmed in the Vanni because of a lack of humanitarian aid deserve a complete investigation into this matter, and the GSL should instigate an independent and impartial investigation into the government’s possible role in depriving civilians of humanitarian relief.

G. Establishment of NFZs 2 & 3
An important question the LLRC raises but leaves unanswered is why the GSL created a second and third NFZ after becoming cognizant that the LTTE would exploit such zones to launch attacks, to which the GSL would respond, putting civilians in harm’s way. The LLRC report recognizes a pattern in which the LTTE exploited the NFZs and civilians there to attack GSL forces and then force civilians to follow them to the next NFZ. This tactic of using human shields was expressly recognized in both the LLRC and POE reports. The LLRC report concludes, “The conclusions to be drawn from these representations is that the conduct of the LTTE, in gross violation of IHL obligations on the protection of civilians, radically transformed the very character of the NFZ and made it an integral part of the LTTE’s combat operations to achieve their military objectives.”[41] Despite its knowledge that the LTTE used NFZ-1 and the civilians therein as part of its military strategy and that the GSL would respond to attacks from the NFZ thereby harming civilians, the GSL unilaterally declared NFZ-2 on February 12, 2009 and NFZ-3 on May 8, 2009.
In its concluding statements, the LLRC expressly remarked that “The Sri Lankan experience has in fact given rise to a debate as to whether, by unilateral declaration of a No Fire Zone, the Government unwittingly provided the LTTE an opportunity to consolidate itself amongst the civilian enclave for strategic purposes.”[42] The LLRC does not make any recommendations regarding the GSL’s decision to unilaterally create NFZs 2 and 3. Likewise, the POE report does not expressly address this issue, although the POE report does detail the creation of the NFZs and the significant civilians casualties incurred in NFZs 2 and 3. More needs to be done to investigate how and why the GSL decided to create NFZs 2 and 3 after it concluded that the LTTE used NFZ-1 as part of its military strategy and thereby endangered thousands of civilian lives.

H. Enforced Disappearances
The LLRC report states that the Commission is concerned about the number of reports alleging enforced disappearances during the conflict and after surrender or arrest. The report found credible allegations of abductions of at least 12 people in the Batticaloa district, 100 in Mannar, and 6 in Jaffna. The Commission found a “clear duty of the State to cause necessary investigations into such specific allegations and where such investigations produce evidence of any unlawful act on the part of individual members of the Army, to prosecute and punish the wrongdoers.”[43] This impartial tone of the report's findings on the missing turns more partisan, however, when it concludes that such investigations are necessary “to clear the good name of the Army who have by and large conducted themselves in an exemplary manner in the surrender process and when civilians were crossing over to cleared areas, which conduct should not be tarnished by the actions of a few.”[44]
Like the LLRC report, the POE report found a number of credible allegations of enforced disappearance. The Panel reported 32 instances of alleged disappearances in May 2009 alone, many of which involved groups of people rather than individuals.[45] The report recommended full investigation into and potential prosecution for allegations of enforced disappearance by the GSL during and immediately after the conflict.[46] An independent and impartial investigation into reports of enforced disappearance and any resulting prosecution and punishment would bring justice and closure to those affected by missing family members, and the GSL should immediately begin the investigations called for in the LLRC report.

I. Arrest/Detention Policy
The LLRC report makes a number of important recommendations regarding the GSL’s detention policy that the government should implement as soon as possible. The report notes several instances in which LTTE detainees remain in detention without charges and in which next of kin were either not notified of a detainee’s whereabouts or not allowed to visit. The report states that all next of kin should have the right of access to detainees. The LLRC report also states that no person should be detained outside authorized places of detention and that law enforcement authorities should follow legal provisions when taking persons into custody, such as issuing a formal receipt of arrest and providing details of the place of detention.[47] In an important recommendation, the LLRC concludes that “The failure or refusal by the Police to record an arrest, detention and transfer or to record complaints of abductions and failure to investigate the same would constitute a criminal offence and steps should be taken to prosecute such wrongdoers.”[48] The LLRC also recommends that an “Independent Advisory Committee be appointed to monitor and examine detention and arrest of persons taken into custody under any regulations made under the Public Security Ordinance or the PTA.”[49] All of these recommendations are important in ensuring that the rights of detainees are protected. The LLRC makes laudable recommendations about law enforcement procedures for detainees and their next of kin as well as calls for investigations into allegations of violations of those laws.
The Department of State is aware of approximately 228 detainees under investigation remaining in GSL custody and an additional 892 detainees remaining in rehabilitation facilities. The government has permitted international humanitarian organization access to some detention facilities where former LTTE combatants are detained, including the Boosa detention facility where approximately 200 detainees are held. The government does not provide access to any detention facilities operated by military intelligence, stating that none existed. International humanitarian organizations have also only been permitted to visit detainees in rehabilitation as they are released.

J. Videos Showing Evidence of Summary Executions
On May 23, 2011, the UN Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions (SR) Christof Heyns released a report to the Human Rights Council 17th session that, in part, dealt with a video aired by Channel 4 in the United Kingdom. The video in question, provided by Channel 4 on November 30, 2010, is a longer version of the video aired by Channel 4 on August 25, 2009, that purportedly depicted Sri Lankan soldiers summarily executing bound prisoners.
The matter of the original, shorter version of the video is covered in detail in the Department of State’s second report to Congress of August 2010. In summary, the GSL commissioned four experts to evaluate the authenticity of the footage, and ultimately found the footage inauthentic based on a number of factors. Philip Alston, the then-UN Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, commissioned a separate, independent group of forensic experts to analyze the video. A January 2010 report by these experts concluded that there was strong evidence to suggest the video was authentic. Then-SR Alston contended that the video necessitated an impartial investigation into the question of whether war crimes had been committed.

The extended video investigated by SR Heyns contains additional executions and shows the faces of some soldiers. SR Heyns commissioned three experts to analyze the video, including an audio and firearms expert. As a result of that analysis, SR Heyns concluded that the extended video was authentic, and that it “…provides credible evidence that serious crimes have been committed within the context of the Sri Lankan civil war, which should together with any other available evidence be examined systematically and professionally by domestic investigators, as well as by an independent, international investigational body…”
The LLRC Report directly addresses the Channel 4 videos and concludes that its authenticity cannot be verified through available forensic information. The LLRC Report raises questions about the footage’s authenticity stating that the Commission “finds that there are troubling technical and forensic questions of a serious nature that cast significant doubts about the authenticity of the video and the credibility of its content.”[50] The Report commendably calls for the GSL to “institute an independent investigation into this issue.”[51] While the GSL has said that the Army court of inquiry would investigate the Channel 4 videos, the State Department is not aware of any action by the GSL to implement the LLRC’s recommendation of establishing an independent investigation into the Channel 4 videos.

