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Establishment of LLRC:

SL has developed home-grown transitional justice process - Mohan Peiris

Sri Lanka developed its home-grown transitional justice process with the establishment of the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC), based on the principle of restorative justice, to advise on the measures which may be required to achieve national healing, cohesion and unity, Senior Advisor to the Cabinet Mohan Peiris said.

In formulating the LLRC, Sri Lanka reflected on comparative transitional justice experiences in other countries, he said intervening in the interactive dialogue on the report of the Special Rapporteur on Truth, Justice, Reparation and Non-recurrence on Wednesday.

The Sri Lankan delegation to the 21st session of the Human Rights Council which opened in Geneva earlier this week, is continuing to engage with the relevant interactive dialogues with special procedures mandate holders and working groups.

Peiris said the Sri Lankan government has undertaken a harmonious and holistic approach to reconciliation, taking into consideration a range of cross - cutting issues including resettlement of IDPs, reconstruction of housing, resolution of land issues, rehabilitation and reintegration of ex-combatants including former child soldiers, democratisation, issues of accountability, demilitarisation, demining, infrastructure development, livelihood development, education and vocational training, trauma and psycho-social counselling, support to female-headed households and women widowed due to the conflict, effective implementation of the national languages policy etc.

A victim- centric approach has been adopted in the rehabilitation and reintegration of former child combatants, he said.

Peiris said attention is also paid to encourage the constructive and productive engagement of the diaspora in the country's reconciliation process, in accordance with the development policy of the government and aspirations of the Sri Lankans.

He said Sri Lanka has consistently upheld the position that sufficient attention needs to be paid to economic, social and cultural rights when addressing post-conflict situations.

The Sri Lankan government, in the three years since the end of the conflict, has devoted much attention to the socio-economic development of the former conflict- affected areas in the Northern and Eastern Provinces, Peiris said.

"The government has, for the period 2009 to 2011, spent Rs 145.6 billion on post-conflict development work in the North and the East, and the Northern Province in 2011 continued to increase its share of the national economy by recording the highest GDP growth rate of 27.1 percent among all Provinces," he said.

Participating on Tuesday in the interactive dialogue on the report of the Special Representative of the Secretary General for Children and Armed Conflict, Peiris observed having undergone an internecine conflict which lasted nearly three decades, in which thousands of children were forcibly conscripted to fight by the terrorist group, Sri Lanka is especially sensitive to the psychological as well as socio-economic contours of the rehabilitation of children in armed conflict.

Following the end of the conflict, the government's reconciliation programme has paid special attention to the rehabilitation of the former child combatants who had surrendered.

He said of the approximately 12,000 ex-combatants, there were 594 LTTE child soldiers, who were rehabilitated and returned to their families within one year.

Describing Sri Lanka's experience "as a strory that we could be proud of," the Senior Legal Advisor said the government adhered to the policy of treating all child combatants as victims and not as perpetrators.

Peiris said Sri Lanka has been delisted by the Secretary- General from Annex 11 of the Security Council Resolution 1612, on Children and Armed Conflict, and said positive observations had been made by the President and members of the UNICEF Executive Board upon concluding an assessment Mission to Sri Lanka early this year, where they acknowledged the "rapid strides" made by the country since the end of the conflict and that "there are lessons to be learnt here."

The 21st session of the Council will continue until September 28

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