Lasantha’s daughter seeks relief from UN

Saturday, 9 January 2021 00:20 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

  • Files complaint with the United Nations Human Rights Committee seeking accountability

The Center for Justice and Accountability (CJA) and Debevoise & Plimpton LLP—acting on behalf of Ahimsa Wickrematunge, the daughter of acclaimed Sri Lankan journalist Lasantha Wickrematunge—have filed a complaint against the Government of Sri Lanka with the United Nations Human Rights Committee, seeking accountability for the Government’s role in Wickrematunge’s 2009 assassination.

Releasing a statement the organisations recalled that 12 years ago, Wickrematunge was killed by a group of military assassins on the streets of Sri Lanka’s capital, as part of what it termed as a systematic attack on the free press by Government and pro-Government groups.

The complaint alleges that the Government of Sri Lanka perpetrated grave violations of fundamental human rights, including the rights to life, freedom from torture, and freedom of expression, by orchestrating Wickrematunge’s assassination and failing to adequately investigate it or prosecute those responsible for his death. 

It requests that the Human Rights Committee ensure that the Government of Sri Lanka conducts an independent, exhaustive, and effective investigation into the attack against Wickrematunge; prosecutes those responsible at all levels of the Government; apologises to and compensates the Wickrematunge family for the violations they have suffered; and guarantees an end to these human rights violations. 

“Friday was the anniversary of my father’s assassination and I live every day with the pain of his loss,” said Ahimsa Wickrematunge. “The Sri Lankan Government killed my father for his independent reporting. Twelve years later, I see those responsible for his death in the highest positions of power within the Sri Lankan Government, carrying out the same crimes they committed over a decade ago.”

CJA Senior Staff Attorney Nushin Sarkarati said: “Amid ongoing impunity for the crimes it perpetrated against Lasantha twelve years ago, the Sri Lankan government is once again employing the same violent tactics to target critics and the free press. The UN must use this critical opportunity to condemn Sri Lanka’s human rights violations and advance accountability efforts, to ensure impunity can no longer reign.”

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