K. Child Soldiers
The LLRC recommends full investigations into the conscription of child soldiers by the LTTE and other political parties. Notably, the report calls for the Tamil Makkal Viduthalai Pulikal (TMVP), the GSL, and UNICEF to fully implement the 2008 Action Plan between the parties to release and reintegrate child soldiers. The LLRC also calls for large-scale projects to reintegrate, educate, and provide counseling for former child soldiers.[52]
The LLRC report also makes an important accountability recommendation regarding the prosecution of recruiters of child soldiers: “In instances where there is prima facie evidence of conscription of children as combatants, any such alleged cases should be investigated and offenders must be brought to justice. In this regard, the complaints of alleged recruitment of children by illegal armed groups/groups affiliated with the LTTE or any political party should be investigated with a view to prosecuting the offenders to ensure that the practice would not occur in the future.”[53]



[1] Report of the Secretary-General’s Panel of Experts on Accountability in Sri Lanka (Mar. 31, 2011), available at http://www.un.org/News/dh/infocus/Sri_Lanka/POE_Report_Full.pdf [hereinafter POE Report].
[2] POE Report, para. 237-43.
[3] http://www.state.gov/j/gcj/srilanka/releases/145884.htm.
[4] POE Report, para. 323.
[5] POE Report, paras. 323, 326.
[6] LLRC report, para. 8.305.
[7] LLRC report, para. 4.286.
[8] LLRC report, para. 4.360.
[9] LLRC Report, para. 4.359xii.
[10] LLRC Report, para. 9.4
[11] LLRC Report, para. 9.35.
[12] POE Report, para. 137.
[13] POE Report, p. ii.
[14] LLRC Report, para. 4.321 & Chapter 5.
[15] LLRC Report, para. 4.321.
[16] POE Report, pp. iii-iv.
[17] LLRC Report, paras. 4.321 & 9.26.
[18] LLRC Report, para. 4.282.
[19] LLRC Report, para. 4.283.
[20] LLRC Report, para. 9.13.
[21] POE Report, p. ii.
[22] Id.
[23] POE Report, para. 105.
[24] POE Report, para. 100.
[25] LLRC Report, para. 4.119.
[26] LLRC Report, para. 4.121.
[27] LLRC Report, paras. 4.125-4.128.
[28] LLRC Report, para. 4.288.
[29] LLRC Report, para. 4.294.
[30] POE Report, para. 81.
[31] POE Report, para. 130.
[32] LLRC Report, para. 4.288.
[33] POE Report, paras. 170-71.
[34] LLRC Report, paras. 4.234-4.3.237.
[35] POE Report, para. 153.
[36] POE Report, para. 152.
[37] LLRC Report, para. 4.304.
[38] LLRC Report, para. 4.304.
[39] LLRC Report, para. 9.22.
[40] POE Report, para. 209.
[41] LLRC Report, para. 4.274.
[42] LLRC Report, para. 4.335.
[43] LLRC Report, paras. 9.23, 9.48 & 4.319.
[44] LLRC Report, para. 4.319.
[45] POE Report, para. 151.
[46] POE Report, Recommendation 2(B), p. 121.
[47] LLRC Report, para. 9.54.
[48] LLRC Report, para. 5.42.
[49] LLRC Report, para. 5.44.
[50] LLRC Report, para. 4.374e.
[51] LLRC Report, para. 4.377.
[52] LLRC Report, para. 9.77.
[53] LLRC Report, para. 5.96.

source: Report

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Intrigues By The Ministry Of External Affairs

EXPOSE!!!
By Rajiva Wijesinha  I was delighted to have (also) been attacked in an article in ‘Ceylon Today’ that basically attempted to say that what it termed the monumental loss at Geneva was largely due to Dayan Jayatilleka (and, in parenthesis as it were, to me). It is suggested that what the writer, Ms Bastians, calls a Rottweiller approach, alienated the West, and that is why we have been persecuted by the US and other countries. But, since much of the article is a personal attack on Dr Jayatilleka, building up the case that was set in motion with a missive from the Ministry of External Affairs alleging corruption etc, it is obvious that this is part of the brilliant technique of the fellow travelers in the Ministry to ignore the real problems about Geneva and get on with their task of getting rid of all our able emissaries.

Ms Bastians, I gather, is the wife of Gehan Indragupta who is in the Ministry, in Colombo at present, a batchmate of George Cook, one of the principal plotters against Dr Jayatilleka. George, who is unmarried, was permitted to move into an unfurnished apartment at a monthly rental of Euro 3280/-. One of the charges against Dayan is that he permitted Mr Razee, also a Second Secretary at the Mission like George, to stay for a long time in a hotel. The reason for this is that he was given a much lower rent ceiling and, even when this was subsequently increased to Euro 2500/-, finding a furnished apartment, which was specified, was not easy.

George however is a lucky soul, one of those plump Burgher boys whom motherly teachers at nursery school adored. Though not very bright, they would win prizes for elocution, and I recall George acting as Master of Ceremonies at various functions during Mr Bogollagama’s tenure. I suspect he was the person who advised Mr Bogollagama that the G15 was not of the slightest importance, for when the President was offered the Chairmanship of this body, he said that the Foreign Minister had told him not to take it up because it did not contain countries of importance. I should note though that, when I told the Foreign Minister that it included countries such as India and Brazil, he ignored the advice of the Ministry professionals and persuaded the President to take up the position. That it was not made use of subsequently is well known by diplomats in Geneva, and also the reasons for this – as one Indian journalist told me, the problem was that, after Dayan left, instead of asking friends for advice and assistance, we would only ask them for their votes.

So much for the professionalism of the Foreign Office. That, doubtless, is why they – as exemplified by Ms Bastians – are also attacking Tamara Kunanayagam, who was grossly ill-treated in Geneva. I was asked why this was so by two Westerners, who appreciated the forthrightness with which she spoke, and her sheer professionalism. They could not understand why she had been sidelined, but the mandarins who ill-treated her will claim to the President that it was all her fault.

But there is a more serious element to all this. While I was in Geneva I was told that Douglas Devananda had nearly been sent home early on the grounds that he was going to be arrested. He himself thought that Mahinda Samarasinghe was responsible for this, but though Mahinda maybe gullible, I do not think he is devious. It was rather Foreign Ministry personnel who went to pick up Douglas’ baggage, and were fortunately stopped by the Ambassador. Meanwhile Douglas had been told that it was dangerous for him to stay, while the President was told that Douglas was nervous and wanted to leave.

I was worried by this, and that made me think back to what in my view started the rot, as far as Sri Lanka is concerned, namely the ill advised visit of the President to England in late 2010 to address the Oxford Union. Those of us who have actually been at Oxford know that one should never take the Union seriously, wonderful place though it is, and I was surprised that, having spoken there once, the President wanted to go there again. He was advised against this by the Deputy High Commissioner in London at the time, the marvelously efficient and able Mr Amza, and also – in writing – by the High Commissioner, Nihal Jayasinghe. I have been told by very loyal Sri Lankans living in London how they told Mr Jayasinghe about their qualms, and how he was at first nervous to warn against the visit, given the hype in Sri Lanka, but that he finally did so.

The recommendation that the visit go ahead was made by Kshenuka Seneviratne, the former High Commissioner in London, who actually accompanied the President on the visit. He was under the impression that the visit had been recommended by Bell Pottinger, but those professionals had also advised against it, and been ignored.

Until I heard what happened in Geneva, I was under the impression that the whole business had been a colossal misjudgment on Ms Seneviratne’s part. But then I thought of the moment when we appeared most weak, which was when General Gallage – a totally proper and efficient officer against whom there is no major allegation, even a trumped up one – was hurried out of the country. He did not want to leave, but the President was persuaded that he was in danger – and when he left it was trumpeted around that he had fled out of fear.

I believe then that we are dealing with an extremely grave situation where, if the President is not careful, he will be destroyed by those who care nothing for him or his policies. While writing this I was sent an article in the Sri Lanka Guardian claiming that Ms Seneviratne had given a contract while she was in Geneva to an LTTE leader, to restore the ambassador’s house. I have been rung also by both Sinhala and Tamil friends in England to warn me about Josephine, as they call her – it took me a moment or two to work that one out – claiming that she is in the pocket of the LTTE.

That need not be true. I am reminded of what Mahinda Samarasinghe said, rather wittily, when I said very firmly, when we were trying to deal with Radhika Coomaraswamy’s excesses and someone claimed she had ulterior motives, that Radhika was not pro-LTTE: no, said the Minister, she is just pro-Radhika. Radhika however would never promote the LTTE knowingly, even though she might not quite understand – as sadly even Bob Blake does not – how a seemingly innocuous agenda can play into terrorist hands. Ms Seneviratne however may have no such qualms, and may not be able to distinguish. Certainly, had Douglas left Geneva, the publicity would have been as appalling as what we suffered after the Oxford fiasco – and such publicity leads to enhanced funding for the Tiger rump.

