International rights body poised to downgrade Lankan Human Rights Commission

At its virtual session in October, the Sub-Committee on Accreditation (SCA) of the Global Alliance of National Human Rights Institutions (GANHRI) had recommended the downgrading of the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka (HRCSL) to “B status” for its structural flaws and unsatisfactory performance. The HRCSL currently enjoys A status.

However, the downgrading will not take effect till after a year in 2022, the SCA clarified. In the interim, the HRCSL has an opportunity to provide documentary evidence necessary to establish its continued conformity with the Paris Principles.

The SCA said that in February 2021, it had received correspondence from civil society organizations regarding the flawed appointment process of the HRCSL, the lack of pluralism in the HRCSL’s membership and staff, as well as its ineffectiveness in discharging its human rights mandate.

 

The SCA conducted a telephone interview with the HRCSL in which the latter was asked to provide responses to the following issues: (a) the selection and appointment process that took place for the current Chairperson and Commissioners of HRCSL; (b) how pluralism is ensured in the current membership of the Commissioners and staff; (c) how the 20th amendment of the Constitution of Sri Lanka (20A) has affected the HRCSL’s ability to realize and perform its mandate; (d) the steps taken by HRCSL to respond to recommendations made by international human rights mechanisms; (e) actions taken, including public statements/positions on reports of serious human rights violations including surveillance, intimidation, judicial harassment of human rights defenders, excessive use of force and arrest and detention of protesters, deaths in police custody and torture by law enforcement officials, and the use of the Prevention of Terrorism Act.

“While the SCA acknowledges that the HRCSL has provided some information in relation to the above mentioned issues, in both its interview and written submission, it considers the responses insufficient to address the substance of its concerns. In view of the information before it, the SCA is concerned that the institution’s independence and effectiveness have not been sufficiently maintained in line with the requirements of the Paris Principles,” the SCA said.

 

It encouraged the HRCSL to continue to actively engage with the Office of the High Commissioner of Human Rights, the GANHRI and other rights bodies as well as relevant stakeholders at international, regional and national levels, in order to continue strengthening its institutional framework and working methods.

20 th.Constitutional Amendment

The 20A passed in October 2020, had abolished the Constitutional Council, a 10-member body with three seats reserved for civil society representatives, that was tasked to recommend candidates for appointment as HRCSL Commissioners. In its place, the 20A reinstated the Parliamentary Council, composed exclusively of members of parliament, with “power to make only observations” to the President of Sri Lanka with respect to the appointment of HRCSL Commissioners.

Appointing Process

In the recent selection and appointment process in December 2020, the government did not advertise the vacancies, nor did it detail the criteria for the assessment of the candidates. This resulted in appointments made in a manner that was not wholly transparent to civil society, the SCA noted.

The HRCSL’s reply to this was that the Parliamentary Council is composed of parliamentarians who represent the public and different groups in society and therefore they knew the best interests of the country. The HRCSL also pointed out that the publication of vacancies is not a legal requirement.

In view of the available information before it, the SCA was of the view that the process currently enshrined in law was not sufficiently participatory and transparent. The process also did not provide sufficient opportunities for consultation with or participation of civil society.

READ: US Treasury sanctions Chinese face recognition company for rights violations in Xinjiang

“Based on the HRCSL written and oral response to the issues above, the SCA is of the view that the HRCSL has not effectively engaged on and publicly addressed all human rights issues, including allegations of deaths in custody and torture, nor has it spoken out in a manner that promotes and protects all human rights.”

The SCA held that a national human rights institution mandate should be interpreted in a “broad, liberal, and purposive manner to promote a progressive definition of human rights which includes all rights set out in international, regional and domestic instruments.”

Further “National Human Rights Institutions (NHRIs) are expected to promote and ensure respect for all human rights, democratic principles and the strengthening of the rule of law in all circumstances, and without exception. Where serious violations of human rights are imminent, NHRIs are expected to conduct themselves with a heightened level of vigilance and independence.” Further, the SCA highlights that regular and constructive engagement with human rights defenders and civil society organizations is essential for NHRIs to fulfil their mandates effectively.”

