Iain Guest

Iain founded AP in 2001 after many years of writing about and working with civil society in countries in conflict. He was a Geneva-based correspondent for the London-based Guardian and International Herald Tribune (1976-1987); authored a book on the disappearances in Argentina; fronted several BBC documentaries; served as spokesperson for the UNHCR operation in Cambodia (1992-1993) and the UN humanitarian operation in Haiti (2004); served as a Senior Fellow at the US Institute of Peace (1996-7); and conducted missions to Rwanda and Bosnia for the UN, USAID and UNHCR. Iain recently stepped down as an adjunct professor at Georgetown’s School of Foreign Service, where he taught human rights.



Travesty of Justice in Nepal

19 Dec

Why has the human rights movement turned its back on relatives of the disappeared in Nepal?

Kathmandu, Nepal: A disappearance, to human rights advocates, is the worst crime imaginable.
So why has the human rights movement including Human Rights Watch and Amnesty
International turned its back on the families of those who disappeared in Nepal?

I was asked this question recently in the Midwestern district of Bardiya by women who lost
relatives during the Maoist insurgency between 1996 and 2006. Some of the victims were taken
by Maoists. Most were seized by Nepal’s security forces. None have reappeared.

I have reported on disappearances in several countries and never failed to be inspired by the
family members, who refuse to accept the loss of their loved ones. These Nepali women are
among the most determined and bravest I have ever met.

Their relatives were among 1,475 Nepalis who disappeared during the insurgency. This may
seem small in relation to Nepal’s population of 28 million. In addition, many of the victims were
from the Tharu, a minority in the Midwest of Nepal that has no representatives in parliament
and exerts very little political influence.

Nonetheless, many Nepalis view the disappearances as among the worst wounds of a brutal
insurgency that have still not healed, ten years after the signing of the November 21 2006 Peace Accord. Until the issue is resolved, the political and social cohesion of Nepal will be put at risk.

This makes it all the more surprising that the families have been badly let down by Western
governments, the United Nations and human rights advocates who are normally vocal defenders
of transitional justice.

At issue is a 2014 law which established two commissions, one to investigate disappearances
and the other to promote truth and reconciliation more generally. But the law also offered an
amnesty for serious abuses committed during the emergency, and this has caused the

international community to boycott the entire process. The last time a US official visited the

commission on the missing was in April 2015.

The legal deadlock may soon be resolved thanks to Nepal’s Supreme Court, which has ordered
the law revised. The government is currently considering a draft that would rule out amnesty for

murder, torture, disappearances, and rape committed during the conflict. If passed, the law

should open the way to investigations that could even lead to the door of the current Prime

Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal, who led the Maoist insurgency.

So, one might ask, is this not an example of successful pressure by the human rights movement?
Not to family members of the disappeared. They feel betrayed and abandoned. By boycotting the
commissions, they say, the human rights professionals have ignored their right to be heard and

to know the truth.

The commissions have been harshly criticized by Nepalis for being slow to act and bureaucratic,
but they have also chalked up some achievements. Between them they have registered some

68,000 incidents and received 2,886 complaints from family members which could, if properly

investigated, help to provide an official record for future generations perhaps the most

important function of truth commissions.

The two commissions have also argued for a reparations policy that has paid $5,000 to most
families and is considering a further $3,000 per family a significant sum for the women I met
recently, many of whom lost their breadwinners. If it is extended in February, the commission

on the missing plans to collect antemortem data on the disappeared and follow up with

exhumations, which would be a big step forward.

Most important, the commissions have heard directly from family members. This is a critically
important feature of truth commissions, and several women told me that they had found it
cathartic to denounce their loss to an official body. By providing families with a forum, the
commissions have also strengthened their national networks and advocates, like the Conflict

Victims Common Platform and NEFAD (the National Network of Families of Disappeared and

Missing Nepal). This has helped to build women’s civil society in isolated regions like Bardiya.

These are significant outcomes, but they would have been more impressive if the human rights
specialists and Western governments had contributed their resources and expertise. Why did
they not work with the families in strengthening the commissions while at the same time
arguing for the amnesty provision to be revised? It would have been difficult, but creativity has

been a hallmark of the struggle for transitional justice think of the way Human Rights Watch

secured the indictment of Hissene Habre in Chad. It is hard not to conclude that a historic

opportunity has been lost in Nepal.

There is still time to change course. The next few weeks will be decisive as the commissions
come up for an extension in February and the Nepali government struggles to revise the all
important law. Western governments should work with human rights leaders like Amnesty

International, Human Rights Watch, and the International Center for Transitional Justice to

support the process, starting now. It is particularly important that the commissions produce

strong and credible reports that will endure.

Finally, we should all listen to those who matter most the grieving wives, sisters and daughters
of the disappeared. These and other family members deserve enormous credit for the progress

achieved so far. They should be ignored no longer.

 

Posted By Iain Guest

Posted Dec 19th, 2016

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