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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, April 21, 2019
SRI LANKANS ACCUSE HIM OF WARTIME ATROCITIES. CALIFORNIA MAY DECIDE.

Image: Gotabaya Rajapaksa, brother to the former Sri Lankan president Mahinda Rajapaksa, at home in Colombo in December.CreditCreditAdam Dean for The New York Times.
In the decade since Sri Lanka’s civil war ended, a former wartime
defense chief has successfully dodged accusations of crimes against
humanity. He may soon run for president.
But the accusations, which are supported by United Nations inquiries, recently caught up with him in a California parking lot.
The former official, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, oversaw the final stages of a
quarter-century-long conflict with Tamil separatists that ended in 2009.
So far he has avoided prosecution at home and abroad over the
allegations of crimes against humanity.
But in early April, a private investigator tracked Mr. Rajapaksa, now an
American citizen, to a Trader Joe’s parking lot in a Los Angeles
suburb. He was then personally served with civil court complaints
accusing him of a journalist’s murder and the torture of an ethnic Tamil
who had Canadian citizenship, court documents show.
Supporters of the lawsuits say they were brought in California since
opening criminal trials in Sri Lankan courts is politically impossible
for now, not least because Mr. Rajapaksa’s family has significant
influence over the country’s institutions. They say the California cases
are a logical interim step in a long campaign for justice.
“There is no doubt that the case has caused enormous interest because
Sri Lankans are amazed to see a powerful and feared figure, who still
has his people inside the security establishment, being openly
challenged,” said Yasmin Sooka, a South African human rights lawyer who
specializes in Sri Lanka and worked on the torture complaint.
Mr. Rajapaksa’s spokesman, Milinda Rajapaksha, said on Friday that the
defendant “does not acknowledge any kind of official delivery of legal
documents by any party.” But he said Mr. Rajapaksa’s legal counsel in
the United States would take action “if required.”
Separately, Mohammed Ali Sabry, the head of Mr. Rajapaksa’s legal team
in Sri Lanka, said that California litigation would be handled
exclusively from the United States.

Mr. Rajapaksa greeting supporters in Katunayake, Sri Lanka, this month,
after his return from the United States.CreditDinuka Liyanawatte/Reuters
Mr. Rajapaksa was Sri Lanka’s defense chief from 2005 to 2015, when his
brother, Mahinda, was president. Thousands of people disappeared or
were tortured during the war’s final years, including aid workers,
journalists, ethnic Tamil civilians and the Rajapaksa family’s political
opponents.
Many of them turned up dead, according to United Nations reports, and millions of people in the country are still traumatized by the war’s painful legacy.
Last week in Sri Lanka, Mr. Rajapaksa told reporters that
he had started the process of renouncing his American citizenship, a
requirement for contesting the presidency, which his brother
relinquished after losing a 2015 election.
Harshana Rambukwella, a political scientist at the Open University of
Sri Lanka, said that if Mr. Rajapaksa runs for president, he could
potentially leverage the California litigation to drum up nationalist
sentiment among his base within the country’s Sinhalese ethnic majority.
The essence of the candidate’s argument, Mr. Rambukwella said, would be
that human rights campaigners are persecuting leaders who liberated Sri
Lanka from civil war.
But rights advocates say that the California cases are important because
they focus international scrutiny on the Rajapaksa family’s wartime
actions.
The first case concerns the 2009 killing of a prominent Sri Lankan
investigative journalist, Lasantha Wickrematunge, who was bludgeoned to
death by men on motorcycles who had surrounded his car.
In court papers, lawyers for the journalist’s daughter, Ahimsa
Wickrematunge, accused Mr. Rajapaksa of instigating, authorizing and
covering up the killing as part of a “systematic” targeting of
journalists who were perceived to be critical of the government. The
suit seeks unspecified damages.
“My family and I have been pushing for justice for my father’s killing
for 10 years now,” Ms. Wickrematunge said in an interview. “This pursuit
isn’t tied to any election. It is tied to a need for truth.”
The second case was brought by Roy Samathanam, a Tamil civilian with
Canadian citizenship who was arrested in Sri Lanka in 2007 on what his
lawyers say were false charges of illegally importing a GPS device. They
say he was beaten with clubs, metal pipes and rifle butts, and forced
to sign a false confession. The suit seeks at least $75,000 in damages.

The ruins of a historic fort complex in Jaffna, Sri Lanka, that was the
scene of many battles in the civil war.CreditAdam Dean for The New York
Times
Toby Cadman, a British lawyer in London who specializes in war crimes,
said the Sri Lanka cases were another example of lawyers acting in a
more “innovative manner” when the criminal justice process fails victims
of violence in their own countries.
“Although the jurisdiction for bringing civil claims in the U.S. has
been significantly narrowed in recent years, it remains an important
tool for holding political and military leaders accountable for gross
human rights violations,” he said.
Nushin Sarkarati, a lawyer at the Center for Justice and Accountability
in San Francisco who is representing Ms. Wickrematunge, said such civil
claims were first filed in the 1990s in Europe. In the United States,
she added, they have typically been filed against former officials from
countries in Latin America.
In a recent case in the United States, one of Mr. Samathanam’s lawyers,
Scott Gilmore, represented the family of the American journalist Marie
Colvin in an effort to hold Syria’s government liable for killing her as
she reported on that country’s civil war. In January, a federal court awarded $302.5 million to Ms. Colvin’s relatives, though collecting the money will be difficult.
Mr. Rajapaksa’s lawyers are expected to formally respond to the
California complaints by late April. Lawyers for the plaintiffs said
they had no specific information about the defendant’s assets in the
United States.
However the cases turn out, it is an open question how far they could go toward healing the wounds of the bitter war.
“Even if we win, it’s not justice,” said Steven Butler, the Asia program
coordinator at the Committee to Protect Journalists, an advocacy group
in New York. He said opening criminal cases in the country where the
atrocities occurred was still the primary goal in both the Wickrematunge
and Colvin cases.
Amarnath Amarasingam, a Toronto-based expert on political violence in
Sri Lanka, said that most people in the Tamil community supported the
effort to prosecute Mr. Rajapaksa in the United States.
But some worry that bringing the Rajapaksa family to justice could be
seen as an end in itself, he added, thereby minimizing the racism and
discrimination against minorities they say was built into Sri Lanka’s
constitution and institutions.
“There’s an argument to be made that the Rajapaksa family, because they
were in power during the war, should be held especially responsible” for
human rights violations committed during its final years, Mr.
Amarasingam said. “But there’s also an argument that it’s just a symptom
of what caused the war in the first place.”
