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Sri Lanka: UN experts say army chief appointment is “affront to victims” of rights abuses

Image: Shavendra Silva, joined the army in 1984 and was its chief of staff from January ( REUTERS/Dinuka Liyanawatte )

GENEVA (27 August 2019) – A group of UN experts expressed serious concern at the appointment of Lieutenant General Shavendra Silva as Sri Lanka’s army chief, and urged the Government to advance long overdue reforms of the security sector and investigate past abuses.

On 18 August 2019, President Maithripala Sirisena appointed Lieutenant General Shavendra Silva as Commander of the Sri Lanka Army, raising concerns of numerous actors, including the High Commissioner for Human Rights, due to his alleged involvement in serious human rights violations during the 25-year long civil war.

“The appointment of Lieutenant General Silva to the highest ranks in Sri Lankan’s Army, while facing allegations of this nature, is an affront to the victims and a harrowing sign of the perpetuation of impunity in the country, which risks undermining the trust of Sri Lankan society on state institutions and fuelling further destabilization,” said the experts.

Lieutenant General Silva was the Commanding Officer of the 58th Division of the SLA during the last stages of the conflict that ended in May 2009. UN reports have implicated him and his troops in alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity. In 2012, Lieutenant General Silva was removed from the UN Special Advisory Group on Peace Keeping Operations due to the allegations. “The allegations against Lieutenant General Silva and his division have not been properly investigated to date,” the UN experts said.

The experts recalled that the Government of Sri Lanka had voluntarily committed to provide accountability for all serious human rights violations and abuses committed during the war, as reflected in Human Rights Council resolution 30/1. “We express serious concern at the lack of progress in investigating and prosecuting these crimes, and in reforming the country’s security sector despite the serious allegations against some of its members. We urge the authorities to urgently move forward in these areas,” the experts said.

The lack of tangible progress on emblematic causes and the serious limitations of the justice system in addressing human rights violations was raised with the Government by the Special Rapporteur on the promotion of truth, justice, reparations and guarantees of non-recurrence, at the end of a country visit in October 2017. “If Sri Lanka is unwilling and unable to investigate these and other allegations the international community must explore other ways to achieve accountability including universal jurisdiction principles”, said the experts referring to the process which enables war crimes to be prosecuted in a court of any country regardless of where the crimes were committed.

“It defies understanding that a person suspected of leading in the commission of serious violations of human rights and international human rights law will be put at the head of an institution which stands to be investigated for these violations and reformed to avoid their recurrence,” said the UN experts.

“We recall that the comprehensive adoption of transitional justice measures such as accountability and guarantees of non-recurrence, including security sector reform, are essential in any endeavour to strengthen and consolidate the rule of law and avoid a relapse into violence. The recent measures and the lack of commitment to a genuine transitional justice process preposterously aim to the contrary.”

OHCHR

 

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