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, March 8, 2017
Sri Lanka rejects UN call for foreign judges in war probe
Sri Lanka President Maithripala Sirisena was elected in 2015 after vowing to investigate war-era atrocities




More than 100,000 people were killed in Sri Lanka's 37-year Tamil conflict that ended in 2009
Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena has rejected a fresh appeal
from the United Nations to allow international judges to investigate
alleged war-era atrocities, vowing to not prosecute soldiers.
"I am not going to allow non-governmental organisations to dictate how
to run my government. I will not listen to their calls to prosecute my
troops," the president said in remarks distributed by his office Sunday.
The UN on Friday criticised Sri Lanka's "worryingly slow" progress in
addressing its wartime past, urging the government to adopt laws
allowing for special hybrid courts to try war criminals.
In his first remarks since the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva handed
down a new scorecard on Sri Lanka, Sirisena rebuffed calls for
international judges to probe abuses committed during the island's
37-year civil war.
Sri Lanka has resisted calls to establish a special court to investigate
allegations that government forces killed up to 40,000 Tamil civilians
in the final months of fighting, which ended in May 2009.
Sirisena, a member of the majority Sinhalese community, received the
support of the Tamil minority after promising accountability for
excesses carried out by the largely Sinhalese military.
- Inadequate response -
He had agreed to a UN Human Rights Council resolution in October 2015
which called for special tribunals and reparations for victims and gave
Sri Lanka 18 months to establish credible investigations.
But the deadline lapsed without those commitments being met.
The UN said coalition politics in the unity government Sirisena formed
after ousting former strongman leader Mahinda Rajapakse were likely to
blame for the slow pace of progress.
Last week the main Tamil political party accused Sirisena of failing to
deliver on his promises, and urged the UN to hold his administration to
account.
Sirisena's response marks a sharp shift in his policy towards
accountability and reconciliation, which had earned him the praise of
international observers.
"A charge sheet is now brought against our forces with a demand to
include foreign judges to try them," he said in a speech to troops in
the northern peninsula of Jaffna, the Tamil heartland.
The defiant tone contrasted with his Foreign Minister Mangala
Samaraweera, who asked the Human Rights Council for more time, promising
that his country remained committed to seeking justice.
At least 100,000 people were killed during the separatist war between
government forces and rebels from the Tamil Tigers group, with
atrocities recorded by both sides.
In its report, the UN said abuses including torture remain widespread in
the ethnically divided island nation of 21 million, with "a prevailing
culture of impunity" partly to blame.
The UN acknowledged that Colombo had made some positive advances on
constitutional and legal reforms, limited land restitution and symbolic
gestures towards reconciliation.
But it cautioned that the measures taken so far had been "inadequate, lacked coordination and a sense of urgency."