Source:(newsin.asia)

Posted in Uncategorized

Sri Lanka: Opposition MPs representing Tamil-speaking people underscore 13th Amendment

A group of Opposition MPs in Sri Lanka, representing Tamils from the north and east, hill country (Malaiyaha Tamils), and Tamil-speaking Muslims on Sunday sought the full implementation of the 13th Amendment to ensure “existing rights are not snatched away”.

The contentious 13th Amendment, born out of the Indo-Lanka Accord of 1987, has remained in Sri Lanka’s Constitution for nearly four decades without seeing full implementation, as successive regimes in Colombo have refused to part with power over crucial areas including land, and law and order. Some within the Rajapaksa administration are calling for its repeal deeming the provincial councils, created consequent to the Amendment, “white elephants”. The 13th Amendment is the only legislative guarantee thus far for a measure of power devolution that many in the southern Sinhala majority consider “too much”, and most in the Tamil polity consider “too little”.

India has repeatedly asked the Sri Lankan leadership to ensure the full implementation of the 13th Amendment. While Colombo has in turn given many assurances to “go beyond” the legislation, to ensure meaningful devolution, “that has not happened so far,” said said senior Tamil politician and Tamil National Alliance Leader R. Sampanthan. “We have gathered today from different political parties to discuss the situation. We exchanged our views on the subject, and will be taking this discussion forward,” he told a press conference, following the MPs’ meet at a Colombo hotel on Sunday.

 

“There is now talk of a new Constitution, but simultaneously we see the government’s efforts such as ‘One Country One Law’,” the 88-year-old Trincomalee parliamentarian said, of an ongoing initiative of the government that critics fear might further impair even the limited legislative powers of the Provincial Councils

The parliamentarians will finalise a “comprehensive document” by December 21, said Mano Ganesan, Leader of the Tamil Progressive Alliance that represents Malaiyaha Tamils. “We are challenging this government and asking them to fully implement what is already in our Constitution. Nothing has changed in this country 12 years after the war ended. Our message is not only to the Sri Lankan leadership, but also to India, the international community and UN bodies,” he said. As a signatory to the Accord of 1987, “India has an obligation,” Mr. Ganesan added. The final document coming out of the discussion would also be sent to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, according to the organisers.

Sri Lanka’s nine Provincial Councils are defunct for about two years, after their terms lapsed in 2018 and 2019. “Meanwhile, the Centre through various presidential task forces is trying to snatch our powers. If that has to be stopped, we must emphasise our rights highlighting what is guaranteed in our Constitution,” said Rauf Hakeem, Sri Lanka Muslim Congress Leader and legislator.

Jaffna MP and former Northern Provincial Council Chief Minister C.V. Wigneswaran said in demanding the full implementation of the 13th Amendment, the MPs were not abandoning the call for a federal political solution to Sri Lanka’s historic Tamil national question. “While we don’t see the Amendment as a permanent solution, we recognise its importance in the interim, until there is an acceptable permanent solution,” he said, adding: “India will be able to intervene only as long as the 13th Amendment is there.”

Tamil polity divided

In this renewed emphasis on the 13th Amendment, Sri Lanka’s Tamil polity appears divided. While TNA constituents Tamil Eelam Liberation Organisation (TELO) and People’s Liberation Organisation of Tamil Eelam (PLOTE) are part of the MPs’ initiative centred on the legislation, the Illankai Tamil Arasu Kachchi (ITAK) – chief constituent of the TNA that Mr. Samapanthan and Mr. Sumanthiran belong to – have been focusing on the prospect of a political solution in the promised new Constitution, turning the spotlight away from the 35-year-old Amendment that few Tamils consider adequate.

In August this year, Mr. Samapanthan wrote to President Gotabaya Rajapaksa expressing keenness to meet him and discuss the new Constitution. “The 13th Amendment to the Constitution was enacted in 1988 this was found to be inadequate and since 1988 every successive government has taken steps and agreed to build on the 13th Amendment to bring about meaningful devolution. There has been substantial consensus derived from these processes,” Mr. Sampanthan said in the letter reminding Mr. Rajapaksa of a pending meeting. President Rajapaksa was scheduled to meet the TNA in June, but the meeting was postponed, and his office is yet to announce a new date.

