Tamil Diplomat

Sri Lanka’s justice mechanism will not be credible: say Forty Tamil Organizations

Forty Tamil organizations, including three constituent parties of Tamil National Alliance (TNA) , have in a joint statement on Tuesday, reiterated the demand for an UN-led  “hybrid” judicial mechanism to investigate and try war crimes cases in  Sri Lanka.

The demand, made by Eelam People’s Revolutionary Liberation Front (EPRLF); Peoples’ Liberation Organization of Tamil Eelam (PLOTE); Tamil Eelam Liberation Organization (TELO); Tamil National Peoples‘ Front (TNPF) among others, stressed that  “a mechanism, which is by and large managed and controlled by the Sri Lankan state, will not in our opinion be deemed credible by the victims in Sri Lanka”.

“We reiterate the firm conviction of the victims of the ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka, a majority of whom are Tamils, that accountability and justice can only be truly delivered through an international criminal justice process,” the statement said.

See full statement below:

We release this statement in response to the draft resolution titled ‘Promoting Reconciliation, Accountability and Human Rights in Sri Lanka’ tabled under Item 2 and scheduled for debate and adoption on the 30th of September 2015.

1. We reiterate the firm conviction of the victims of the ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka, a majority of whom are Tamils, that accountability and justice can only be truly delivered through an international criminal justice process.

2. We however in deference to the Report of the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights’ Inquiry on Sri Lanka (the OISL report) were willing to consider the possibility of achieving justice and accountability through a credible hybrid mechanism in the event of the mechanism being led and managed by its international component under the aegis of the UN.

3. We regret that Operative Paragraphs 4 and 6 of the draft resolution do not adequately provide for the setting up of such a credible hybrid mechanism. The paragraphs when read together only seek to provide the appearance of credibility to a domestic process through the appointment of ‘commonwealth and other foreign judges, defence lawyers, and authorized prosecutors and investigators’. The Sri Lankan Government appointing foreign judges to its own judicial mechanism will not address the structural factors that inhibit the domestic structures in Sri Lanka, reasons for which are detailed in the OISL report. A mechanism, which is by and large managed and controlled by the Sri Lankan state, will not in our opinion be deemed credible by the victims in Sri Lanka.

4. We also deeply regret that references to demilitarization of the North-East and an increased role for the OHCHR which were included in the initial draft of the resolution have been removed from the current draft tabled before the UNHRC. The current draft resolution in Operative Paragraph 3 provides for a ‘national’ victims consultation process thereby in effect excluding numerous Tamil victims who live outside of Sri Lanka in fear of persecution. The testimonies of these victims from the diaspora were key to the OISL inquiry. We note with deep regret that in the interest of arriving at a consensus resolution with Sri Lanka that many key components of the initial draft have been omitted.

5. We urge you to reconsider the current draft of the resolution and to redraft it so that it truly serves the purpose of providing the basis for delivering accountability and justice in Sri Lanka.

Signatories:

Political Parties

1. Eelam People’s Revolutionary Liberation Front (EPRLF)

2. Democratic People’s Liberation Front (PLOTE)

3. Tamil Eelam Liberation Organisation (TELO)

4. Tamil National People’s Front (TNPF)

Civil Society Organisations & Trade Unions

1. Tamil Action Committee for an International Accountability Mechanism (TACIAM)

2. Tamil Civil Society Forum (TCSF)

3. Centre for Human Rights and Development (CHRD)

4. Home for Human Rights (HHR)

5. The Social Architects (TSA)

6. Ceylon Teachers Union

7. Vavuniya Citizens Committee

8. Mannar Citizens Committee

9. Council of Non Governmental Organisations, Jaffna

10. Tamil Lawyers Forum

11. North East Coordinating Committee of the Relatives of the Forcibly Disappeared

12. Jaffna University Teachers Association

13. Jaffna University Employees Union

14. Foundation of Changers – Batticaloa

15. East Civil society Activist Alliance – Batticaloa

16. Commission for Justice and Peace of the Catholic Diocese of Jaffna

17. Batticaloa Social Workers Network

18. Paduvaankarai People’s Alliance

19. Mannar Economic and Social Development Organization

20. Hindu Development Society Karaithivu – Amparai

21. Tamilar Valvurimai Maiyam

22. Valikamam North Development Board, Jaffna.

23. Batticaloa District Civil Society

24. Tamil Civil Society – Trincomalee (TCST)

25. Chamber of Commerce and Insustries – Jaffna

26. Ceylon Tamil Teachers Association

27. Jaffna District Fishermen’s Cooperative Society Unions Federation

28. Jaffna Economists Association

29. Rural Labourers Society – Jaffna District

30. Northern Province Fisher People’s Unity

31. Jaffna District Fisheries Solidarity Movement

32. Valikamam South West Fisheries Co-operative Societies Federation

33. Trincomalee Tamils Development Federation

34. Trincomalee Women Headed Families Association

35. Batticaloa Sri Mamangeswarar Thrift Co-operative Society

36. Batticaloa District Pensioners Association

37. Batticaloa Municipal Tax Payers Association

38. Batticaloa Maamangam Development Society

39. Batticaloa SriMamangeswarar Hindu association

40. Batticaloa SriMamangeswarar Women’s Association