Sri Lanka Rejects Unsubstantiated U.s. Report On War Abuses

October 24th, 2009|Sasha James
State

“There is a track record of vested interests endeavoring to bring the government of Sri Lanka into disrepute through fabricated allegations and concocted stories,” the Foreign Ministry said on the governments Web site.

The State Department released a congressionally mandated report yesterday listing accounts of shelling of civilians and killings carried out by the army and Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. The contents appear to be “unsubstantiated and devoid of corroborative evidence,” the Foreign Ministry said in the capital, Colombo.

Sri Lankas army defeated the last LTTE forces in a battle on the northeastern coast in May, ending the groups 26-year fight for a separate Tamil homeland in the north and east of the South Asian island. The U.S. and United Nations are leading international calls for President Mahinda Rajapaksas government to release more than 280,000 people, who are mainly Tamils, displaced by the fighting and still held in transit camps.

Those with vested interests want to “fan the flames of secessionism” and undermine the governments rehabilitation and reconciliation efforts, the ministry said. Rajapaksa has called on the international community to stop criticizing Sri Lanka over human rights and the treatment of displaced people and help the country rebuild after the war.

List of Incidents

The State Departments 73-page account amounts to a log of incidents carried out by the army and the LTTE from January to May. The report doesnt reach any conclusions on whether the incidents constituted violations of international law.

“We wanted to lay out all of these credible allegations of human rights violations,” State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said in Washington yesterday. “The report doesnt attempt to verify all the claims, but we believe that the claims, which are based mostly on reporting” by the U.S. Embassy, international organizations and the media, “are credible,” he added.

The report cited one estimate that 6,710 civilians and LTTE fighters were killed between Jan. 20 and April 20 this year and acknowledged that a significant number of additional deaths may not have been recorded.

During the final weeks of the conflict, senior Sri Lankan government officials repeatedly denied that the army was shelling a civilian safe zone. “However, sources alleged that the majority of shelling” in the no-fire zone was from Sri Lankan forces, the State Department said in the report.

“Reports also indicated that the LTTE forcibly prevented the escape” of internally displaced people and “used them as human shields,” it added.

Open Area

“The report eliminates any reasonable doubt that serious violations of the laws of war were committed by both the LTTE rebels and Sri Lankan government forces,” said Senator Patrick Leahy, a Vermont Democrat, who wrote the requirement for the report in legislation.

“If Sri Lanka is to build real peace based on reconciliation and justice, a full and independent investigation is needed, and those responsible must be held accountable,” Leahy said in an e-mailed statement.

Rights Group

New York-based Human Rights Watch yesterday called for an independent international investigation.

“Theres never been an official and comprehensive assessment of abuses by both sides from a government, and that gives the report much more credibility,” Tom Malinowski, Washington advocacy director for Human Rights Watch, said in a telephone interview.

Sri Lankas government said the delay in releasing civilians from camps is because of the need to ensure security in the north and clear mines from former conflict zones.

Human Rights Watch earlier this week said the government is failing to meet its promise to resettle 80 percent of displaced people by December.

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