What then is the game plan now? I believe several irons are in the fire, but the most important is to get rid of the truly professional and patriotic Secretary to the Ministry, Mr Amunugama, so that Ms Seneviratne can step into his shoes. This is confidently predicted by members of her staff, the husband of the sweet young Priyanga Wickramasinghe having assured me some time ago that this would happen soon, or that Priyanga at least believed this. Such too seems to be the view of the groupies in Geneva and Paris who are busily undermining their ambassadors, from the IT officer in Paris from whose IP address a scurrilous email about Dayan had been sent to the Ministry to the more senior officer in Geneva who falsely used the ambassador’s name in a way that nearly upset relations with our good friends.

Secondly, there is a concerted attempt to remove the most efficient and loyal non-career diplomats we have, Dayan in Paris, Tamara in Geneva, Asitha Perera in Rome, Palitha Kohona in New York, and later I believe even Sarath Kongahage in Berlin and Chris Nonis in London. The task of the last has now been made more difficult by the transfer, not only of Mr Amza (with regard to whom bad blood was created from the start by the plotters) but also Mr Pathmanathan, so that there is no senior speaker of Tamil in London. It is possible that the targeting of Mr Razee in Paris is for a similar reason, while in Chennai the very capable Tamil speaking High Commissioners we had, Amza and then Mr Krishnamoorthy, are being followed by a Sinhalese. Of course he may be very good, but no effort was made, though Mr Krishnamoorthy kept asking, for greater engagement with Tamilnadu. When I visited, I was told by the very distinguished academics and journalists I met that they now understood the situation better, and wished there had been previous visits like this. Needless to say the books I had taken to Delhi responding to the Darusman Report had not been sent down to Chennai.

Which brings me to the attack on me, the perpetuation of what essentially has been claimed only by the fellow travelers of the Ministry – not the many very capable concerned diplomats I have worked with, who are belittled on the grounds that their English is not perfect – that I upset the West. That is complete nonsense, though it is true that Patricia Butenis is cross with me at present, because I revealed publicly what Paul Carter – whom many members of the international community also find strange – had been up to. The point is, they all know where they stand with me and, though I am very hard on unfair criticism, in many respects we share similar ideals about strengthening the Human Rights regime and promoting Reconciliation and Pluralism.

Interestingly, the claim that Dayan’s attitude and mine led to Western hostility is belied by the fact that the British first introduced a motion against us in Geneva in 2006 – when Sarala Fernando, a career diplomat, was there, and when Ms Seneviratne in London was convincing Colombo if not herself that the British were favourable towards us. It was of Sarala that I first heard a canine metaphor, when Philip Alston claimed that she had come at him like a bulldog (for reasons I sympathized with, though I would obviously have been much gentler as well as much sharper – which is why Alston’s successor has told a student of his that, had he to find someone to defend him in court, he would choose me). That, Alston claimed, is why he had been so hostile to Sri Lanka subsequently, another instance I feel in which manoevering by unscrupulous forces – not Sarala, who simply reacted – won the day.

Conversely, those I suspect Ms Bastians and her associates in the Ministry would see as poodles as far as the West is concerned simply have no credibility – as two influential ambassadors have claimed in recent months about two such very gentle individuals. The point is, one should not say what one thinks people want to hear unless one is prepared to work hard to achieve it. That I find hardly happens with these individuals.
Two years ago, before the 2010 election, I could not understand why the then Swiss ambassador told me she had heard I was to be appointed Foreign Minister. That seemed absurd, and as I said on Rupavahini, when asked about possible executive office – before the election results were delayed for two weeks so that those who relied on seniority and preferences had made their claims, to the exclusion of others – what I was interested in was Reconciliation. I have since been told that I was actually considered for Education, but the establishment decided they had a much more able person available. Now, with the committed and capable Mr Dissanayake at Higher Education, the visionary Mr Alahapperuma at Youth Affairs, and also the imaginative and efficient Mr Grero to help in Education, that area will go from strength to strength. Reconciliation is what I can do best, and what we have achieved there through the Draft Policy document, as well as the concerted efforts being made to ensure implementation of the National Action Plan on Human Rights, which no one else could have ensured, make it clear what I must proceed with.

But I think back to what Ruth Flint said, and realize that sometimes the West knows what is best for us as well as the West better than we do. A deputy position in that Ministry – for the Minister should not be replaced given that the fiasco was no fault of his – with a brief for Reconciliation as well as training of youngsters would perhaps help to save the President from the intrigues that surround him. And while of course I could not have said this publicly before, I am grateful to Ms Bastians for having given me the opportunity – and for reminding me also of Mangala Samaraweera telling me two years back that he held Dayan and me responsible for the ills that beset the country, because it was the victory at Geneva in 2009 that had contributed to the sense of impunity he claimed the government felt. Perhaps he was right, and we must now make up for that through a rounded and well planned programme of work.

රජයේ දේශපාලකයෝ මහජන මුදලින් රතී ක්‍රීඩාවල

EXPOSE!!!
රජයේ දේශපාලකයෝ මහජන මුදලින් රතී ක්‍රීඩාවෙ. දේශපාලකයන් (හෝ ඕනෑම කෙනෙකු)රති ක්‍රීඩා වල යෙදුනාට කම් නැත, එහෙත් අප කරුණු දෙකක් රජයේ අවධානයට යොමු කලයුතු බවයි මගේ හැඟීම:
1. මහජන මුදලින් රජයේ දේශපාලකයෝ රති ක්‍රීඩාවේ යෙදෙන වාද නැද්ද යන්න පිළිබඳව විමර්ශනයක් කර ජනතාවට වාර්තා කිරීම (ඔවුන්ගේ වගකීමක් බව) සහ එවැනි ක්‍රියා නතර කිරීමට පියවර ගැනීම.
2. රජය ජනතාවගේ රති ක්‍රීඩා අනිසි ලෙස බලය යොදා ගනිමින් තලා පෙලා දැමු නිතිය සහ යාන්ත්‍රනය විමර්ශනය කිරීම සහ අවශ්‍ය සංශෝදන ගෙන ඒම. (කැබිනෙට් ඇමතිවරු ගණිකා මඩම් වල ඇසුර පතනවානම් ජනතාවටද එම වරප්‍රසාද තිබිය යුතුය. එනිසා ගණිකා, සම්භන නීතිගත කිරීම)
(උපුටා ගැනීම Gossip9.comApril 7, 2012). කැබිනට් ඇමතිවරුන් , පාර්ලිමේන්තු මන්ත්‍රීවරුන් විශාල පිරිසක් ජනතා මුදල් වැය කරමින් නිරන්තරයෙන් රති ක්‍රීඩාවල නියැලෙන බව හෙළි වී තිබේ. මෙම පිරිස අතර ජේෂ්ඨ කැබිනට් ඇමතිවරුන් කිහිප දෙනෙකුද සිටිති. 

