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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, December 2, 2015
Sri Lanka to launch special court to probe war crimes
Sri Lanka will launch a special war crimes court early next year to investigate major atrocities during the bloody finale to its decades-long ethnic war, a top official said Tuesday.


Former
president Chandrika Kumaratunga, who heads the office of national unity
and reconciliation, said her work cannot be done without justice for
victims of the 37-year conflict that ended in May 2009. (Photo:
AFP/Ishara S Kodikara)
COLOMBO: Sri Lanka will launch a special war crimes court early next
year to investigate major atrocities during the bloody finale to its
decades-long ethnic war, a top official said on Tuesday (Dec 1).
Former president Chandrika Kumaratunga, who heads the office of national
unity and reconciliation, said her work cannot be done without justice
for victims of the 37-year conflict that ended in May 2009.
"We have ended the war nearly seven years ago, but we have not won the
peace," Kumaratunga told reporters. "No reconciliation is possible
without accepting the mistakes of the past."
She said tens of thousands of victims of the Tamil separatist conflict
would not accept reconciliation unless war criminals are brought to
justice.
A special court is set to begin work by January, two months before a UN
Human Rights Council review of Sri Lanka's progress in implementing a
September resolution calling for accountability for war crimes, she
said.
"Enormous amount of work has been done and the special court should
start its work by the end of this month or by early January," she said.
"They (the court) will not be chasing behind every soldier, but the main
line of command will be looked at," she said adding that surviving
Tamil rebel leaders would also be hauled up to answer allegations of
"horrendous crimes" by the rebels.
International rights groups as well as Tamils had pressed for
international judges and prosecutors to be involved in a Sri Lankan war
crimes probe, but the government has firmly rejected this.
Kumaratunga said she personally believed that involving independent
foreign judges was preferable as suggested in a UN Human Rights Council
resolution adopted in October.
Local and international rights groups have accused both sides in the war
of targeting civilians. At least 100,000 civilians were killed in the
conflict between 1972 and 2009.
Some of the bloodiest fighting came in the last two months when troops
unleashed a no-holds-barred onslaught against the rebels, with rights
group saying tens of thousands of people may have been killed.
Kumaratunga, who ruled between 1994 and 2005, said her office was
working on building bridges between the majority Sinhalese and minority
Tamils to ensure ethnic peace after decades of war.
"Reconciliation and accountability will have to go hand in hand," Kumaratunga said. "You cannot have one without the other."
- AFP/ec

