VI. Recommendations
To the Government of
Sri Lanka
Conduct of the Hostilities
- Cease all attacks that violate
the laws of war, including artillery bombardment and aerial bombing that
does not discriminate between military targets and civilians, or that
causes expected harm to civilians and civilian objects that is
disproportionate to the anticipated military gain. Investigate and
prosecute as appropriate military personnel, regardless of rank, who
commit serious violations of the laws of war, which are war crimes.
- Cease attacks on hospitals,
including makeshift hospitals. Hospitals used to commit hostile acts are
only subject to attack after a reasonable warning has been given that goes
unheeded.
- Cease attacks using weapons, such
as multi-barrel rocket launchers and heavy artillery, which are
indiscriminate when used in or near densely populated civilian
populations.
- Cease justifying unlawful attacks on civilians on the
spurious ground that civilians who are not in so-called "safe zones" may legitimately
be attacked. Violations of the laws of war by the LTTE do not justify
attacks by government security forces in violation of the law.
Humanitarian Access and Civil Society
- Facilitate the immediate creation
of humanitarian corridors to allow civilians trapped by the fighting to
travel to areas away from the fighting.
- Immediately lift the September
2008 order barring humanitarian agencies from the Vanni conflict area in
northern Sri Lanka and allow humanitarian agencies to return to assist
at-risk individuals and reach all civilians in need. Restrictions on
relief should be made on a case-by-case basis and only when there is a
specific and justifiable security reason for the restriction. Refusals for
valid security reasons should only be for as long as necessary and should
not block legitimate humanitarian assistance.
- Allow independent observers,
including journalists, access to conflict zones so that accurate and
timely information about the situation of civilians in such areas is
publicly available.
- Instruct security forces to
respect and protect humanitarian aid personnel and their facilities,
supplies, and transportation. Personnel who commit abuses against
humanitarian organizations and their staff should be disciplined or criminally
prosecuted as appropriate.
- Ensure that nongovernmental
organizations (NGOs) are able to perform their work without arbitrary
government interference: regulation of NGO activities should comply with
international standards, be transparent, and follow clearly defined
procedures. Registration should ultimately facilitate the work of NGOs and
should neither disrupt legitimate NGO activities nor put NGO workers at
risk.
- Work with donor governments to establish an international
human rights monitoring mission under United Nations auspices to monitor
violations of human rights and international humanitarian law by all
parties to the conflict.
Displaced Persons
- Abide by the United Nations
General Principles on Internal Displacement, including by permitting the
freedom of movement of displaced persons, respecting the right of
displaced persons to return to their homes, and permitting humanitarian
agencies access to displaced persons.
- Permit humanitarian agencies
to monitor the intake of displaced persons at checkpoints, such as at
Omanthai.
- Immediately end the arbitrary
and indefinite detention of civilians displaced by recent fighting at the
Kalimoddai, Sirunkandal, and Menik Farm camps in northern Sri Lanka, and
at other proposed camps.
- Make public the names of all persons detained by the
military and police under Emergency Regulations and other laws, and
provide those detained prompt access to their families and legal counsel.
To the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE)
- Stop preventing civilians from
leaving areas under LTTE control. Respect and facilitate the right to
freedom of movement of civilians, including the right of civilians to move
to government-controlled territory for safety.
- End all deliberate attacks on
civilians, such as on civilians who are seeking to flee LTTE-controlled
areas. Appropriately punish individuals responsible for such attacks.
- Do not use civilians as "human
shields," and take all feasible steps to avoid placing military targets
near civilians.
- Facilitate the immediate creation
of humanitarian corridors to allow civilians trapped by the fighting to
travel to areas away from the fighting.
- Provide United Nations and humanitarian agencies safe and
unhindered access to areas under LTTE control, and guarantee the security
of all humanitarian and UN workers, including Vanni residents working as
humanitarian or UN staff.
To the Co-chairs of the
Tokyo Donors' Conference (Japan, the European Union, Norway, and the United
States), India, the United Kingdom, and Other Concerned Governments
- Urgently seek a special
session of the UN Human Rights Council on the situation in the Vanni and
violations of international humanitarian law by all parties to the
conflict.
- Speak out publicly and in private
meetings with Sri Lankan authorities and other concerned officials on the
situation in the Vanni. Insist that the government adhere to its
international legal obligations on human rights and humanitarian matters.
- Urge the government to
withdraw its September 2008 order and allow humanitarian agencies access
to the Vanni so that they can provide urgent humanitarian assistance and
help provide civilian protection.
- Urge the government to ensure
the protection of displaced persons, regardless of ethnicity, and end
arbitrary detention. Press the government to follow the UN Guiding
Principles on Internal Displacement, which provide that, consistent with
the right to liberty, internally displaced persons "shall not be
interned in or confined to a camp."
- Urge the government to allow
the UN and its agencies to conduct a strategic, long-term needs assessment
of displaced civilians in the north and permit a follow-up program to
implement these needs.
- Press the government to allow
independent observers, including journalists, access to conflict zones so
that accurate and timely information about the situation of civilians in
such areas is publicly available.
- Work with the Sri Lankan government to establish an
international human rights monitoring mission under United Nations
auspices to monitor violations of human rights and international
humanitarian law by all parties to the conflict.