තම තමන්ගේ අමාත්‍යංශ වල මුදල් සම්පත් වාහන යොදා ගනිමින් මෙලෙස කාම සැප ලබන දේශපාලකයන් ජනතාවට පටි තද කරගන්න ලෙසටත් විදුලිය , බලශක්ති පිරිමසින ලෙසටත් ඔවදන් දීම වැදිබණ කීමක් බවට පත් වී ඇත. විවිධ වැඩමුළු පවත්වන නියායෙන් අමාත්‍යංශ මුදල් වියදම් කරමින් තරු පහේ හෝටල් වල රැස්වීම ශාලා සහ කාමර වෙන් කර ගනිමිනින් සුප්‍රකට සිනමා සහ ටෙලිනාට්‍ය නිලියන්, මෝස්‌තර නිරුපිකාවන් ගේ පහස ලබා ගැනීම සඳහා ඔවුන්ව එම ස්ථාන වෙත ගෙන්වා ගැනීම සිදු කරන බව ඇමති ආරක්ෂක අංශ වල සාමාජිකයන් පවසති. ඇතැම් විට රජයේ නිවාඩු නිකේතන , අමාත්‍ය සහ මන්ත්‍රී නිල නිවාසද මේ සඳහා බහුලව යොදා ගැනෙති.

ටෙලි නාට්‍ය , සිනමා සහ මෝස්‌තර නිරුපිකාවන්ට අමතරව තම තමන්ගේ අමාත්‍යංශ වල විවිධ පත්වීම් ලබා දී ඇති රූමත් තරුණියන්ද ලිංගික කටයුතු සඳහා ගෙන්වා ගන්නා බවට වාර්තා වේ. දේශපාලකයන්ගේ සන්තර්පණය සඳහා ගෙන එන කාන්තාවන් ප්‍රවාහනය කිරීමද සිදු කරන්නේ දේශපාලකයන්ගේ සුපිරි වාහන වලින් වන අතර ඔවුන් සඳහා ආහාර ඇනවුම් කරන්නේ තරු හෝටල් වලින් රජයේ (ජනතා) මුදල් වැය කරමිනි. 


මෙම අමාත්‍යංශ වල වැඩ කරන ඇතැම් උසස් නිලධාරීන් ද අමාත්‍යංශ විෂය භාර ඇමතිවරයා, නියෝජ්‍ය ඇමතිවරයා සතුටු කිරීම සඳහාද ඔවුන්ට කාන්තාවන් සපයති.

සමහර මැති ඇමතිවරු ලිංගික චිත්‍රපට නිෂ්පාදකවරයෙකු විසින් පවත්වාගෙන යන සුපිරි ගණිකාවන් විකුණන ජයීක් හිල්ටන් හි හත්වන තට්ටුවේ අංක 07 සහ අංක හතර 04 කාමරද ඇතැම් විට භාවිතා කරයි. නැතහොත් දුරකථන ඇමතුමක් දීමෙන් සුපිරි ගණිකාවන් දේශපාලකයාට අවශ්‍ය ස්ථානයට ගෙනවිත් දේ. 


මේ සඳහා ඒ ඒ අමාත්‍යංශ වල විවිද ව්‍යාජ ව්‍යාපෘති යටතේ මුදල් ගෙවීම කරන අතර සමහර විට ටෙන්ඩර් පාස් කිරීම නිසා සතුටට පත් වූ වියාපරිකයන් විසින් අදාල ගණිකා මඩම් හිමියාට මුදල් ගෙවයි.

අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය ධුරයද දරන ලද ලද එක වයෝවෘධ ජේෂ්ඨ කැබිනට් ඇමතිවරයෙකු කාන්තාවන් තමන් වෙත ගෙන ඒම සඳහා ඔහුට රජයෙන් ලබා දී ඇති වෙඩි නොවදින ආරක්‍ෂිත රථය භාවිතා කරන බව හෙළි වී තිබේ. 


හෙළ උරුමයන් පැමිණ අමාත්‍යධුරයක් දරන දේශපාලකයෙකු එකවර කාන්තාවන් දෙතුන් දෙනෙකු සමග ලිංගික කටයුතු වල නිරත වන අතර එම කාන්තාවන්ට පර පිඩක ක්‍රියා කිරීමෙන් තෘප්තිය ලබන බවටද වාර්තා වේ. මෙම දේශපාලකයාගේ පර පිඩක ක්‍රියා ක්‍රියා නිසා 2009 වසරේදී ඔහුගේ බිරිඳ දික්කසාද නඩුවක් දමා ඔහුගෙන් වෙන් විය

තවත් අමාත්‍යවරයෙකු කන්‍යාවන් සමග ලිංගිකව එක්වීමට ආශාවක් දක්වන අතර ඔහුගේ අමාත්‍යංශයේ රැකියා ලබා දීමේදී නෑඹුල් තරුණියන් සඳහා අවස්ථාව ලබා දෙයි.

ජාත්‍යන්තර මුල්‍ය කටයුතු පිළිබඳව අමාත්‍යධුරයක් දරන ජේෂ්ඨ ඇමතිවරයෙකු මැදි වයසේ සිටින සිනමා නිළියක් තමන් වෙත නිතර ගෙන්වා ගන්නා අතර මේ නිසා ඇය දේශපාලනයටද අවතීර්ණ වුවාය. මෙම තැනැත්තියට ඔහුගේ අමාත්‍යංශ ලේකම් පවා අමතන්නේ මැඩම් යන ගරු වදනෙනි. 

තවත් ඇමතිවරයෙකු රාජකාරි වෙලාවල පවා තම පුද්ගලක ලේකම්වරිය සමග රජයේ නිවාඩු නිකේතන වලට යයි. මොහු අක්ෂරය චිත්රපටය අසික්ෂිත දර්ශන තිබෙනවා කියා තහනම් කිරීමට මුල් වූ අයෙකි. 

වතු කම්කරුවන් ගේ අයිතවාසිකම් වෙනුවෙන් පෙනී සිටින ද්‍රවිඩ අමාත්‍යවරයෙකුට දිනපතා විදේශීය ගණිකාවන් අවශ්‍ය කරන අතර මේ සඳහා දිනකට ඔහු අමාත්‍යංශයේ මුදල් රුපියල් ලක්ෂයක් පමණ වියදම් කරයි. 

දිළිඳු පිඩිත පන්තියේ දෙමාපියන්ට දාව උපත ලබා ජවිපෙ වැනි රැඩිකල් දේශපාලන පක්ෂ වලින් තම දේශපාලන දිවිය අරඹා පසුව පාලක පන්තියට හේත්තු වී සිටින දේශපාලකයන් කිහිප දෙනෙකුද නැති බැරි කාලයේ ලබා ගැනීමට නොහැකි වූ කම් සැප එරියස් සමග දැන් විඳින බව හෙළි වේ. මේ වර්ගයට අයත් වන එක් නියෝජ්‍ය අමාත්‍යවරයෙකු තම අමාත්‍යංශයේ ඇඳක් සහිත විශේෂ කාමරයක් ද ඒ සඳහා තනවා ඇත.

ලිංගිකත්වය සහ ලිංගික කටයුතු යනු අතිශයින්ම පුද්ගලික ක්‍රියාය. නමුත් මෙම ක්‍රියා සඳහා තමන්ගේ දේශපාලන බලතල යොදා ගනිමින් රජයේ (ජනතා) මුදල් කාබාසිනියා කරන්නේ නම් එය හෙණ ගහන ජාතික අපරාදයකි. 


එසේම තමන් සියලු අවකල් ක්‍රියා කරමින් ජනතාවට සදාචාරය ගැන බණ දෙසමින් කෙටි සායවල් තහනමට , ලිංගික චිත්‍රපට වල රඟපෑ හෝ පෙම්වතා විසින් මුලා කොට වීඩියෝ කිරීමෙන් පසු අන්තර්ජාලයට මුදා හැරි පටවල සිටින වින්දිතයන් අත්අඩංගුවට ගැනීමට, ලිංගිකත්වය තිබෙනවා කියා චිත්‍රපට, නාට්‍ය තහනම් කිරීමට පෙරමුණ ගැනීම වැනි තලිබාන් පන්නයේ වැඩ කිරීම කුරිරු දෙබිඩි පිලිවතකි

මේ අන්දමට ජනතා මුදල් කාබාසිනියා කරමින් දේශපාලකයන් කම් සැප විඳීම මගින් ජනතාව කෙසේ වෙතත් මේ පරපුටු දේශපාලන නඩය නම් ආශ්චර්ය කරා ගමන් කිරීම අනිවාර්යෙන්ම සිදු වනු ඇත.

