A/HRC/34/53/Add.3
in areas that have no Buddhist population; new Sinhalese settlements with facilities
appearing suddenly; and State confiscation from Tamil owners of land for development or
conservation. It is clear that the fear of this real or perceived deliberate population change is
inherently tied to governance issues, including devolution of powers, but it also illustrates
the extent to which the minorities view the Sinhalese majority as a threat to their ethnic,
religious, cultural and political identity.
Social fragmentation and psychological impact of the conflict
40.
While people of the war-affected areas struggle with their day-to-day livelihood
challenges, another post-conflict issue that remains largely unaddressed is the psychological
impact the conflict has had on the communities collectively and individually. Those in the
North and East who were directly affected by the war in its last stages — whether they were
Tamils or Muslims, combatants or civilians — witnessed, or were victims of, grave
violations of international human rights and humanitarian laws by both the government
forces and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), including extrajudicial killings,
torture and enforced disappearances, as well as suffering loss of loved ones and multiple
displacements. Numerous studies show that psychosocial disorders in the population in the
war-affected areas, including post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety disorder, major
depression, alcohol abuse and dependence and substance abuse disorder, are prevalent. 5
Seven years on, these scars remain largely unaddressed, with little psychosocial assistance
provided to the victims and their families. The result is “a complete breakdown of social
networks, breakdown in social capital and loss of social cohesion, the feeling of being part
of a community is gone. A rise in alcoholism … coupled with a general sense of
powerlessness …. Family relationships have destabilised.”6 Domestic violence, including
child abuse and gender-based violence, elder abuse and neglect, suicide and attempted
suicide are all reportedly on the rise.
Search for truth and accountability
41.
As at 18 May 2016, there were 5,758 outstanding cases of enforced disappearance in
Sri Lanka with the Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances. While most
victims of conflict-era enforced disappearances and extrajudicial killings at the hands of the
Sri Lankan army were Tamils, Muslims were also either killed or disappeared after being
taken by LTTE. 7 Despite several successive commissions of inquiry on enforced or
involuntary disappearances and missing persons, the search for truth and justice continues.
The Special Rapporteur felt widespread, deep-seated frustration and anger about the lack of
progress in the search for truth, compounded by the chronic pattern of impunity. While the
ratification by the Government of the International Convention for the Protection of all
Persons from Enforced Disappearance and the enactment of the Office of the Missing
Persons Act are to be commended, it remains to be seen how effectively the transitional
justice mechanisms will be able to provide redress, as well as accountability.
5
6
7
10
Daya Somasundaram, “Psychosocial rehabilitation in north (sic) in a post-war context”, Sunday Times
2 (Colombo), 9 August 2015.
Gowrinathan and Cronin-Furman, The Forever Victims?.
Report of the Committee on Disappearances in the Jaffna Region of the Human Rights Commission
of Sri Lanka, October 2003, pp. 18-19.