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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, March 2, 2017
TAMILS WANT SRI LANKA TO FULFILL PROMISES TO UN RIGHTS BODY
Image: Sumanthiran speaking to FCA, Sri Lanka ( Photo credit:FCA facebook)
By bharatha mallawarachi, associated press.-01/03/2017
Sri
Lanka’s main ethnic Tamil party has said the government has not
fulfilled promises made to the United Nations including allowing a probe
into war crimes allegations from a civil war that ended nearly eight
years ago.
Mathiaparanan Abraham Sumanthiran, a lawmaker from the Tamil National
Alliance, told reporters from the foreign media in Colombo on Tuesday
that his party was willing to give the government more time to fulfill
promises made to the U.N human rights council in 2015, but under a
strict timetable and monitoring process.
His comments came as a U.N. human rights session began in Geneva, where
the Sri Lankan government plans to seek more time to meet the goals.
In a joint resolution in 2015 at the U.N. Human Rights Council, Sri
Lanka had promised among other things, a truth-seeking mechanism, a
judicial mechanism to prosecute those accused of human rights abuses,
and a new constitution that covers the island nation’s varied
ethnicities and religions. However, little progress has been made.
“Sri Lanka has not accomplished even one of those obligations, not even
one obligation that they voluntarily undertook,” Sumanthiran said.
A law was passed during that time to set up an Office on Missing Persons but it is still no operational, he said.
Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera said last month that the government
needed more time, and on Tuesday he told the human rights council in
Geneva that the government had made progress in fulfilling its promises,
but added forces on both side of the island’s ethnic divide were
throwing up road blocks for political gain.
He said they had refused “to acknowledge any of the far-reaching gains we have made in the last?two years.”
According to U.N. estimates, up to 100,000 people were killed Sri
Lanka’s 26-year civil war, but many more are feared dead, including up
to 40,000 civilians who are believed to have died in the final months of
the fighting.
Government troops and the Tamil Tiger rebels, who fought for an
independent state for ethnic minority Tamils in the island’s north and
east, are both accused of war crimes.
The U.N. human rights chief has called for a hybrid court with local and
international judges. Sri Lanka agreed to allow foreign judges before
backtracking and insisting that only local courts could investigate the
allegations.