අමිල ගුණරත්න
(උපුටා ගැනීමGossip9.com)

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

US$ 50bn Chinese led private investment no misnomer

Ms Song Jianhua (SSLRI)
Ms Song Jianhua, Chairperson (SSLRI)
Source: Apr 4 (Island) . The Ministry of Industry and Commerce issuing a statement yesterday gave out more details on the proposed US$ 50 billion investment planned for the development of Hambantota, with a top official saying it was no misnomer. As Sri Lanka-China trade topped US$ 2.2 billion in 2011, an international port city in Hambantota region to compete with Singapore, is proposed by a Beijing based private investment group with no less thanUS$50 billion as envisaged project value. "We are looking at a 10 year timeline for the US$ 50 billion Hambantota Trade City Project on the Public Private Partnership model. We are planning to implement it with the support of international investment and financial institutions" said Ms Song Jianhua, Chairperson of Sino-Sri Lanka Rich Investment (SSLRI) yesterday, as quoted by the ministry.

 Ms Song Jianhua led the 13 member Chinese Business delegation that arrived in Colombo as part of the overall 150 Chinese business delegation for the Sri Lanka Expo 2012 organised by the Export Development Board under the Ministry of Industry and Commerce. Her delegation comprised of powerful, state-of-art technology players in fertilizer, port development, energy, petro-chemistry, cement, and machinery.

 Clarifying about the US$50 billion project value, which is seen by some analysts as almost equal to Sri Lanka’s annual GDP, the resourceful Ms Jianhua responded: "The US$ 50 billion value is no misnomer. This is a private public partnership at our end and we envisage an overall investment value of US$ 50 billion over 10-15 year period and we will proceed upon approval by the government of Sri Lanka. I am happy to inform you that this is not a sole Chinese entry-in fact it is a multinational effort in which investors from Singapore, Hong Kong and US are also joining the Chinese investors as lead investors. The main Chinese investors represent manufacturing and logistic sectors. But I should stress that the project timeline will also depend on the speed of approval."

 Ms Jianhua added: "There will be other investments from us after the port city is established. Members of my delegation are also keen on real estate, black tea and jewellery once we process the port city. We also have the support of international investment and financial institutions. Most importantly, I believe that our efforts will boost Sri Lanka – China trade cooperation significantly" she added.

 According to the Department of Commerce of Sri Lanka under the Ministry of Industry and Commerce, the total trade between Sri Lanka and China is on an upward trend. In 2011, the total bilateral trade value topped US$ 2239.43 million with the balance of trade in favour of China. Sri Lanka’s exports to China, although still at a lower level, have  increased from US$ 10.9 million in 2002 to US$  104.06 million in 2011 which is an achievement  considering the  fact   that only 8 Countries  in Asia including  Sri Lanka  were  able  to maintain  a positive Export  growth  to China compared  with  2008.

 "It is too early to give specific details of the venture at the moment since we are in the initial stages" Ms Jianhua said and added: "We had a good experience during this visit to Sri Lanka and believe the country has investment promise. We are committed to creating jobs and promote economic growth in Sri Lanka with our financial strength."

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

ගණිකාවාස පනත සහ මානව හිමිකම් මෙවලම් සහ ආයතන

නීතියේ ආධිපත්‍ය කෙරෙහි ඇති ගරුත්වය ආරක‍්ෂා කිරීම, ප්‍රවර්ධනය කිරීම සහ සෑම පුරවැසියෙකුගේම මානව හිමිකමි ආරක‍්ෂා කිරීම උදෙසා  උපුටාගත් ලිපි එකතුවකි.

ලැගුම්හල් හා පෙමවතුන් පිලිබඳ ලංකාවේ නීතිය


මෙහිදී ලැගුම්හල් සම්බන්ධයෙන් පොලීසියට ක‍්‍රියාත්මක විය හැකි වපසරිය තීරණය වන්නේ ඒ සම්බන්ධයෙන් පවත්නා විවිධ නීතිරීති මගිනි. ඒ සම්බන්ධයෙන් වර්තමාන සමාජයේ පුරවැසියන්ට පමණක් නොව, ඇතැම් පොලිස් නිලධාරීන්ටද පැහැදිලි අවබෝධයක් නොපවතින බව සමාජ සිදුවීම් ආශ‍්‍රයෙන් ප‍්‍රත්‍යක්ෂ වේ. එබැවින් පොලීසියේ නිශ්චිත සීමාව කුමක්ද යන්න පිළිබඳව හරියාකාර අවබෝධයක් මහජනයාට ලැබිය යතුය.

ප‍්‍රධාන වශයෙන්ම ගණිකාවාස පනත යටතේ ලැගුම්හල්වල සිටින්නන් අත්අඩංගුවට ගැනීමට පොලීසියට බලය ඇත. මෙම පනතේ 02 වන වගන්තිය ප‍්‍රකාරව ගණිකාවාසයක් පවත්වාගෙන යාම, කළමනාකරණය කිරීම, කළමනාකරණය සඳහා ක‍්‍රියාකිරීම හෝ ආධාර කරන්නෙකු වරදකරු වන්නේය. ඒ අනුව මේ පනත යටතේ ලැගුම්හලක සිටින්නන් අත්අඩංගුවට ගැනීමට හැකියාව ලැබෙන්නේ දෙදෙනාගෙන් කාන්තාව අදාළ ලැගුම්හලේ සේවයේ නියුතුව සිටින්නියක් නම් පමණි. යම් පුද්ගලයෙක් එම ලැගුම්හලට පරිබාහිරයෙන් කාන්තාවක රැගෙන ගොස් ඇය සමඟ ලිංගික කාර්යයේ යෙදේ නම් එයට බාධා කිරීමට පොලීසියට බලයක් නැත. සිරිනිමල් එදිරිව හලාවත පොලිස් පරීක්ෂක සහ තවත් අය නඩුවේ (2001 ශ‍්‍රී ලංකා නව නීති වාර්තා, පිටු අංක 29) මේ බව දක්වා ඇත.

යම් පුද්ගලයෙකු ලැගුම්හලක බාලවයස්කරුවකු සමඟ රැඳී සිටින්නේ නම් ජාතික ළමාරක්ෂක අධිකාරී පනත යටතේ එම පුද්ගලයා අත්අඩංගුවට ගැනීමට පොලීසියට බලය ඇත. එහිදී එම පුද්ගලයාට චෝදනා එල්ලවන්නේ බාලවයස්කරුවකු ලිංගික අපයෝජනයට ලක්කිරීම හේතුවෙනි. ඉහත කී පාසල් සිසු සිසුවියන් සම්බන්ධ තත්වය මෙම කාරණාව යටතට අයත් වේ. මෙම නීතියට ගරු කිරීමක් වශයෙන් බොහෝ ලැගුම්හල් වලට පුද්ගලයන් ඇතුළු කරගැනීමේදී හැඳුනුම්පත පරීක්ෂා කිරීමක් සිදුකරන අතර අවුරුදු 18 ට අඩු පුද්ගලයන් දෙමාපියන් හා තම පවුල සමඟ නොසිටින බව පෙනී යන්නේ නම් කාමර ලබාදීම ප‍්‍රතික්ෂේප කරන ලැගුම්හල් හිමියන් කොතෙකුත් සිටිති. එසේ වුවද ඉහත ලිපිවල දක්වා ඇති ආකාරයෙන්ම පටු ලාභ ප‍්‍රයෝජන හා වාසි අරභයා බාලවයස්කාරයින්ට ලැගුම්හල් සේවාව සපයන පුද්ගලයන්ද සිටින බව සත්‍යයකි. ඒ සම්බන්ධයෙන් ක‍්‍රියා කිරීමට ප‍්‍රමාණවත් නීතිරීති පවතී.