Further, TNA’s Jaffna legislator M.A. Sumanthiran recently led a delegation to the United States, where the Alliance sought a US-India collaboration in pushing for a political solution in Sri Lanka by way of a constitutional settlement. Remarking on the MPs’ initiative, Mr. Sumanthiran said in a Jaffna meeting on Saturday: “If 13th Amendment were enough, why would we have lost so many lives? Lakhs of our people died after it came into effect… The Amendment is not a meaningful way of devolving power. Even [PM and former President] Mahinda Rajapaksa has acknowledged that in the past. Why are we now asking for something that is not meaningful?” The TNA has been in discussion with India at every stage, he added.

Source:The Hindu

Suspended Chinese solar power projects will not be given to India : Dr.ramesh

Government spokesman Dr. Ramesh Pathirana dismissed media reports that the solar power generation projects in the north about to be launched by China but abandoned under controversial circumstances would be given to India.

He told the media that neither the government discussed it nor the government intends to entrust the construction of a solar power generation project to Adani Group of India as suggested by interested parties.

The Chinese Embassy in Colombo has announced that China has decided to suspend the construction of a hybrid solar power (renewable energy) project in three islands in the north, namely, Nagadeepa, Analthivue and Delft off Jaffna but decided to suspend the project owing to security concerns raised by a third party. Following the awarding of the contract to China in early this year, India vehemently protested to the awarding of the contract to a Chinese company citing security concerns.

Responding to a journalist at the news briefing, Minister Dr. Pathirana flatly rejected that the government was in a move to give the renewable energy project to Adanis of India.

PMD confirms Prez leaves to Singapore on private visit

President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has left for Singapore this morning on a private visit, as confirmed by the Presidents Media Division today (13).

Earlier today, The Morning exclusively reported of this trip whereas the travel itinerary and purpose of travel was not revealed by the President’s Spokesperson Kingsley Rathnayake.

“The President will be travelling out of the island today, but due to reasons, I cannot reveal the final destination or the purpose of travel. But, he will be travelling today,” said Rathnayake this morning.

Sources said he is likely to have gone for a medical check-up.

Posted in Uncategorized

India Working on Economic Package to Aid Sri Lanka, ET Reports

(Bloomberg) India is working on an urgent package of assistance for Sri Lanka to help the island nation out of an economic crisis, the Economic Times newspaper reported Saturday, citing officials that it didn’t identify.

The measures will cover areas including food and health security, energy security and a currency swap, the officials said. The move follows a recent visit by Sri Lanka’s finance minister to India, the paper said. The plan is to extend credit lines for Sri Lanka to import food, medicine, fuel and other essential items from India.

Sri Lanka is at risk of a possible default amid dwindling foreign-exchange reserves, even as its central bank governor said he’s confident the government will service all its overseas debt. It’s also trying to revive its Covid-hit tourism industry with the reopening of borders following extended pandemic lockdowns, and is expecting increased remittance inflows as more Sri Lankans head overseas to seek employment.

The two countries have “identified ways and means through which the existing bilateral economic relationship between the two countries could be further broadened and deepened,” ET said, citing a statement from the Sri Lankan government.

Posted in Uncategorized

EC ready for PC polls

The Election Commission (EC) will shortly begin preparatory work for the delayed Provincial Council (PC) elections, a media release from Elections Commissioner General Saman Sri Ratnayake stated yesterday.

Training programs for District, Deputy and Assistant Election Commissioners and the staff of district offices on the preparatory work for the PC elections will be conducted in the coming weeks.

The training programs will cover preparation of the voters’ registers under electoral divisions, selection of polling stations, nominations and postal voting process, enforcing election laws, conducting the election, counting and the releasing of results.

The Commission members also decided at its meeting on December 10 to publish a commemorative booklet on the work it has been doing.

The Election Commission comprises Chairman Nimal G. Punchihewa, S.B. Divaratne, M.M. Mohamed, K.P.P. Pathirana and Mrs. P.S.M. Charles.

SLFP moves to revive UPFA, PA amid growing rift with ruling alliance

The Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) is working towards reactivating the United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA) and the People’s Alliance (PA) with the aim of forming a broad front as it increasingly tries to distance itself from the ruling Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP), a senior party member said.

SLFP Vice Chairman Rohana Luxman Piyadasa told the Sunday Times yesterday that talks had already begun with parties represented in Parliament and even parties not represented in Parliament. The idea of reactivating the UPFA and the PA was first discussed at the SLFP’s Central Committee (CC) meeting several weeks ago following talks between a group of Government coalition parties which were opposed to the sale of Yugadanavi power plant shares to a US-based company.

