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AFP: Sri Lanka’s government announced Wednesday a probe into allegations police were sexually abusing suspects and still using torture seven years after the end of the island’s civil war.
UN human rights official Juan E. Mendez said earlier this month that he had found “credible evidence” of detainees being tortured and disappearances since the end of the war in 2009.
The government pledged an investigation after ministers met to discuss Mendez’s allegations on Tuesday, spokesman Rajitha Senaratne told reporters in Colombo.
“We are going to investigate this and ensure that there is no room for recurrence,” Senaratne said, without giving details. Official sources said an internal police investigation was already underway.
Mendez, UN special rapporteur on torture, conducted a nine-day fact-finding mission in Sri Lanka earlier this month.
He said he had heard testimony that between 16,000 and 22,000 people had gone missing during the conflict and its immediate aftermath, and that police were still resorting to torturing suspects.
Suspects have been beaten with sticks or wires on the soles of the feet, suspended for hours while handcuffed, asphyxiated using plastic bags drenched in kerosene and hung upside down, he said.
In some cases, victims had chili powder thrown on their face and eyes and there were “sexual violations, including mutilation of the genital area and rubbing of chili paste or onions on the genital area”.
Mendez expressed hope that President Maithripala Sirisena’s new government would deliver on promises of accountability for war crimes and an end to rights abuses.
Sirisena’s administration, which took power in January last year, has promised to investigate rights abuses following allegations that up to 40,000 ethnic Tamil civilians were killed by government forces in 2009 as they crushed rebel forces.
Inter-ministerial committee to be appointed to deal with HR
The Government is to appoint an inter-ministerial committee to consider all facts related to human rights for the preparation of a National Action Plan on Human Rights for the period 2017-2021.
Cabinet has approved the proposal made by Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera to form the committee, the Government Information Department said.
The Government says it’s policy is to uphold, promote and protect the human rights of Sri Lankan people and so it must strengthen the national reconciliation process, freedom and democracy and also create the background for the economic development of the country.
As the five year human rights action plan implemented from 2012-2016 expires this year the proposal made by Samaraweera to appoint an inter-ministerial Committee to consider all facts related to human rights for the preparation of a National Action Plan on Human Rights for the period 2017-2021, was approved by the Cabinet of Ministers. (Colombo Gazette)