යම් පුද්ගලයකු ලැගුම්හලක නොව වෙනත් ඕනෑම ස්ථානයක රැඳී සිටියදී සිදුකරනු ලබන පරීක්ෂා කිරීමකදී තමාගේ අනන්‍යතාවය තහවුරු කිරීමට අසමත් වේ නම් ත‍්‍රස්තවාදය වැළැක්වීමේ පනත යටතේ ඔහුව අත්අඩංගුවට ගැනීමට පොලීසියට බලය ඇත. එහෙත් මෙසේ අත්අඩංගුවට ගන්නා අවස්ථාවක චෝදනා ගොනු කළ හැක්කේ අනන්‍යතාවය ඔප්පු කිරීමට අසමත් වීම සම්බන්ධයෙන් පමණක් වේ. ලැගුම්හල තුළ ලිංගික ක‍්‍රියාවක යෙදුණේද යන්න මෙහිදී අදාළ කරුණක් නොවේ. නමුත් බොහෝ අවස්ථාවලදී සිදුවන්නේ අනන්‍යතාවය ඔප්පු කිරීමට අසමත්වීම යටතේ සැකපිට අත්අඩංගුවට ගෙන ලිංගික ක‍්‍රියාවක යෙදීම සම්බන්ධයෙන් සැකකරු වෙත දැඩි සේ අවවාද කොට මුදාහැරීමය. හදිසි නීතිය ක‍්‍රියාත්මක වූ පසුගිය සමයේ බොහෝ ලැගුම්හල් වැටලීම් කළේද, ඒවායේ රැඳී සිටි “ජෝඩු” අත්අඩංගුවට ගත්තේද පසුව “දැඩිසේ අවවාද කොට” මුදාහරින ලද්දේද මෙම න්‍යාය යටතේය. කෙසේ වෙතත් හදිසි නීතිය හෝ ත‍්‍රස්තවාදය වැළැක්වීමේ පනත යටතේ ලිංගික වැරදි සම්බන්ධයෙන් පුද්ගලයන් අත්අඩංගුවට ගැනීම නෛතික වශයෙන් ප‍්‍රශ්න කළ හැකි තත්වයකි.

යම් අවස්ථාවක යම් කාන්තාවක් සමඟ ලැගුම්හලක හෝ වෙනයම් ස්ථානයකදී ලිංගික ක‍්‍රියාවේ යෙදෙන්නේ ඇගේ කැමැත්තට පටහැණිව නම් දණ්ඩ නීති සංග‍්‍රහයේ 363 වගන්තිය යටතේ එන ස්ත‍්‍රී දූෂණ චෝදනාව යටතේ අත්අඩංගුවට ගැනීමට පොලීසියට බලය ඇත. මෙහිදී ප‍්‍රබලතම කාරණය වන්නේ අදාළ ස්ත‍්‍රියගේ කැමැත්තයි. ඇගේ කැමැත්ත ඇය කැමැත්ත දීමට හැකි අවස්ථාවක, එනම් හොඳ සිහිබුද්ධියෙන් පසුවන අවස්ථාවක ලබාගත්තක් විය යුතුය. අදාළ කාන්තාව බාලවයස්කාරියක් නම් මෙම කැමැත්ත පිළිබඳ කාරණය බල නොපායි.

විවාහක පුරුෂයෙකු හෝ ස්ත‍්‍රියක් තවත් විවාහක පුරුෂයෙකු හෝ ස්ත‍්‍රියක් සමඟ ලිංගික කාර්යයේ යෙදීම, එනම් අනාචාරය ශ‍්‍රී ලංකාවේ අපරාධ නීතිය යටතේ වරදක් නොවේ. අනාචාරය යනු දික්කසාදයේදී නඩු නිමිත්තක් සපයන්නාවූ කාරණයක් පමණක් වන අතර මෙවන් අවස්ථාවකදී පොලීසියට භූමිකාවක් නොමැති බව අවධාරණය කළ යුතුය. කිසිඳු අවස්ථාවක අනාචාරයේ හැසිරීම හෝ අනියම් ලිංගික සබඳතාවයක් නිසා පුද්ගලයන් අත්අඩංගුවට ගැනීමට පොලීසියට බලයක් නොමැත.

එබැවින් යම් පුද්ගලයන් දෙදෙනෙකු, ඔවුන් දෙදෙනාගෙන් කෙනෙකු හෝ බාලවයස්කරුවකු නොවන අවස්ථාවකදී, අදාළ කටයුත්තට දෙදෙනාගේම කැමැත්ත ඇති අවස්ථාවකදී, දෙදෙනාගෙන් අයෙකු සේවයේ යෙදෙන ගණිකාවාසය තුළ ලිංගික කාර්යය සිදු නොකරන අවස්ථාවකදී කිසිම හේතුවක් නිසා ලිංගික වරදක් සම්බන්ධයෙන් අත්අඩංගුවට ගැනීමට පොලීසියට බලයක් නොමැත. එමෙන්ම තම අනන්‍යතාවය සනාථ කිරීමට සමත්වන, වරෙන්තු නොකරන ලද පුද්ගලයෙකුද එසේ අත්අඩංගුවට ගත නොහැක. එසේ අත්අඩංගුවට ගැනීම ආණ්ඩුක‍්‍රම ව්‍යවස්ථාවේ 13(1) වන ව්‍යවස්ථාව යටතේ මූලික අයිතිවාසිකම් කඩකිරීමක් වේ.

වර්තමාන තරුණ පරපුර මෙසේ ලිංගික තෘප්තිය සොයා අහුමුලූ ගැන්නීමෙහි වගකීම භාරගත යුත්තාහු වැඩිහිටියෝමය. පෙම් යුවලක් ආසන්නයේ සිටින විට ඔවුන්ගේ සෑම අංග චලනයක් පාසා නිරීක්ෂණය කිරීමේ පුරුද්දක් අපේ වැඩිහිටියන්ට ඇත. අතින් අල්ලාගෙන සිටීම වැනි අහිංසක ක‍්‍රියාවක් දෙස පවා ඇතමුන් බලන්නේ වපරැසිනි. ප‍්‍රසිද්ධ සමාජයේ ප‍්‍රතික්ෂේප වන්නන්, ගැරහුමට ලක් වන්නන් තමන්ගේම ලෝක තුළ මුළුගැන්නීම ලිංගිකත්වය තුලදී පමණක් නොව අනෙකුත් සෑම සියලූ සමාජ ක‍්‍රියාවලියක් තුළදීම අත්දැකීමට ලැබෙන සමාජ සංසිද්ධියකි.

උපුටා ගත්තේ: elakiri
 ගණිකාවාස තොරතුරු 

Sri Lanka's Biggest Brothel Raided. Sex-workers: Ban or not? 

Sexual rights and principles declared by IPPF 

PRINCIPLES
IPPF believes that having sexual rights adds to the freedom, equality and dignity of all people.

