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  Sri Lanka will declare 65,000 missing after civil war dead

Sri Lanka will declare 65,000 missing after civil war dead

AFP
Published : Jun 8, 2016, 7:10 am IST
Updated : Jun 8, 2016, 7:10 am IST

Sri Lanka Tuesday announced a landmark law to recognise as dead an estimated 65,000 people still missing seven years after the end of a bitter civil war, allowing relatives to claim inheritances.

Sri Lanka Tuesday announced a landmark law to recognise as dead an estimated 65,000 people still missing seven years after the end of a bitter civil war, allowing relatives to claim inheritances.

Ministers approved a draft bill to issue “certificates of absence” to the families of those who went missing during a 37-year war with Tamil separatists and a Marxist uprising.

“This measure will help tens of thousands of Sri Lankans whose family members and loved ones are missing and who are unable to address practical issues relating to their disappearance,” the foreign ministry said in a statement.

Under the current law, families cannot access the property, bank accounts or inheritances left by missing relatives unless they can conclusively prove they are dead — an often impossible task.

Huge numbers of minority Tamils went missing during almost four decades of war after being arrested by security services, while thousands more died in military bombardments.

Several mass graves containing skeletal remains have been found in the past two decades, but only a handful have ever been identified. Thousands of people went missing during a crackdown between 1987 and 1990.

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