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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, January 23, 2016
Government accused of rolling back on commitment in Geneva


The International Truth and Justice Project is deeply concerned that Sri
Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena appears to be rolling back on his
commitment in Geneva to include international involvement in a future
judicial mechanism.
In an interview
with the BBC yesterday, the President reportedly stated, “I will never
agree to international involvement in this matter”.
This flies in the face of the recommendation of the UN High Commissioner
for Human Rights that Sri Lankan establish “an ad hoc hybrid special
court, integrating international judges, prosecutors, lawyers and
investigators”.
High Commissioner Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, who is due to visit Sri Lanka
shortly, has been very clear about the “total failure of domestic
mechanisms to conduct credible investigations” in Sri Lanka.
“The High Commissioner is right: international involvement is essential
for victims and witnesses to have trust in the justice process because
Sri Lanka has such a long history of failed domestic processes,” said
ITJP Executive Director Yasmin Sooka.
ITJP is also shocked that the Sri Lankan President should question that
crimes took place after the detailed and graphic revelations of the
year-long OHCHR Investigation, as well as reports by many other credible
international and Sri Lankan organisations.
ITJP notes the BBC reported that President Sirisena said, “it was
important to determine whether such crimes actually took place”.
“This is an insult to the thousands of victims and witnesses who
testified to the UN inquiry and other bodies,” said Yasmin Sooka,
adding, “it’s rather late in the day to question whether crimes took
place”.
President Sirisena also suggested in his BBC interview that because the
UN did not specify names of alleged perpetrators, there was some doubt
about the allegations.
“Just because the UN decided from the outset not to mention names of
alleged perpetrators does not mean they do not have such information. It
is usual for an UN inquiry not to disclose the names but to hand this
over to a credible prosecutorial body when established. Quite frankly
enough evidence exists already for a tribunal, if it’s run in a way that
protects witnesses,” said Ms. Sooka.
President Sirisena also dismissed reports that the Sri Lankan security
forces have continued to abduct, torture and sexually violate Tamil
detainees during his period in office. He said such reports came from
people “close to the Tamil Tigers”.
ITJP documented twenty such cases that occurred in 2015, while Freedom From Torture has an additional 7 cases that do not overlap.
“It is disappointing to see the new President defame all those who
allege there are still ongoing violations as linked to the LTTE”, said
Ms. Sooka, “this is the sort of rhetoric and denial we’d hoped would
change.”
ITJP is a South African based project investigating allegations of war crimes and crimes against humanity in Sri Lanka. (Colombo Gazette)