  1. Principle 1: Sexuality is an important part of being human, whether or not a person chooses to be sexually active. Being healthy and able to express one's sexuality freely is central to every person being able to develop and participate in the economic, social, cultural and political arenas.
  2. Principle 2: IPPF recognises that people under eighteen are rights holders. The rights and protection of people under eighteen are sometimes different to that of adults. The best interests of those under eighteen should always be protected and their evolving capacity to make decisions for themselves should be recognised.
  3. Principle 3: IPPF believes that the basis of human rights protection and promotion and enjoyment/ fulfillment is non-discrimination. This means that no one should be treated differently or unequally because of their sexuality, sex, age or gender.
  4. Principle 4: People should be able to enjoy their sexuality and be free to choose whether or not they want to reproduce.
  5. Principle 5: Everyone has the right to be protected from all harm. All people under eighteen should have special protection from all forms of exploitation.
  6. Principle 6: Sexual rights can only be limited by law in order to ensure for the goal of ensuring recognition and respect for the rights and freedoms of others in accordance with human rights law. The freedom to express one's sexuality should only be limited by law if it is:
  • -1 to protect and respect others' rights and freedoms
  • -2 to ensure the general public welfare in a democratic society,
  • -3 to protect public health and public order.
Principle 7

States have the obligation to respect, protect and fulfil sexual rights for all. The obligation to fulfill requires States to adopt appropriate measures towards the full realization of the right.

WOMEN'S BUREAU OF SRI LANKA

FUNCTIONS


Women's Bureau of Sri Lanka established in 1978 for the advancement of Sri Lanka Women.

Mission

Improvement of living standards and empowerment of Sri Lanka Women by providing knowledge, opportunities & resources for them to utilize their full human potential and reap the benefits through ensuring their equal rights in Educational, Socio Economic, Political and Cultural spheres.

Objectives


Ensuring Equal Opportunities for Women before the Law and in the Social, Economical, Educational, Political and Cultural fields through the promotion of Equality Between women and men.
Empowerment of Women through the Promotion of women's education, health, Participation in economic activities and counseling support.
Poverty alleviation through Social Mobilization and Sustainable Micro Enterprise Development.
Safeguarding the Right of Women to protect them from Gender Based Violence.
Mainstreaming gender in all development policies and programmes


Contact Details
Sri Lanka Women’s Bureau
No. 177,
Nawala Road,
Narahenpita.
Tel : 011-2504934
E-mail : directorwb_womens@mymail.lk

 ශ්‍රී ලංකා මානව හිමිකම් කොමිෂන් සභාව

එක්සත් ජාතීන්ගේ සංවිධානයේ සාමාජිකයෙකු ලෙස ශ්‍රී ලංකාව මානව හිමිකම් සුරැකීමට කැපවී කටයුතු කිරීම ශක්තිමත් කිරීමත් ජාත්‍යන්තර ගිවිසුම් මගින් ශ්‍රී ලංකාවට පවරා ඇති රාජකාරී හා පොරොන්දු ජාත්‍යන්තර මට්ටමින් ක්‍රියාවට නැංවීමත් 1996දී ශ්‍රී ලංකා රජය විසින් ප්‍රංශ මූලධර්ම යටතේ සකස්කරන ලද තත්ත්වයන් පවත්වා ගැනීමත් වෙනුවෙන් 1996 පනත් අංක 21 මගින් ශ්‍රී ලංකා මානව හිමිකම් කොමිෂන් සභාව ස්ථාපිත කරන ලදී.

රටේ මානව හිමිකම් ප්‍රවර්ධනයට හා ආරක්ෂා කිරීමට පිහිටුවා ඇති ශ්‍රී ලංකා මානව හිමිකම් කොමිෂන් සභාව ස්වාධීන කොමිෂන් සභාවකි.

ශ්‍රී ලංකා මානව හිමිකම් කොමිෂන් සභාව (HRCSL) ස්ථාපනය කිරීමට පෙර, නීත්‍යානුකූල නොවන අත්අඩංගුවට ගැනීම් හා රඳවා තබාගැනීම් සම්බන්ධයෙන් මානව හිමිකම් කාර්ය සාධක බලකාය (HRTF) සහ විශේෂ සැලකිලි හෝ වෙනස්කම් දැක්වීම තුරන් කිරීමේ සහ මූලික අයිතිවාසිකම් සමීක්ෂණය කිරීමේ කොමිෂන් සභාව (CEDMHR) ලෙස හදිසි නීතිය යටතේ වෙනස් ආයතන දෙකක් පිහිටුවන ලදී.

දර්ශනය

නීතියේ ආධිපත්‍ය කෙරෙහි ඇති ගරුත්වය ආරක‍්ෂා කිරීම, ප්‍රවර්ධනය කිරීම සහ සෑම පුරවැසියෙකුගේම මානව හිමිකමි ආරක‍්ෂා කිරීම.

මෙහෙවර

ජාත්‍යන්තරව පිළිගෙන ඇති මානව හිමිකමි ප්‍රතිපත්ති වලට අනුකූල වන ලෙසින් මානව හිමිකමි ආරක‍්ෂා වන ආකාරයෙන් වඩාත් හොඳ මානව හිමිකමි සංස්කෘතියක් බිහිකිරීම සඳහා, සියල්ලන්ගේම මානව හිමිකමි සුරක‍්ෂිත කිරීම සහ වැඩිදියුණු කිරීම උදෙසා ක්‍රියාත්මක වන්නා වූ සියළලුම කොටස්කරුවන්ගේ සමිබන්ධීකරණයෙන් සහ සහයෝගයෙන් ශ්‍රී ලංකා ආණ්ඩුක්‍රම ව්‍යාවස්ථාවෙහි තහවුරු කර ඇති සියලු පුරවැසියන්ගේ මූලික අයිතිවාසිකමි ආරක‍්ෂා කිරීමත්, ජාතික නීති සහ පිළිවෙත් ජාත්‍යන්තර නීතීන් සහ සමිමුතිවලට අනුකූල වන ලෙස සකස්කිරීමට රජයට මගපෙන්වීමත්, මානව හිමිකමි පිළිබඳ දැනුම දිවයින පුරා ජීවත්වන සියලු පුද්ගලයින් අතර ප්‍රචලිත කිරීමත් වෙයි.

 වාර්ෂික වාර්තා ; 2009

ශ්‍රී ලංකා මානව හිමිකම් කොමිෂණ් සභාවෙහි මුලික කාර්යයන් මොනවාද?
  • මුලික මානව හිමිකම් උල්ලංඝනයන්හිදී විමසීම් සහ විමර්ෂණය කිරීම
  • ශ්රී ලංකා රජයේ සියලුම ක්රියා පටිපාටීන්, ශ්රී ලංකා ආණ්ඩුක්රම ව්යවස්ථාව මගින් සහතිකකර ඇති මූලික අයිතිවාසිකම් වලට අනුව ඉටු කිරීමට වග බලා ගැනීම
  • මූලික අයිතිවාසිකම්වලට අනුකූලව නීති සම්පාදනය කිරීමටත්, පරිපාලන මගපෙන්වීම් කිරීමටත් රජයට උපදෙස් සහ සහයෝගය දීම
  • ජාතික නීති පද්ධතිය සහ පාලන ක්රමය ජාත්යන්තරව පිළිගත් මානව අයිතිවාසිකම්වලට අවනත වෙමින් ක්රියාත්මක කිරීමට රජයට උපදෙස් දීම
  • මානව හිමිකම් ක්ෂේත්රයේ ජාත්යන්තර මානව හිමිකම් ගිවිසුම් සහ අනෙකුත් ජාත්යන්තර මෙවලම් උපයෝගී කරගැනීමට රජයට උපදෙස් දීම
  • රට තුළ මානව හිමිකම් පිළිබඳ දැනුවත් බව ප්රවර්ධනය කිරීම

පුද්ගලයන්ට කුමන වර්ගයේ පැමිණිලිද කොමිසම සඳහා ඉදිරිපත් කළ හැකි වන්නේ?
1978) ආණ්ඩුක්රම ව්යවස්ථාවෙහි IIIවන පරිච්ඡේදය මගින් පිළිගත් මූලික ආයිතිවාසිකම් කඩවීම්වීම් සහ කඩවීමට අත්‍යසන්න අවස්ථාවලදී පැමිණිලි ඉදිරිපත් කළ හැකියි. 

