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(Afghanistan
and Myanmar in the
map are not members
of SAARC)
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‘Systematic
Crimes During Civil War’
BY
JAYA
RAMACHADRAN

Failure
to address the systematic crimes committed during Nepal’s ten-year
civil war is threatening the peace process, says the International
Crisis Group in a new report that not only criticises the South Asian
nation’s political parties and media, but also the UN and countries
providing military assistance.
Unaccountable and heavy-handed security measures by a state with weak
legitimacy have escalated conflict before and threaten to do so again,
warns the report released simultaneously in Brussels and Kathmandu on
January 14.
Entitled
‘Nepal: Peace and Justice’, the report examines the impact of the
abuses and impunity on the peace process, the institutional cultures
that allowed the crimes to be committed in the first place, and the
prospects for progress on justice.
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“There
has not been a single prosecution in civilian courts for any of the
serious crimes committed during the conflict,” says Rhoderick Chalmers,
Crisis Group’s South Asia Deputy Project Director. “The cultures of
impunity that enabled abuses in the first place have remained intact,
further increasing public distrust and incentives to resort to
violence.”
Tackling justice now is not only feasible but would also improve the
chances of re-establishing productive political negotiations and
salvaging the credibility of the parties and the state, avers the
report. For those directly affected by the conflict, in particular
victims and their families, the pursuit of justice and reparation, as
well as the truth about the abuses suffered, is not an abstract concern,
it adds.
The Crisis Group pleads for clear priorities: The first is prosecution
of the most serious conflict-era cases. “Without a credible threat of
prosecution, any commissions of inquiry will not get beyond the
inadequate explanations the army and Maoists have already provided.”
The second is to ensure the commissions on disappearances and on truth
and reconciliation specified in the 2006 peace agreement meet basic
standards. “More importantly, they should be locally owned and have
clear, achievable goals.”
Finally, vetting is needed -- both domestically and internationally --
to help ensure the stability of any future security forces.
‘THE UN HAS LOST CREDIBILITY’
Though currently the conditions for action are poor, “international
actors can do more to target their support, especially if the UN can
take a lead by making its engagement with Nepal on the peace process and
peacekeeping operations more consistent.”
The UN has lost credibility as its core values have been marginalised
during the process, says the report. “With no systematic vetting of
peacekeeping troops by either the government or the UN, even
high-profile alleged abusers have been deployed in lucrative posts in UN
missions -- including, in September 2009, one army major sought by
Nepal’s police and courts for questioning over the torture and murder
of a teenage girl in 2004 inside a Nepali peacekeeping training
centre.“
International efforts are no substitute for national will. Nevertheless,
international commitment is to support a peace process based on
fundamental rights. “Allowing words to replace substance undermines
such principles,” maintains the Brussels-based Crisis Group.
Countries providing military assistance, including the U.S., UK, India
and China, have rarely or never restricted training and opportunities
for individuals or units accused of serious violations.
However, international efforts are no substitute for national will.
“Nepalese society as a whole faces larger questions of the value it
places on justice and the kind of peace it hopes to build,” says
Robert Templer, Crisis Group’s Asia Program Director. “Such
questions relate to the future as much as the past. Simply saying
‘never again’ will not ensure that abuses are not repeated.”
JUSTICE VERSUS PEACE
The report refers to “tensions between the pursuit of justice and the
pursuit of peace”. An absolutist approach to accountability for past
abuses is impossible in practice and could obstruct the compromises
needed to bring formerly warring parties together to forge a stable
political settlement.
“But tackling impunity and improving accountability has a direct and
acute relevance to managing Nepal’s fractious transition.
Unaccountable and heavy-handed security measures by a state with weak
legitimacy have escalated conflict before and threaten to do so
again.”
Multiple grievances are not being effectively channelled through the
constitutional process, and dealing with them is fraught with risk as
long as political violence remains a viable tool. “Yet moving from a
state of impunity to one of accountability will be a painful transition
for many individuals in the security forces and political parties,”
cautions the report.
“Avoiding, or deferring, this discomfort may appear tempting but is
counterproductive. Longstanding cycles of abuse have undermined
prospects for improved public security and peaceful political debate.”
The Crisis Group recalls that both sides carried out repeated and
systematic violations of the laws of war during the conflict, which
ended with the November 2006 Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA).
State security forces accountable primarily to the interests of party
leaders or the palace felt unconstrained by legal requirements. They
were responsible for hundreds of disappearances and unlawful killings,
rampant torture and other abuses of the civilian population. Of the more
than 13,000 people killed during the war, the vast majority died at the
hands of the state.
The Maoists, in challenging a state they portrayed as unjust and
illegitimate, sought to characterise violence -- including brutal
killings of civilians and political opponents -- as an essential, and
justified, plank of political strategy.
Though at the heart of the peace deal lay a commitment to recognise that
both sides had broken fundamental rules, neither believes its actions
were wrong. Both insist on judging their own, meting out no real
punishment, and have refused to cooperate with civilian authorities.
Lack of action on justice is not for lack of promises.
Commitments to human rights norms and specific steps such as
investigating disappearances have been central to successive agreements,
including the CPA. Lip service, however, has only become entrenched as a
substitute for action, the Crisis Group admonishes.
The report notes that concern for victims has been inconsistent. The
most tangible response has been interim relief payments to families of
those who died or were disappeared. Yet this has been weakened by
political manipulation and the lack of effective oversight of fund
distribution. For relatives of the more than 1,000 still missing,
distress, frustration and a sense of betrayal have grown.
The report bashes political parties for not showing interest in dealing
with past crimes. “Indeed, they have exploited the lack of
accountability to avoid reining in the unlawful activities of their own
activists and to justify regular interference in the criminal justice
system.”
This, the report goes on to say, has left a demoralised, ineffective and
increasingly desperate police force to confront growing insecurity and
small yet still dangerous local, regional and ethnic struggles.
But political leaders alone are not to blame. The domestic constituency
for justice is minimal. Despite the pioneering work of some activists,
rights and justice are not rallying calls for the politically
influential middle classes.
The Crisis Group chaired by Louise Arbour, who served as United Nations
High Commissioner for Human Rights from 2004 to 2008, points to a
perturbing aspect of the situation in Nepal:” Citizens are not keen to
re-examine what the state did in the name of their security, and see no
need for national dialogue and catharsis. Many victims were from
disadvantaged communities long marginalised by the state and more
influential social strata. Media and parliamentary attention to
questions of justice is sporadic.”
[Source:
IDN-InDepthNews
| Analysis That Matters]
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