Torture widespread in Sri Lanka
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United Nations Special Rapporteur
29 October 2007
Mr.Manfred
Nowak, United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture and
Human Rights Abuse, said today that the brutal practice of
torture is widespread in Sri Lanka, and �prone to become routine
in the context of counter-terrorism operations,� in a press
release issued Tuesday by the United Nations. Mr Nowak visited
Sri Lanka during the first week of October, and held discussions
with Sri Lanka's President Mahinda Rajapakse and other highlevel
officials.
Full text of the press release follows:
Torture widely practiced in Sri Lanka, says UN human rights
expert
An independent United Nations human rights expert said today
that although Sri Lanka has measures in place to prevent
torture, the brutal practice is widespread and �prone to become
routine in the context of counter-terrorism operations.�
�The high number of indictments for torture filed by the
Attorney General�s Office, the number of successful fundamental
rights cases decided by the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka, as well
as the high number of complaints that the National Human Rights
Commission continues to receive on an almost daily basis
indicates that torture is widely practiced in Sri Lanka,�
Manfred Nowak told the General Assembly committee dealing with
social, humanitarian and cultural issues, known as the Third
Committee.
�This practice is prone to become routine in the context of
counter-terrorism operations,� Mr. Nowak, the UN Special
Rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment, added.
Mr. Nowak said that during the course of his visit to the
country from 1 to 8 October, he received �numerous consistent
and credible allegations� from detainees who reported that they
were ill-treated by the police to extract confessions, or to
obtain information in relation to other criminal offences.
Similar allegations were received with respect to the army.
In an effort to criminalize torture and bring perpetrators to
justice, the Government enacted the 1994 Torture Act. While the
significant number of indictments filed under the Act was
encouraging, Mr. Nowak decried the fact that only three people
have so far been convicted.
�Given the high standards of proof applied by the Supreme Court
in torture related cases, it is regrettable that the facts
established do not trigger more convictions by criminal courts,�
he stated.
While the Government does not agree that torture is widely
practiced, �I�m convinced and I think I have enough evidence for
that,� Mr. Nowak told reporters after his address to the
committee.
He said he found �overwhelming evidence that torture is routine�
at a detention facility run by the Terrorist Investigation
Department at Boossa, near Galle.
In addition, �serious incidence of corporal punishment� was
discovered at Bogambara, the main prison in Kandy, even though
that practice was recently abolished by law. The Government has
stated it will investigate those cases and dismiss those
responsible. �In my opinion they should be dismissed and also
brought to justice under Sri Lankan criminal law,� Mr. Nowak
said.
The Special Rapporteur also highlighted the problem of
overcrowded prisons, one of the main reasons for which is the
high number of pre-trial detainees in the prisons than actual
convicted prisoners. There are some 28,000 people being held in
prisons that have the capacity to hold 8,200.
Mr. Nowak added that the most serious allegations of human
rights violations, including torture, relate to the ongoing
conflict between the Government and the Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam (LTTE). But he noted that he was not in a position
to speak about that since he was not able to visit detention
facilities in army camps or those run by the LTTE.
In addition to Sri Lanka, Mr. Nowak has visited Paraguay,
Nigeria and Togo in the last year. He is scheduled to visit
Indonesia next month and Equatorial Guinea and Iraq early next
year. |