කොමිසම සඳහා පැමිණිලි ඉදිරිපත් කළ හැක්කේ කා හටද?
  • පීඩාවට පත් පුද්ගලයන්ට
  • පුද්ගල කණ්ඩායම්වලට
  • පුද්ගලයෙක්/පුද්ගල කණ්ඩායමක් හෝ පීඩාවට පත් යම් පුද්ගල කණ්ඩායමක් වෙනුවෙන් පැමිණිලි ඉදිරිපත් කළ හැකිය

ශ්‍රේෂ්ඨාධිකරණයට පැමිණිලි සම්බන්ධව විමර්ශනය කොට වාර්තා කරන ලෙසට කොමිෂන් සභාවට දැන්විය හැකිද?
  • ඔව්. සමහර අවස්ථාවලදී ශ්‍රේෂ්ඨාධිකරණය විසින් පැමිණිලි සම්බන්ධව විමර්ශනය කොට ශ්‍රේෂ්ඨාධිකරණය වෙත වාර්තා කරන ලෙස කොමිෂන් සභාවට දන්වයි.
  • පැමිණිල්ලක අඩංගු විය යුතු කරුණු මොනවාද?
  • උල්ලංඝනය වී ඇති අයිතිවාසිකම කුමක්ද?
  • අයිතිවාසිකම් උල්ලංඝනය වී ඇත්තේ කාගේද?
  • අයිතිවාසිකම් හෝ හිමිකම් උල්ලංඝනය සඳහා වගකිව යුත්තේ කවුරුන්ද?
  • අයිතිවාසිකම් උල්ලංඝනය වූයේ කවරාකාරයෙන්ද?
  • අයිතිවාසිකම් උල්ලංඝනය වූයේ කවදාද? කොතැනකදීද?
  • ප්රතිකර්ම ලෙස ඔබ බලාපොරොත්තු වන්නේ මොනවාද?
මානව හිමිකම් කොමිෂන් සභාව: අභ්‍යන්තර මෙවලම් සහ ආයතන

(A) ශ්‍රී ලංකාවේ දින වකවානු අනුව සිදුවීම් පෙළ ගැස්ම

(B) ගෘහස්ත නීති සම්පාදනය

(i) ශ්‍රී ලංකා ආණ්ඩුක්‍රම ව්‍යවස්ථාව-1978 – 1978 ඉ / සි / ද
(ii) නීති සම්පාදනයට අදාළ මානව හිමිකම් සීමාව

-ළමයින්ට අදාළවන නීති පද්ධතිය - කාන්තාවන්ට අදාළවන නීති පද්ධතිය 
- ආබාධිත පුද්ගලයන්ට අදාළවන නීති පද්ධතිය 
-විදේශගත ශ්රමිකයන්ට අදාළවන නීති පද්ධතිය
-වැඩිහිටියන්ට අදාළවන නීති පද්ධතිය 
-භාෂාවට අදාළවන නීති පද්ධතිය 
-වධහිංසාවට පත් කිරීමට අදාළවන නීති පද්ධතිය    
-සිවිල් සහ දේශපාලනයට අදාළවන නීති පද්ධතිය  
- පරිසරයට අදාළවන නීති පද්ධතිය 
-සමාජ ආරක්ෂාවට අදාළවන නීති පද්ධතිය
- අනන්‍යතාවයට අදාළවන නීති පද්ධතිය
-මැතිවරණවලට අදාළවන නීති පද්ධතිය 
-රැකියාවන්ට අදාළ නීති පද්ධතිය      
 (C) විධිවිධාන/ආඥා පනත/නියෝග/ප්‍රඥප්ති
(D)චින්තනය හෘද සාක්ෂිය හා ආගමික නිදහස පිළිබඳ ශ්රී ලංකාවේ ශ්රේෂ්ඨාධිකරණය ලබාදුන් සුවිශේෂී නඩු තීන්දු
-චින්තනය හෘද සාක්ෂිය හා ආගමික නිදහස
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වධහිංසාවන්ගෙන් නිදහස් වීම
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සමානාත්මතාවයේ අයිතිවාසිකම්
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පුද්ගලික ස්වාධීනත්වය හා අපරාධ ක්‍රියාවලිවලට අදාළ අයිතිවාසිකම්
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භාෂණයේ සහ ප්රකාශනයේ නිදහස
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රැස්වීමේ නිදහස
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ඇසුරු කිරීමට ඇති නිදහස
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කැමති රැකියාවක නියැළීමේ නිදහස
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කැමති ස්ථානයකට යාමට සහ ගොස් පදිංචි වීමට ඇති නිදහස
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(E) ශ්‍රී ලංකා මානව හිමිකම් කොමිෂන් සභාව මගින් නිර්දේෂිත සංධිස්ථාන

(F) ශ්‍රී ලංකා මානව හිමිකම් කොමිෂන් සභාවේ තත්ත්වය

ශ්‍රී  ලංකාවේ ජාත්යන්තර මානව හිමිකම් නීතිමය ලියවිලිවල තත්ත්වය
-නීතිමය ලියවිලි

(G) ශ්රී ලංකා ගිවිසුම් සංවිධානවල වාර්තාවන්ගේ තත්ත්වය

ශ්‍රී ලංකා ගිවිසුම් සංවිධානවල වාර්තාවන්ගේ තත්ත්වය
නීතිමය ලියවිලි

(H)ගිවිසුම් සංවිධානවල කමිටු මගින් කළ අවසන් සොයා බැලීම්

ගිවිසුම් සංවිධානවල කමිටු මගින් කළ අවසන් සොයා බැලීම්
කමිටුව

ගිවිසුම් සංවිධානවල කමිටු මගින් කළ අවසන් සොයා බැලීම්
කමිටුව දිනය වාර්තාව
සංක්රමණික සේවකයින් සම්බන්ධ කමිටුව 14.12.2009 CMW/C/LKA/CO/1
වධහිංසාවන්ට එරෙහි කමිටුව 15.12.2005 15.05.1998 CAT/C/LKA/CO/2 A/53/44(SUPP)
මානව හිමිකම් කමිටුව 01.12.2003 27.07.1995 CCPR/CO/79/LKA CCPR/C/79/Add.56
ළමා අයිතිවාසිකම් පිළිබඳ කමිටුව 02.07.2003 21.06.1995 CRC/C/15/Add.207 CRC/C/15/Add.40
කාන්තාවන්ට එරෙහි වෙනස්කම් පිටුදැකීමේ කමිටුව 01.02.2002 28.01.1998 A/57/38(SUPP) A/47/38(SUPP)
ජාතීන්ට වෙනස්කම් කිරීම පිටුදැකීමේ කමිටුව 14.09.2001 22.09.1995 A/56/18(SUPP) A/50/18(SUPP)
ආර්ථික, සමාජීය හා සංස්කෘතික අයිතිවාසිකම් පිළිබඳ කමිටුව

(I) එක්සත් ජාතීන්ගේ විශේෂ ක්රියාපටිපාටීන්ට යටත් වාර්තා

(J) ආයතන

(i) ව්යවස්ථාපිත මණ්ඩල

(ii)දෙපාර්තමේන්තු
(K) අධිකරණ හෝ උසාවි
Thirty two women in 'oldest profession' caught
16.06.1998 E/C.12/1/Add.24


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