The UPFA and the PA are already registered with the Election Commission, with Mahinda Amaraweera being the UPFA General Secretary and Lasantha Alagiyawanna the PA General Secretary.

As a first step, a meeting of parties that earlier came under the UPFA banner was convened, followed by wider discussions with minor political parties that are not represented in Parliament, Prof. Piyadasa said.

He, however, said the focus for now was not on any election. “The Government is yet to call an election and we don’t know when one will be held. Our focus now is on reactivating this alliance and moving forward to form a strong, broad front.”

The SLFP has been increasingly at loggerheads with the SLPP over the past few months. All SLFP MPs, including party chairman and former President Maithripala Sirisena, voted with the Government on Friday to pass the Budget, but tensions continue to play out publicly, with accusations flying back and forth between the two sides.

During a media briefing in Kandy yesterday, Prof. Piyadasa lashed out at the SLPP over the “arrogant attitude” it displayed towards other coalition partners from the earliest days of the Government. “The repercussions of this attitude are being felt today. The country is plagued by many social issues and the people are wondering whether they have a leader they can trust,” he remarked.

Posted in Uncategorized

This isn’t just a visa ban but a warning signal – Yasmin Sooka

The ban imposed by the United states isn’t just a visa ban against low level alleged perpetrators but a warning signal to their commanders, many of whom are still in positions of power, that they too are extremely vulnerable, said the Executive Director of the International Truth and Justice Project (ITJP), Yasmin Sooka.

The United States department of state has announced bans on two more Sri Lankan military officials for human rights violations, as the State Department expand sanctions on those accused of war crimes.

“Setting up presidential commissions to recommend dropping charges and issuing presidential pardons won’t safeguard the commanding officers, who still have a case to answer for gross violations of human rights,” she added.

See the full statement below:

10th December 2021

Human Rights Day Press release: US designation of Sri Lankans – Seeds of Hope for Victim Families.

Johannesburg: Victim families and human rights groups have welcomed the designation by the United States Government of a Sri Lankan naval intelligence official allegedly involved in enforced disappearances in 2008 and 2009, as well as a soldier convicted of extrajudicial killings of Tamils in 2000 but then controversially pardoned1.

The two named individuals are Chandana Hettiarachchi and Sunil Ratnayake respectively. Lt. Cmdr. HMPCK Hettiarachchi was a naval intelligence officer and a prime suspect, who absconded from justice, in the Fort Magistrate’s Trincomalee 11 abduction case, as well as one of the accused who was acquitted by an all-Sinhala jury for the killing of Tamil MP, Nadaraja Raviraj2.

According to Sri Lankan court documents, Hettiarachchi allegedly ran one of two special intelligence teams responsible for abductions and disappearances, operating mainly from Colombo but transporting detainees in vans to the naval base in Trincomalee3.

In Colombo, he is alleged to have worked closely with the aide-de-camp to then Navy Commander Wasantha Karannagoda. Only this week, Karannagoda, who had been charged in the same court case, was appointed as a provincial governor after the new government decided not to pursue charges against him.

While former Staff Sergeant Sunil Ratnayake was pardoned in 2020 after being convicted of the murder of 8 Tamil civilians in 2000 including three children. His case was one of very few cases where a soldier had ever been tried for war crimes in Sri Lanka and his pardon caused consternation internationally, signalling that domestic accountability is now an impossibility.

A relative whose loved one was among the eleven people who disappeared in 2008-9 at the hands of the Sri Lankan Navy, says she will now take heart from the news: “When we saw that all the charges were being dropped in the magistrate’s court in Sri Lanka, we gave up. I said to my family, what’s the point of carrying on asking for justice,” said one of the Trincomalee 11 family members.

“But now the seed of hope is growing again in my heart and you are watering it with this news. We are really happy that the Americans could at least do this; it gives us a little strength and hope. When I saw Hettiarachchi’s name on the list, I took a deep breath,” she added. Her statement confirms how important accountability for past violations remains for victims in Sri Lanka.

