A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, October 27, 2015
Paranagama Report Self-contradictory- Suresh Premachandran

26/10/2015
The next follow up action of the government on the report would be
establishing a judicial mechanism to conduct investigations.One has to
wait to see whether the judicial mechanism will be credible, what role
members of the international judiciary will play, whether punishment
would be meted out to the offenders or whether they will be given a
general amnesty, Premachandran said.
Excerpts :
Q: What are your views on the Maxwell Paranagama Commission report that the Prime Minister tabled in Parliament Tuesday?
A: The report that Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe tabled in
Parliament recently touches on various matters relating to the reported
war crimes, crimes against humanity and human rights violations during
the last 12 hours of the final battle. On the one hand, the report
blames the LTTE for holding civilians as human shields which,
consequently, led to their deaths in the cross-fire.
The report has also accused the LTTE of indiscriminate firing into the
‘no-man’s zone’ where there was a huge concentration of civilians,
resulting in a large number of deaths. The report says that the Sri
Lankan Army could not differentiate between combatants and non-combatant
civilians, mingled together, because they were all clad in civilian
clothes.
The
army did not have any intentions of killing civilians or attacking
civilian hospitals, the report says. But the Army is a responsible
government institution and its main function is protecting the citizens
of the country, irrespective of ethnicity or race and that is why the
Army is known as the security forces. How can Justice Maxwell Paranagama
who is a legal luminary having held the highest judicial positions
justify the Army killing hundreds of civilians merely because a handful
of LTTE cadres had mingled amidst them?
It should have been their prime duty to identify and isolate combatants.
The Army is functioning under a government and a President elected by
the people. The President, the government and the Army that is
functioning under them have a responsibility by the people and it is
their primary duty to protect their lives. I do not know what actually
happened during the last hours of the final battle but the bounden duty
of the government security forces should have been protecting the lives
of non-combatant civilians. How can the Commission equate the Army with
the LTTE ?
Q:
The report has recommended a judicial mechanism, with the participation
of the Commonwealth and international judiciary, to go into details of
the Channel 4 documentary and killings of top rung LTTE cadres who
surrendered with white flags. Your comments?
A: The report also talks about issues that merit investigations under an
international mechanism, including the the Channel 4 documentary,
killings of those who surrendered with white flags, including
Pulithevan, Nadesan and his wife and the killing of Prabhakaran’ son
Balachandran, their media coordinator Isaipriya and others.
As far as I am aware the senior cadres who surrendered had contacts with
internationally prominent persons and journalists until the last
movement. A BBC correspondent was conveying their decision to surrender
to the UN and other concerned international authorities.
The then advisor to the UN Secretary General, Vijay K. Nambiar was in
Colombo on that day and the message having been conveyed to him was
reportedly conveyed to the government hierarchy by him. But, in spite of
it, fire was opened at those who surrendered with white flags. Some
reports say that they were arrested and killed later. Worse still, some
200 senior and important cadres who surrendered on that occasion were
consequently boarded into a bus and there has been no information about
them since then. If these are not war crimes or crimes against humanity
what else are ?
Q: You are not happy with the Paranagama Commission report ?
A: Not only me, even the people who attended the Commission sittings to
give evidence said that they were not happy with the proceedings and the
recording of their statements. The international Community, including
the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) also criticised the
commission inquiries. It is apparent that the reports are efforts to
project an altogether different picture to the local and international
communities on reported war crimes, crimes against humanity and
violation of human rights. But I must point out that there are
differences of views within the constituents of the TNA on the matter.
The
Ilankai Thamil Arasu Kadchy (ITAK), the main constituent of the TNA ,
supports the government on establishing a judicial mechanism and holding
credible investigations. But I am of the view that a local mechanism,
even with the participation of the Commonwealth and international
judiciary, will not do justice to the victims and the affected families
because we have the bitter experience of all such past exercises. The
Tamils have been deceived over and again. We do not know what role the
members of the international judiciary will play and what type of
mechanism will be established.
Q: There have been many inquiries at local and international level and
the reports have been submitted, especially the LLRC report,
incorporating recommendations on reconciliation and remedial measures.
What kind of justice or compensation do you seek in respect of affected
families ?
A: The Tamils are victims of war crimes and the need for justice to them
should be recognised and sought for, by all stakeholders. The Sri
Lankan legal framework does not have the capacity to mete out justice
which the UNHRC too has clearly pointed out. Even the Paranagama
Commission report has recommended inquiries on a par with international
standards and with the prominent participation of international lawyers
and judges. Secondly, demilitarisation should form part of such justice
which even the LLRC and the UNHRC have recommended.
The Minister in charge of rehabilitation and resettlement says that the
Army is not cooperating with him on the matter of land release. In such a
situation how can we anticipate justice and fairplay for the Tamils ?
Before we talk about what kind of remedy or compensation should be
offered to the affected people, we must make certain that justice is
meted out to them.
by P. Krishnaswamy / Sunday Observer
