WELCOME YOU.

Saturday, July 18, 2020

Sri Lankan government sets up a new Office of Missing Persons -published on May 25,2016

Sri Lankan government sets up a new Office of Missing Persons Wed, May 25, 2016, 10:52 pm SL Time, ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka. May 25, Colombo: The Sri Lankan government will set up a new Office of Missing Persons (OMP) to help families of missing persons across Sri Lanka to discover the fate of their missing family members, Foreign Affairs Minister Mangala Samaraweera said in a statement Wednesday. Minister Samaraweera informed the parliament today that the government received approval from the cabinet of ministers to establish the Missing Persons office. Announcing the cabinet decision, the Foreign Minister said the need to set up such an office is particularly acute as Sri Lanka has one of the largest caseloads of missing persons in the entire world as a result of uprisings in the South and the ethnic war lasting nearly three decades. Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe in his capacity as the Minister of National Policies and Economic Affairs made the proposal to the cabinet to establish an independent institution as Office on Missing Persons by a parliament act. There have been strong requests for providing true information on disappeared or missing persons to their relatives to know their actual fate as knowing the fate of the missing persons will enable the families to be reunited and obtain closure with regard to such disappearance. Further they will be able to be granted with reparations and other relief and support, the government said. The Office on Missing Persons approved by the cabinet will be established with the view of search for and trace missing persons and identify appropriate mechanisms for the same, submission of recommendations to authorities to take measures on missing persons, protect the rights of missing persons and their relatives, identify channels that missing persons and their relatives can obtain reliefs and inform them the same, and to collate data related to missing persons obtained by government institutions and other institutions and centralize all available data within its database. According to the Minister, the OMP will be composed of commissioners and officers of the highest moral integrity, constituted at the highest level by the President, on recommendation of the Constitutional Council. "The OMP will work in tandem with the other post-conflict mechanisms, and along with the implementation of the convention on enforced disappearances, will prevent the re-emergence of the white van culture contributing to the safety and security of all Sri Lankans," Minister Samaraweera said. Full Statement of the Minister Samaraweera: Yesterday (24th May) the Cabinet of Ministers approved the establishment of an Office for Missing Persons. The Office will help several thousands families of missing persons across Sri Lanka to discover the fate of their loved ones, and the circumstances under which they went missing. The need to set up such an office is particularly acute as Sri Lanka has one of the largest caseloads of missing persons in the entire world - the result of uprisings in the South and the war lasting nearly three decades. This Office is the first of the four mechanisms dealing with conflict-related grievances that the new Government pledged to establish and legislation will soon be presented to parliament to make that commitment a reality. Sri Lanka has a long history of recognizing and assisting missing persons through ad-hoc structures. Law enforcement mechanisms have traditionally held responsibility for searching for missing persons. However, the Southern uprisings and civil war, created the need for new commissions to deal with this issue. The 1995 Zonal Commissions, established by former President Kumaratunga, and a subsequent follow-up commission, investigated cases beginning in 1987. More recently, the Lessons Learned and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) noted that the GoSL is "duty bound" to ensure that allegations of missing persons are properly investigated. The LLRC asserts that relatives of missing persons have the right to know the whereabouts and the "truth about what happened" to their loved ones. This allows them the possibility of 'closure' and also enables them to seek appropriate legal remedies. However despite these commissions, some formed in the aftermath of the LLRC recommendations, and which have collected over 20,000 complaints, the vast majority of cases still remain unresolved. By contrast, this permanent Office will ensure that measures are taken and recommendations made so that Sri Lankans no longer have to fear being disappearance. The new office has been established to systematically address the issue of missing persons after a rigorous review of best practices both in Sri Lanka and across the world - including Uganda, Bolivia, Argentina, and Uruguay which have all had missing persons offices. Chile, El Salvador, Guatemala, Peru, Ghana and South Africa, which also had commissions that dealt with the issue of missing persons, were also studied. The OMP will be composed of commissioners and officers of the highest moral integrity, constituted at the highest level by the President, on recommendation of the Constitutional Council. It will have a victim and witness protection unit and will also provide victims access to administrative, legal and psychosocial support, when victims may require it. This Office will not duplicate the work of other Commissions. It will absorb previous records in to a centralized system, aiming to complete outstanding investigations and finally provide families with the answers that they have long sought. The OMP will work in tandem with the other post-conflict mechanisms, and along with the implementation of the convention on enforced disappearances, will prevent the re-emergence of the white van culture contributing to the safety and security of all Sri Lankans.

1 comment:

  1. An office for Missing Persons is a good idea, if it becomes true. At the moment this office is only a news paper announcement. The annulment only says, there will be such an office someday and it will be brought about as a law through an Act passed in the parliament. There was also promise to have an act in parliament to criminalize enforced disappearances. That promise was made a year back. But, that has not happened. Let us wait to see the draft law about this new office and then we can talk about it seriously.


    Basil Fernando
    website: www.basilfernando.org
    “We need a new frontier in the human rights field. This frontier is the frontier of institutional reform.” - Basil Fernando

    ReplyDelete