The ITJP’s 2019 report The Navy: A Collective Blind Eye4 analysed in detail the evidence gathered in Sri Lanka during the police investigation into the disappearances by the Navy and cross referenced it with the testimony of other survivors, eyewitnesses and insiders and the command structure at the time. The study found large number of top Sri Lankan navy commanders were allegedly complicit in the torture, disappearance and murder that occurred inside naval sites from at least 2008-2014 which resulted in the ITJP calling for a review of engagement with the Sri Lankan Navy.

“This isn’t just a visa ban against low level alleged perpetrators but a warning signal to their commanders, many of whom are still in positions of power, that they too are extremely vulnerable,” said the Executive Director of the International Truth and Justice Project (ITJP), Yasmin Sooka. “Setting up presidential commissions to recommend dropping charges and issuing presidential pardons won’t safeguard the commanding officers, who still have a case to answer for gross violations of human rights,” she added.

1 https://www.state.gov/the-united-states-promotes-accountability-for-human-rights-violations-and-abuses/

2 Tamil MP Nadaraja Raviraj was murdered 10 November 2006. An all-Sinhalese jury in 2016 acquitted all those on trial. After his release from prison, HMPCK Hettiarachchi came back to work at Navy Headquarters in Colombo despite being a suspect in the 11 Trincomalee abduction case. This is testament to the protection he benefited from at the highest level as generally speaking, as a suspect in a criminal case, he should have been suspended.

3 “Hettiarachchi and Wickramasuriya put the Dehiwala boys to a white van. Mahesh said that they were taken to be handed over to Ranasinghe in Trincomalee”, said Susantha Petty officer XC 30543, Northern camp (Kankesanthurai), 14 August 2018. Police Investigation documents. “Hettiarachchi has given him cash to get them food”, said Wijekoon Mudiyanselage Chandrakumar Leading seamen XS 37614 Puttlam Camp, 14 August 2018. Court documents (Ref 13 March 2017 B report) quote the disappeared youth Rajeev Naganathan calling his father in Feb. 2009 and alleging Hettiarachchi had brought Ali Anver to Chaitya Road Naval HQ and had him suspended and beaten. In March, the Naganathan family received an SMS saying Hettiarachchi had moved their son and other prisoners to the high security naval base in Trincomalee.

US sanctions more Sri Lankan soldiers over war crimes

The United States has announced bans on two more Sri Lankan military officials for human rights violations, as the State Department expand sanctions on those accused of war crimes.

Chandana Hettiarachchi, a Sri Lankan naval intelligence officer, involved in the ‘Trinco 11’ disappearances and Sunil Ratnayake, a soldier guilty of murdering at least 8 Tamils, are now barred from entry to the US.

Their families are also barred from entry.

The men become the second and third Sri Lankan soldiers to be barred from entry to the United States over their involvement in war crimes. In 2020, Sri Lankan army chief Shavendra Silva was barred from entering the USA “due to credible information of his involvement, through command responsibility, in gross violations of human rights”.

“We are determined to put human rights at the center of our foreign policy, and we reaffirm this commitment by using appropriate tools and authorities to draw attention to and promote accountability for human rights violations and abuses, no matter where they occur,” said the US State Department in a statement this evening.

The US named the Sri Lankan soldiers as;

Chandana Hettiarachchi, a Sri Lankan naval intelligence officer, for his involvement in gross violations of human rights, namely, the flagrant denial of the right to liberty of at least eight “Trincomalee 11” victims, from 2008 to 2009.

Sunil Ratnayake, a former Staff Sergeant in the Sri Lanka Army, for his involvement in gross violations of human rights, namely the extrajudicial killings of at least eight Tamil villagers in December 2000.

“The designation of these two Sri Lankan individuals is not the only action we are taking in support of accountability for gross violations of human rights in Sri Lanka,” the statement added.

Chandana Hettiarachchi

Lieutenant Commander Chandana Prasad Hettiarachchi alias ‘Navy Sampath’, had earlier evaded arrest over the abduction and forced disappearance of 11 people, who were predominantly Tamil. He was later released on bail.

All 11 victims were abducted in Colombo between August 25, 2008 and February 2009 and held for ransom at navy bases in Colombo and Trincomalee, before being presumably murdered.

The eleven victims have been named as Kasthuriarachchi John, Thyagarajah Jegan, Rajiv Naganathan, Soosaipillai Amalan, Soosaipillai Roshan, Kasthuriarachchi Anton, Prageeth Vishvanathan, Thilakeshwaran Ramalingam, Mohamed Dilan, Mohamed Saajid and Ali Anwar. Two fathers and their sons are among the victims and their ages range from 17 to 50 at the time of abduction.

