17.05.2014 Views

Download the full report - Human Rights Watch

Download the full report - Human Rights Watch

Download the full report - Human Rights Watch

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

than specific dates, are provided. These omissions are out of concern about possible<br />

government reprisals against <strong>the</strong> individuals and <strong>the</strong>ir relatives.<br />

In addition to <strong>the</strong> interviews and medical and psychiatric records described above, <strong>Human</strong><br />

<strong>Rights</strong> <strong>Watch</strong> examined MLRs of 7 individuals—4 men, 3 women—who were allegedly raped<br />

by members of <strong>the</strong> Sri Lankan security forces. The names of <strong>the</strong> medical personnel who<br />

prepared <strong>the</strong> MLRs and <strong>the</strong> medical institutions for which <strong>the</strong>y work have been withheld in<br />

all <strong>the</strong> cases in order to protect <strong>the</strong> victims.<br />

The scale of politically motivated rape and o<strong>the</strong>r sexual violence in <strong>the</strong> context of <strong>the</strong> Sri<br />

Lankan armed conflict is difficult to establish, but it is likely that <strong>the</strong> cases detailed in this<br />

<strong>report</strong> represent only a fraction of <strong>the</strong> total cases; for this <strong>report</strong>, we focused on cases<br />

corroborated by <strong>the</strong> <strong>report</strong>s of agencies outside Sri Lanka that provide services to victims,<br />

such as medical or legal assistance. We received <strong>report</strong>s of many o<strong>the</strong>r cases of sexual<br />

violence from Sri Lanka which we were unable to investigate ourselves or in which victims<br />

were unable, afraid, or unwilling to seek assistance or speak of <strong>the</strong>ir abuse, and <strong>the</strong>se<br />

cases have not been included here.<br />

The appendix to this <strong>report</strong> contains detailed descriptions of 75 cases of rape and sexual<br />

abuse documented by <strong>Human</strong> <strong>Rights</strong> <strong>Watch</strong>. We have medical documentation in 67 of <strong>the</strong><br />

75 cases, and obtained o<strong>the</strong>r independent corroborating information in <strong>the</strong> remaining<br />

eight cases.<br />

This <strong>report</strong> uses <strong>the</strong> following internationally recognized definition of rape, taken from <strong>the</strong><br />

Rome Statute of <strong>the</strong> International Criminal Court: rape is a form of sexual violence during<br />

which <strong>the</strong> body of a person is invaded, resulting in penetration, however slight, of any part<br />

of <strong>the</strong> body of <strong>the</strong> victim, with a sexual organ, or of <strong>the</strong> anal or genital opening of <strong>the</strong> victim<br />

with any object or o<strong>the</strong>r part of <strong>the</strong> body. 4<br />

4<br />

Official Records of <strong>the</strong> Review Conference of <strong>the</strong> Rome Statute of <strong>the</strong> International Criminal Court, Kampala,<br />

May 31-June 11 2010; International Criminal Court, “Elements of Crime,” ICC-PIDS-LET-03-002/11_Eng, 2011,<br />

http://www.icc-cpi.int/NR/rdonlyres/336923D8-A6AD-40EC-AD7B-<br />

45BF9DE73D56/0/ElementsOfCrimesEng.pdf (accessed January 2, 2013).<br />

11 HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH | FEBRUARY 2013

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!