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Sunday, December 8, 2024

Nepal War Crime Laws May Grant Amnesty To Civil War Offenders: Lawyers

Image: In 2017 a Nepal court  sentenced three former soldiers to 20 years in jail for killing a teenage girl during the decade-long Maoist insurgency.

Both government forces and former rebels are accused of carrying out torture, killings, rapes and forced disappearances during Nepal’s Maoist insurgency.

(Agence France-Presse) Kathmandu:

Newly amended laws in Nepal to tackle crimes committed during its decade-long bitter civil war could instead deprive victims of justice and grant amnesty to those culpable, rights lawyers warned Thursday.

Both government forces and former rebels are accused of carrying out torture, killings, rapes and forced disappearances during Nepal’s Maoist insurgency.

The conflict ended in 2006 with a peace deal that brought the rebels into government and promised justice for the victims, which included more than 16,000 dead and around 1,000 missing.

Nepal’s two transitional justice commissions began operating in 2015, but failed to resolve a single case, despite receiving over 60,000 complaints of murders, torture and unexplained disappearances.

In August, parliament passed long-delayed amendments to the transitional justice act aiming to address this.

But a team of international rights lawyers, in a report released Thursday and based on a research mission to Nepal, warned the changes could do the opposite and exclude “swathes of victims” from justice.

The lawyers added that the new law “permits amnesties which would prevent criminal accountability for gross violations of human rights”.

The lawyers said that until addressed, the “doors to the regular justice system should not be closed”.

The group was supported by the rights organisation Peace Brigades International (PBI).

Kishali Pinto-Jayawardena, a constitutional lawyer from Sri Lanka, and part of the team, said effective justice was not possible so long as the law “excludes certain gross violations, opens the door for amnesties and allows for the exclusion of certain victims”.

Just two convictions related to crimes committed during the civil war crimes have been handed down in civilian courts.

Read the press release issued by the PBI here
Read the Full report as a PDF:Eng+IDIL+Nepal+Report+2024

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