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SRI LANKA: REPRESSIVE LAWS REMAIN DESPITE END TO STATE OF EMERGENCY

27 August 2011 The Sri Lankan government must follow up its repeal of the state of emergency by removing repressive legislation such as the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA), Amnesty International said yesterday.
Earlier this week, Sri Lanka’s President Mahinda Rajapaksa promised to remove the state of emergency that has been in place in the country for nearly three decades.
Sri Lankan civil society and Amnesty International have long called for the lifting of emergency laws, so we welcome the government’s commitment to repeal them, said Sam Zarifi, Amnesty International’s Asia-Pacific director.

There are hundreds of people who remain in detention under these regulations who should be released immediately, or charged with a recognizable crime in a proper court of law.
The Sri Lankan government still uses repressive measures such as the PTA, which allows authorities to hold detainees arbitrarily and for long periods without trial, including in places that are not officially acknowledged as detention facilities.

Police and security forces in Sri Lanka routinely ignore international regulations and procedures intended to protect the rights of individuals who have been arrested.

These include informing people of the reasons for their arrest, providing the opportunity to communicate with family members or friends and ensuring a judicial hearing within 24 hours after arrest,

Due process and accountability have eroded after three decades of reliance on sweeping security legislation under the state of emergency, said Sam Zarifi.
The current administration has further degraded judicial independence by concentrating power in the President’s hands. Lifting the state of emergency is an important step, but the proof is in the treatment of detainees and government critics.
The lifting of emergency regulations indicates the Sri Lankan government is feeling international pressure. With the UN Human Rights Council due to meet soon, it’s time to demand the government undertake real reforms, including repeal of the PTA and providing accountability for the thousands of people who suffered during the country’s civil war.




 
    NEWS - HIGHLIGHTS
 
JVP CALLS FOR THE ABOLITION OF PTA

28 August 2011, An opposition party in Sri Lanka has called on the government to repeal the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) in addition to the emergency regulations. President Mahinda Rajapaksa on Thursday announced the imminent withdrawal of the emergency regulations. "I am satisfied that an extension of emergency is not required any more. So I inform that we . . . Read More
 
MP'S DEBATE OVER THE HANDLING OF WAR WIDOWS IN THE NORTH AND EAST

13 August 2011, Newsfrist.lk. Minister of Child Development and Women’’s Affairs Tissa Karaliyadde says that there are over 59,000 widows in the North and East, as a result of the war and various other factors.The Minister made this revelation when answering a question raised by Co-deputy leader of the UNP Sajith Premadasa in parliament y. . . Read More

 
UNCHECKED VIOLENCE WILL DESTRY OUR DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONS

NOTEBOOK FROM NOBODY BY SHANIE 12 August 2001, The Island, "It appears to us that a new and menacing element is crashing into the political scene, which element all responsible persons should determine to eradicate. If unchecked ,this deplorable violence cannot but harm and even destroy the democratic foundation on which our present society is b. . . Read More

 
ABC 4 CORNERS DOCUMENTARY ON SRI LANKA AND ITS RELEVANCE AND MOTIVES - A REFLECTION BY CFDISL 12 AUGUST 2011

Recently there was a television programme aired on the ABC covering the end of the Sri Lankan civil war in 2009, which made very strong criticisms of alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by the government forces. The programme instigated controversy among people in Australia of Sri Lankan origin. Ev. . . Read More

 
Army Camps in closed schools

12 August 2011 'Lanka' newspaper reveals that the Ministry of Defence has taken steps to set up Army camps in schools which have been recommended as ineffective by the Ministry of Education.

At the Attadassi Junior School at Watagedara, Thihagoda in Matara District an Army camp of 3rd Gemunu Regiment 'B" Group is being established. The Campaign for Safeguarding Schools has pointed . . . Read More

 
Real enemies of nation are ensconced at zenith of power and in control of national wealth

16 July 2011, TC by Tisaranee Gunasekara.

“Crime is contagious”. Louis Brandeis (Dissenting opinion in Olmstead vs. United States)

It was a shock, though not an unexpected one. Last week Sri Lanka lost her first hedging case, to the Standard Chartered Bank.
Given this precedent-setting verdict, the other two arbitrat. . . Read More

 
 
 
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