Colombo/Brussels, 30 June 2009 - The Sri Lankan government must reform the
country’s judicial system urgently if the military defeat of the Tamil
Tigers is to lead to a lasting peace.

Sri Lanka’s Judiciary: Politicised Courts, Compromised
Rights<http://www.crisisgroup.org/home/index.cfm?id=6186&l=1>,
the latest policy report from the International Crisis Group, warns that the
Sri Lankan judiciary is not working in a fair and impartial way that secures
justice and human rights for everyone regardless of ethnicity. This risks
undermining the government’s recent military victory over the LTTE
(Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam). A durable national reconciliation
process is only possible if human and constitutional rights are fully
restored.

“The judiciary has not acted as a check on presidential and legislative
power but has instead contributed to the political alienation of Tamils”,
says Robert Templer, Crisis Group’s Asia Program Director. “Under the former
chief justice, the Supreme Court’s rulings strengthened political hardliners
among Sinhala nationalist parties”.

Rather than assuaging conflict, the courts have corroded the rule of law and
worsened ethnic tensions. They are neither constraining militarisation of
Sri Lankan society nor protecting minority rights. Instead, a politicised
bench has entrenched favoured allies, punished foes and blocked compromises
with the Tamil minority. The judiciary’s intermittent interventions on
important political questions have limited settlement options for the ethnic
conflict.

Today, neither the lower nor the higher courts in Sri Lanka provide any
guarantee of personal security or redress against arbitrary state violence.
Although torture in police custody is endemic, courts are unwilling to
provide adequate remedies for illegal or abusive detention. Police, judges
and government officials have acted in ways that further the goals of
powerful political actors, undermine the rule of law and deepen the current
political and humanitarian crisis. The possibility of transitional justice,
which is necessary for society to break the cycle of violence, is still
missing.

The recent appointment of a new chief justice is an opportunity for reforms
to begin. A first step toward restoring judicial independence would be a
return to an orderly appointment and transfer of judges. This needs to be
done both in the lower and appellate judiciary. There should also be
fundamental reform of Sri Lanka’s extensive and often abused emergency laws,
which are used disproportionately against Tamils. Provisions in the
emergency laws concerning arrest, detention and derogation from routine
criminal procedures need to be removed, as well as those that criminalise
free speech and the exercise of associational rights.

“Fixing institutions and reforming laws will only have a limited effect
until political actors, and especially the presidency, feel the cost of
infringing on judicial independence”, warns Donald Steinberg, Crisis Group
Deputy President for Policy. “Without a concerted effort by the bench and
bar, the political costs of interfering with the judiciary will remain
minimal”.

International Crisis Group Press release

 --
W A Laskar
Freelance Reporter and Human Rights Activist
with Barak Human Rights Protection Committee,
http://bhrpc.net.googlepages.com
15, Panjabari Road, Darandha, Six Mile,
Guwahati-781037, Assam, India
Cell: +919401134314

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