The United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) has tracked investigations and prosecutions relating to emblematic cases in Sri Lanka, including the abduction of the 11 youth. UN Human Rights commissioner Michelle Bachelet, noted in a report earlier this year that “not a single emblematic case has been brought to a successful conclusion or conviction.”

See an excerpt of an interview with the mother of one of the victims below.

Sergeant Sunil Ratnayake, was convicted in 2015 for the murder of eight civilians (including children) in Jaffna in 2000. However, in 2020, he was released following a presidential pardon.

He had been sentenced to death in 2015 for the murder of the 8 Tamils, including 3 children, in the town of Mirusuvil. The Tamils had been arrested by Sri Lankan security forces on the10th of December 2000. The following day their bodies were found in a mass grave with their throats slashed, according to the District Medical Officer’s post-mortem report. All but two of the bodies had been stripped naked. The youngest to have been murdered was a 5-year-old child.

The killings have since been dubbed the Mirusuvil massacre.

Ponnathurai Maheswaran, who managed to survive and escape from the army, testified in court and identified at least five of the soldiers responsible. After a lengthy court process only Ratnayake, a member of the military’s elite Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol (LRRP), had been sentenced. The other men were cleared of all charges.

Posted in Uncategorized

Testimony of John Sifton on Accountability and Human Rights in Sri Lanka

Hearing by the United States House of Representatives Tom Lantos Commission on Human Rights

Thank you for providing Human Rights Watch with the opportunity to testify on Sri Lanka today.

It is more than 12 years since the end of Sri Lanka’s brutal civil war, and the defeat of the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). However, as United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet said earlier this year, the country’s human rights situation is now deteriorating. The government is, under President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, “in a state of denial about the past,” and there are “warning signals” that grave rights violations may recur. Civil society groups and human rights defenders are being suppressed, and minority Tamil, Muslim, and Christian communities are being targeted with discriminatory laws, policies, and practices.

It is important to recall the brutalities in Sri Lanka that led to US action to promote human rights in the island nation, including repeatedly at the UN Human Rights Council.

The 26-year civil war that ended in 2009 was marked by serious abuses of international human rights and humanitarian law by both sides, and mass atrocities against civilians in the final months that shocked the conscience of the world. During the armed conflict, the LTTE committed political assassinations, suicide bombings against civilians, and used child soldiers, among other human rights abuses. The LTTE also used civilians as human shields. Government security forces committed countless arbitrary detentions, extrajudicial killings, and enforced disappearances, and often brutally tortured detainees in their custody. In the final months of the war, the security forces bombarded Tamil civilians inside state-declared no-fire-zones, including the targeting of hospitals, killing thousands. Videos emerged at the war’s end of soldiers summarily executing prisoners and jeering over the unclothed bodies of women combatants. Almost the entire leadership of the LTTE was killed or forcibly disappeared, in some cases after surrendering to the Sri Lankan army.

In Colombo and elsewhere, security agencies killed and disappeared journalists and other perceived opponents of the government.

In the year after the war ended, the government detained tens of thousands of Tamil civilians in militarized camps where many of them suffered torture, rape, and enforced disappearance. Those suspected of membership of the LTTE were detained for years without trial.

In 2015, President Mahinda Rajapaksa, who had been in power for a decade, was defeated in a presidential election. Between 2015-2019, under President Maithripala Sirisena, the human rights situation improved. Pressure from minority Tamil and Muslim communities and local activists, as well as from concerned countries, including the United States, led the new government to agree to address human rights abuses and war crimes. Sri Lanka joined a consensus resolution of the UN Human Rights Council in 2015, resolution 30/1, which included measures to ensure truth telling, reparations, security sector reform, and justice through a hybrid mechanism including international investigators, prosecutors, and judges. There was also a commitment to replace the draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA), which had been used to enable torture, enforced disappearance, and prolonged arbitrary detention since 1979, with rights-respecting legislation.

The level of repression inside Sri Lanka decreased. However, by the time Sirisena left office, there had been little progress on accountability or institutional and legal reform to reduce the risk of future violations. The PTA remained unamended.

