Sri Lanka’s sexual violence during the civil war has been formally documented as a deliberate and institutionalized practice following the release of a United Nations report on January 13, 2026. Findings conclude that state security forces used sexual violence in a widespread and systematic manner between 1983 and 2009, conduct that may amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity under international law.
Report publication coincided with renewed public mourning at Mullivaikal, where families gathered to commemorate victims of the war’s final months. Evidence presented by UN investigators underscores that abuses were not isolated incidents but part of an organized strategy to intimidate, punish, extract information, and exert control over Tamil communities.
Sexual Violence As A Tool Of War
UN investigators determined that sexual violence was “deliberate, widespread, and systemic,” pointing to institutional authorization rather than individual misconduct. Abuse occurred primarily in state-run detention facilities and military-controlled zones, where victims were held incommunicado and denied legal protections.
Violence targeted both women and men, although social stigma and fear of retaliation severely limited reporting by male survivors. Testimonies revealed rape, sexual torture, and murder, often followed by threats against families to ensure silence. These acts were used to instill long-term fear and fracture community cohesion, consistent with patterns recognized in international jurisprudence on crimes against humanity.
Successive Sri Lankan governments have failed to conduct credible investigations into wartime sexual violence. UN findings confirm that national inquiries were repeatedly delayed, undermined, or abandoned. Promises of reform and justice made by multiple administrations have not resulted in prosecutions or meaningful reparations.
President Anura Kumara Dissanayake’s government, elected in 2024 on a platform emphasizing justice and reform, has yet to demonstrate tangible progress. Survivors continue to face surveillance, intimidation, and institutional barriers when seeking redress. Legal constraints compound these challenges, including a statute of limitations on sexual violence cases and the absence of legal recognition for male rape under Sri Lankan law.
International Law And State Obligations
Sri Lanka’s obligations under international law are clear. Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women requires states to prevent, investigate, and punish gender-based violence, including conflict-related sexual violence, and to ensure reparations for survivors. Failure to act constitutes a breach of treaty obligations and perpetuates impunity.
International humanitarian law further obliges prosecution of war crimes and crimes against humanity regardless of when they occurred. UN Human Rights Council establishment of the Sri Lanka Accountability Project in 2021 aimed to preserve evidence for future prosecutions, reflecting global recognition that domestic mechanisms have proven ineffective.
UN researchers reported no visible path to justice or restoration for survivors of conflict-related sexual violence. Many continue to suffer chronic medical conditions, psychological trauma, and social exclusion. The Office for Reparations Act, enacted in 2018, has not delivered interim or comprehensive compensation, nor has it produced gender-disaggregated data to inform survivor-centered policy.
Survivors described seeking help from authorities only to encounter humiliation, threats, or disbelief. The expectation that victims report abuse to institutions associated with their trauma undermines fundamental principles of access to justice.
Human Rights Watch and other advocates call on foreign governments to intensify accountability efforts through targeted sanctions, support for international investigations, and prosecutions under universal jurisdiction. Vetting of Sri Lankan military personnel for peacekeeping missions and cooperation with evidence-gathering initiatives remain essential tools for deterrence.
Absence of sustained international pressure risks normalizing impunity and enabling recurrence. Continued sexual violence in post-conflict Sri Lanka demonstrates that unresolved past abuses contribute directly to present-day violations.
Accountability As A Prerequisite For Reconciliation
Lasting reconciliation requires acknowledging crimes, holding perpetrators accountable, and providing meaningful reparations for survivors. Without these measures, cycles of violence and mistrust persist. UN findings reinforce that justice delayed has become justice denied for thousands of survivors.
International partners face a choice between symbolic concern and concrete action. Legal accountability mechanisms remain available, but political will determines whether they are used.
Key Takeaways
- United Nations report confirms systemic sexual violence by Sri Lankan state forces during the civil war.
- Abuses may constitute war crimes and crimes against humanity under international law.
- Domestic investigations have been repeatedly obstructed or abandoned.
- Survivors face legal barriers, intimidation, and the absence of reparations.
- Sri Lanka obligations under international women’s rights and humanitarian law remain unmet.
- International action, including universal jurisdiction, is critical for accountability.
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