'AD HOC CLAIMS SYSTEM NEEDS OVERHAUL'
By Channel 4 News
The compensation system for innocent victims of the
conflict in Afghanistan is in need of an overhaul, says a leading human
rights campaigner.
Sarah
Holewinski, executive director of US human rights group CIVIC, which
has interviewed both Afghan families and Nato soldiers on the emotive
issue of compensation, says the system is too inconsistent.
She tells Channel 4 News that the "ad hoc" compensation payments need
to better organised: "Beyond protection measures, appropriate
compensation is one of the most important things that countries with
combat troops can do at present; because if you don’t handle it
properly you lose the people.
"That’s what we found from talking to Afghan families, that on many
occasions the payments were not appropriate. This is a culture where
payments for harm caused, even between neighbours, has been going on
for centuries - so it’s vital.
"Many who receive compensation of an appropriate amount, or medical
assistance, or materials to rebuild a home, etc, feel that their losses
are dignified. That's absolutely worth the effort, and certainly to get
the effort right.
"But
each country is different. The British and the US do it in a systematic
way but others do it on a more ad-hoc basis. In reality, each country
is doing it differently, it is inconsistency upon inconsistency. We
need a uniform system.
"There will always be some who want a proper trial and punishment for
foreign troops, not just compensation; since most of the harm caused by
troops is not a violation of international laws, that's a bleak hope.
"For the civilians that don't receive any compensation or try and fail
(the base is too far away, they don't know which troops caused the
harm, etc), we know they are angry."
Link to article: http://www.channel4.com/news/articles/world/asia_pacific/aposad+hoc+claims+system+needs+overhaulapos/3244172
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