On Easter Sunday, April 21, 2019, suicide bombers attacked three churches and three hotels, killing over 260 people, including three US citizens. This led to a spate of mob attacks on Sri Lankan Muslims, often incited by Sinhalese Buddhist monks and political leaders.

Following his electoral defeat in 2015, Mahinda Rajapaksa formed a new political party, the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (Sri Lanka People’s Front, SLPP). His brother, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, who was defense secretary between 2005-15, became the SLPP’s presidential candidate and began his 2019 campaign with a pledge to act against terrorists, to block international efforts towards accountability for war crimes, and instead to protect “war heroes.”

Gotabaya Rajapaksa, who then held US nationality in addition to his Sri Lankan citizenship, is implicated in war crimes committed by the Sri Lankan military between 2005-2015. Police investigations that were able to proceed under the Sirisena administration also linked him to the killing and enforced disappearance of journalists and other serious violations. In April 2019, he was served with a court summons in California after Ahimsa Wickrematunge filed a civil suit for his role in the 2009 killing of her father, newspaper editor Lasantha Wickrematunge. In July 2019, the Center for Justice and Accountability amended the complaint with details on attacks against journalists during the Mahinda Rajapaksa government.

US courts later recognized that Rajapaksa had immunity as a head of state following his election in November 2019, but a February 2020 ruling by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals cleared the way for litigation to resume after he leaves office. Gotabaya Rajapaksa surrendered his US nationality during his presidential campaign, as required by the Sri Lankan constitution. Following Gotabaya’s election, former President Mahinda Rajapaksa became prime minister in his brother’s administration. Other senior figures in the current Rajapaksa administration who are implicated in violations, including possible war crimes and crimes against humanity, include the defense secretary, Gen. (retd.) Kamal Gunaratne, and the chief of defense staff, Gen. Shavendra Silva, whom the US banned from travel to the United States in 2020, citing credible information about his responsibility for the commission of extrajudicial killings in 2009.

One of Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s first acts on becoming president was to establish a “Presidential Commission of Inquiry to Investigate Allegations of Political Victimization.” The aim of this commission was to derail criminal investigations into human rights abuses and corruption against political allies, officers in the security forces, and members of the Rajapaksa family, which the police had launched during Sirisena’s presidency. These included cases in which evidence implicates the president himself. The commission recommended halting these investigations, dropping prosecutions in ingoing cases, and instead investigating the investigators for allegedly fabricating evidence. A resolution to implement the commission’s recommendations is before parliament.

In addition, Gotabaya Rajapaksa repudiated the previous government’s sponsorship of Human Rights Council resolution 30/1. In response, in March 2021, the Human Rights Council adopted resolution 46/1, which mandated the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) to collect, analyze, and preserve evidence of international crimes committed in Sri Lanka for use in future prosecutions. The Sri Lankan government opposed the resolution. The United States supported it. This work, called the OHCHR Sri Lanka Accountability Project, is expected to begin in earnest next year.

Since taking office, the Rajapaksa administration has used the security and intelligence services to harass, intimidate, and intrusively surveil civil society groups, human rights defenders, and the relatives of victims of past abuses who have campaigned for truth and accountability, including members of the group Mothers of the Disappeared. This has occurred across the country, including in Colombo, but is most severe in the predominantly minority provinces in the north and east. Since early 2020, human rights defenders and activists have described to Human Rights Watch patterns of abuses by various security and intelligence agencies, including the Terrorism Investigation Division (TID) of the police, in which their offices and homes have been visited, intimidating messages passed to their families and friends, and personal and financial information has been collected. Many organizations have had the transfer of funds from abroad blocked or delayed on the pretext of combatting “terrorist financing.” Numerous human rights defenders have told Human Rights Watch that it has become unsafe or near impossible to continue their work, and that victims and their families are too afraid to raise their cases with human rights groups.

In 2020, the parliament, in which the president’s supporters have a two-thirds’ majority, adopted the 20th amendment to the constitution, which included provisions to undermine the independence of the judiciary and of previously independent bodies, including the previously independent Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka.

The Rajapaksa administration has pursued policies hostile to the country’s Tamil, Muslim, and Christian minorities, raising concerns of future communal violence. An early step was to end the singing of the national anthem in the Tamil language at Independence Day celebrations. During the first year of the Covid-19 pandemic, the administration banned the burial of people who died with the virus on spurious public health grounds, causing distress to bereaved Muslim families. The ban was later relaxed to allow burials of Covid-19 infected people in a remote location, often far from most families’ homes.

