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, February 2, 2014
US frustrated with Sri Lanka’s reconciliation
By Associated Press, Published: February 1
Assistant Secretary of State Nisha Biswal said lack of progress has frustrated her government and the international community.
“Patience of the international community is wearing thin.....” Biswal
told reporters at the American Centre in the capital Colombo, at the end
of her visit on Saturday, adding that the U.S. will sponsor a
resolution asking Sri Lanka to do more on reconciliation and
accountability at the U.N. Human Rights Council in March.
During her visit, Biswal met senior government officials, opposition political leaders, civil society representatives.
Her visit comes two months ahead of a United Nations Human Rights
Council review of Sri Lanka’s progress in probing alleged war crimes.
The U.S. has successfully carried two resolutions at the United Nations
Human Rights Council urging Sri Lanka to conduct its own investigation
into war crimes allegations against both government troops and the
separatist Tamil rebels.
Biswal said US has always supported a Sri Lankan process to resolve the
issues emanating from the conflict. But she said she told senior Sri
Lankan government officials about the “insufficient progress” in
addressing justice, reconciliation and accountability, after the war’s
end.
She said the new resolution will call on Sri Lanka “to do more to
promote reconciliation, democratic governance, justice and
accountability....” But she declined to discuss the text of the
resolution, saying it is too early.
While Sri Lanka has enjoyed relative peace since then, it hasn’t
satisfied concerns, principally from Western nations, over the fate of
tens thousands of Tamil civilians in the final months of the war in
2009, when government forces were closing in on Tamil Tiger rebels
cornered on a sliver of land in the island’s northeast.
A U.N. report previously said as many as 40,000 Tamil civilians died,
mostly in government attacks, but Sri Lanka denies such a high toll and
has repeatedly denied it deliberately targeted civilians.
For two years after the war, Sri Lanka’s government insisted that not a
single civilian was killed. But later in 2011 it acknowledged some
civilian deaths and announced a census of the war dead but its results
were vague.
Government troops were accused of deliberately shelling civilians,
hospitals and blocking food and medical aid to hundreds of thousands of
people boxed inside a tiny strip of land as the rebels mounted their
last stand. The government denies the charges. The rebels were accused
of holding civilians as human shields, killing those who escaped their
control and recruiting child soldiers.
In November, British Prime Minister David Cameron said he would call for
a U.N.-backed investigation into allegations of war crimes unless there
was progress on postwar reconciliation by March, when the U.N. Human
Rights Council holds a bi-annual session
U.N. rights chief Navi Pillay has said she would recommend that the
council establish its own probe if Sri Lanka fails to show progress by
March.
Biswal also expressed concern about the worsening human rights situation
including the continued attacks against religious minority, weakening
of the rule of law, increased levels of corruption and impunity.
Lalith Weeratunga, secretary to the Sri Lanka’s president and his point
man on the government’s own reconciliation efforts, early this week in
Washington, denied targeting civilians by the government forces and said
government had only 18 months to implement the recommendations of it’s
own reconciliation commission.
Weeratunga warned that if that process was mishandled, it could trigger renewed conflict.
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