Nepal forms transitional justice mechanisms
Xinhua, February 11, 2015 Adjust font size:
The Nepalese government has finally formed two much-awaited transitional justice mechanisms to look after the war-time human rights cases and provide justices to the victims, a Nepalese minister told Xinhua in Kathmandu on Tuesday.
A meeting of the Council of Ministers of the Nepalese government formed the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) and Commission of Enquiry on Enforced Disappearance (CEED) on Tuesday, Minister for Law and Justice Narahari Acharya told Xinhua.
The commissions were formed after some six years of the signing of the Comprehensive Peace Accord (CPA) which ended a ten-year civil war in Nepal, though the then rebel Maoists and the then government had agreed to form such commissions within six months after signing the CPA.
The meeting of the Council of Ministers endorsed names of office bearers for both commissions as recommended by a five- member government panel headed by Nepal's Supreme Court former Chief Justice Om Bhakta Shrestha.
Nepal's former Ambassador to Russia Surya Kiran Gurung and former Chief Judge of Appellate Court Lokendra Mallik have been appointed as chairmen of the TRC and CEED, respectively.
"The commissions have two years of tenure each, and if the commissions failed to complete their work within the stipulated deadline, another year can be extended," said Minister Acharya.
The commissions are mandated to probe into all crimes and cases of human rights abuses committed by both the Maoists and the state forces during the ten-year insurgency.
The war that started in 1996 claimed more than 13,000 people's lives while thousands are still missing. Endi