In June 2020, President Rajapaksa established the Presidential Task Force for Archaeological Heritage Management in the Eastern Province – a minority majority area – which is composed entirely of security officials and Buddhist monks. Members of the Tamil and Muslim communities allege that the task force is engaged in erasing their heritage in the region, and appropriating land belonging to members of their communities.

Rajapaksa has said the purpose of the task force was to “preserve our Buddhist heritage.” In October, he appointed a task force to revise personal laws affecting different religious communities, headed by a hardline Buddhist monk who has been accused of inciting communal violence.

Christian communities in Sri Lanka also face official hostility. Members of the Catholic clergy, led by Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith, have become increasingly vocal in condemning delays in the inquiry into the Easter Sunday bombings, alleging a possible cover-up to conceal official complicity. In October, Maj. Gen. Suresh Sallay, director of the State Intelligence Service, ordered police to investigate Father Cyril Gamini and others who had made these allegations.

In recent months, amid a worsening economic situation, the Rajapaksa government has begun reacting to international pressure over human rights by offering vague promises of reform to foreign diplomats, especially from the European Union, which is conducting a periodic review of rights-linked trading preferences enjoyed by Sri Lanka, known as GSP plus. This rhetoric is belied by the government’s actions. In particular, the Rajapaksa administration has issued vague promises to reform the Prevention of Terrorism Act, which it continues to use to target Tamils and Muslims, perceived opponents of the government, and members of civil society groups, with prolonged arbitrary detention.

What can the US government do about these problems?

First, US government officials, including members of Congress, should continue pressing the Sri Lankan government on the importance of repealing or substantially amending the Prevention of Terrorism Act and ending the harassment and intimidation of human rights defenders and other critics of the government. US government officials should be urging the government of Sri Lanka to scrap recommendations from the commission on “political victimization.” And the United States should maintain its renewed engagement on Sri Lanka resolutions at the UN Human Rights Council.

The United States should engage with allies to implement a coordinated and concerted strategy to protect human rights and civil society space in Sri Lanka. The Rajapaksa government has turned to China for various reasons, including providing diplomatic cover for its abusive laws and policies, but Sri Lanka’s most important economic relationships are with the United States, European Union, and India.

Congress should also communicate clearly – to both the Biden administration and the government of Sri Lanka – that failure to address Sri Lanka’s human rights situation will imperil current and future military-to-military engagements and better economic relations. The US should also be harnessing other allies – in particular the European Union – to keep pressure on the Rajapaksa government.

The country’s current economic crisis, and presumably growing anxieties about China’s dominance over its affairs, are opportunities for concerned democratic countries – Japan, the European Union, and United Kingdom – to offer Sri Lanka renewed support and communicate that more can be provided if human rights improvements occur.

At the same time, the US should make clear that it cannot engage with security officials credibly implicated in gross human rights abuses. The US government has no choice but to engage with President Rajapaksa himself, the country’s head of government, with whom the US must engage as a matter of necessity and diplomatic protocol. But State Department and Pentagon officials and officers should continue to make clear that engagement is impossible with persons and units credibly implicated in human rights, and that Sri Lanka must take steps to hold such persons and units responsible for abuses. In the absence of accountability, the US has no choice but to consider imposing targeted sanctions on those persons and units, under the US Global Magnitsky Act.

The United States has already imposed a travel ban on chief of defense staff Gen. Silva, for his alleged responsibility for war crimes. The US should also impose targeted sanctions on others in the government credibly linked to serious human rights abuses; and the US government should communicate that these sanctions will remain in place until human rights improvements are seen.

The United States should ensure that members of the Sri Lankan security forces deployed on UN peacekeeping missions are subjected to independent vetting. Vetting has until now been conducted by the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka, which lacks independence following the adoption of the 20th amendment to the constitution.

Lastly, given the inconclusive results so far of Sri Lankan investigations into the 2019 Easter Bombings, the United States should push for a prompt, impartial, and credible conclusion. The United States and other governments should also examine evidence of transnational corruption and money laundering in cases where the presidential commission on “political victimization” has sought to block domestic investigations.

Thank you again for allowing me to testify, and I look forward to answering your questions.