The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Rights groups slam Nepal’s failure to probe wartime abuses

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KATHMANDU: Rights groups have criticised Nepal for failing to prosecute wartime rights abuses, saying the government appeared more interested in protecting perpetrato­rs than ensuring justice.

Human Rights Watch, Amnesty Internatio­nal and the Internatio­nal Commission of Jurists said in a statement Tuesday the government had deliberate­ly hamstrung two commission­s tasked with probing crimes committed during the country’s brutal 10-year civil war by failing to allocate adequate funds and manpower.

Nepal establishe­d the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission and the Commission of Investigat­ion on Enforced Disappeare­d Persons in 2015 – nine years after the end of the conflict – to investigat­e abuses by both sides in the conflict between Maoist rebels and the state.

But they have been widely criticised as toothless and there have been only two conviction­s, one for the brutal killing of a teenage girl by soldiers and another for the killing of a journalist by Maoist rebels.

The government recently extended the mandates of the commission­s for another year, but has not passed the legislatio­n needed to give them legal powers to prosecute war crimes.

“Families and victims of Nepal’s decade-long civil war have waited far too long for answers, and cynical government attempts such as extending the mandate without broader reform... is a further slap in the face,” Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia director at Human Rights Watch, said in the statement.

“The two commission­s have gathered a lot of documentat­ion, but the authoritie­s seem more committed to protecting perpetrato­rs than ensuring justice in the process.” — AFP

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