Ramesh Lamsal
Kathmandu, Nov 20: In a bid to
unleash the causes of conflict and provide relief and reparation to the
victims, the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) was signed on 21 November
2006, some 18 years ago.
The objective of the peace accord
signed between the government and the then rebel force, CPN (Maoist), was to
investigate the truth about people seriously breaching human rights and
involved in crimes against humanity and bring the perpetrators to justice,
thereby keeping peace in the society by normalizing the adverse situation
arising out of the armed conflict.
After a prolonged serve-rattling,
the government had established a Truth and Reconciliation Commission and a
Commission for Investigation of Disappeared Persons in 10 February 2015.
The two commissions were
constituted eight and a half years after the agreement between the government
and the former rebels. Both the commissions took applications from the
survivors and initiated general works related to reparation, but could not take
strides on other aspects.
It may be noted that the then Prime
Minister Girija Prasad Koirala and CPN (Maoist) Chair Pushpa Kamal Dahal
'Prachanda' had signed the 12-point CPA to bring a decade-long armed conflict
to the peace process.
On the basis of the same agreement,
the promulgation of the Interim Constitution, the two rounds of election to the
Constituent Assembly, and the drafting of the Constitution were
accomplished.
Yet it is imperative to provide
relief, justice and reparation to the survivors that are the backlog of the
home-grown peace process, and spell out the causes of the conflict and prevent
repetition in coming days.
Recently the government had
initiated the process by forming a 'recommendation committee' to recommend
office-bearers to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and the Commission
for Investigation of Disappeared Families in 12 April 2024.
The recommendation committee headed
by former Chief Justice Om Prakash Mishra will recommend the office-bearers of
the two commissions. The application process is currently underway. Although
the government and the concerned political parties were of the common stance
that justice should not be delayed to the victims, there were some doubts about
the enactment of the law for a decade.
Since the Transitional Justice Act
was enacted on the basis of political consensus last time, the basis for the
survivors to get justice has now been prepared.
A total of 63,718 complaints have
been registered with the Truth and Reconciliation Commission so far. The
Commission had decided to keep 3,000 applications in parking lot.
Likewise, 3,243 complaints have
bewen so far registered at the Commission for Investigation of Enforced
Disappeared Persons. A total of 2,496 complaints are being investigated at
length.
After protracted efforts, the Bill
(Third Amendment), 2081 to amend the Commission for Investigation, Truth and
Reconciliation of Disappeared Persons Act, 2071 has been brought into
force.
Minister for Law, Justice and
Parliamentary Affairs Ajaya Kumar Chaurasia said the government was working to
conclude the remaining tasks of the peace process at the earliest.
"Although many works of the CPA have been completed, the task of providing justice to the victims by investigating the truth has yet to tbe finalized", he said, adding the task related to transitional justice has already progressed, and the victims will get justice as soon as possible.
CPN (Maoist Centre) chief whip
Hitraj Pandey however commented that the peace process was supposed to be
concluded in six months as per the agreement, but due to various reasons it
could not move ahead as anticipated. RSS