Sri Lanka police guilty of violating international law

Compensation to be pain to nine students following the October 29 protest


Afp December 04, 2015
Sri Lankan police officer beating a protester on October 29, 2015. PHOTO: AFP

COLOMBO: Sri Lankan police were censured for the first time Friday for violating international humanitarian law, in a landmark decision after officers assaulted students demonstrating in the capital.

The Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka ruled police used excessive force in dispersing undergraduates, with at least nine students taken to hospital following a protest in Colombo in October.

"(The) police action is a violation of the universal declaration of human rights as well as the international covenant on civil and political rights," the independent commission said in a 32-page report.

UN experts demand action over suspected secret Sri Lankan prisons

It ordered the police to pay compensation to nine students hospitalised following the October 29 protest when officers launched water canon and teargas in addition to a brutal baton charge that was captured on television.

The group of students were ordered to be paid a total of 145,000 rupees ($1,035) from the police department. Inspector-General N. K. Illangakoon, the national police chief, was ordered to identify culprits and take disciplinary action within three months.

The students had demanded an accounting course was recognised on a par with other degrees, a demand the government later agreed to.

Sri Lanka's Tamil regions protest for prisoners' release

The commission heard evidence that fleeing students were pursued by officers who hit them on the head and back. Even female students who had fallen during a stampede were targeted.

Official sources said that it was the first ruling against the police -- by the commission or any other body -- specifically referring to international humanitarian law in addition to national  constitutional guarantees of freedom of association and equality before the law.

The human rights decision is the first high profile case by the commission since it was constituted as a fully independent body following the election of the new government of President Maithripala Sirisena earlier this year.

Sri Lanka arrests Rajapakse loyalist over assassination

Sirisena came to power promising to end a culture of impunity for rights abuses by the police and security forces as well as corruption and nepotism under former strongman Mahinda Rajapakse.

Sirisena has also promised to investigate allegations that troops killed tens of thousands of Tamil civilians in the final months of crushing Tamil rebels in 2009 under his predecessor.

COMMENTS

Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