Sri Lanka rejects UN scrutiny over crimes against Tamils during civil war

A resolution empowers the UN rights council to collect evidence of war crimes during Sri Lanka’s 26-year-long conflict. Colombo has historically resisted calls for a probe into allegations that troops killed 40,000 Tamil civilians.

Sri Lankan military officer lowers the national flag at the flag square in Colombo, Sri Lanka on March 23, 2021.
Reuters

Sri Lankan military officer lowers the national flag at the flag square in Colombo, Sri Lanka on March 23, 2021.

UN human rights boss Michelle Bachelet has been given a mandate to collect and preserve information and evidence of crimes related to Sri Lanka's long civil war, which ended in 2009 with the defeat of the separatist Tamil Tigers.

The Human Rights Council has adopted a resolution on Tuesday, brought by Britain on behalf of a group of countries, boosting her office's staff and powers, with a view to future prosecutions.

The vote at the 47-country forum in Geneva was 22 in favour, with 11 against including China and Pakistan, and 14 abstentions including India.

"Impunity has become more entrenched, progress in emblematic cases has stalled," British ambassador Julian Braithwaite said, presenting the text on behalf of a group that included Canada, Germany, Malawi, Montenegro and North Macedonia.

But Sri Lanka's ambassador, MCA Chandraprema, rejected the text as "unhelpful and divisive."

Asian countries including China and the Philippines closed ranks around Sri Lanka's government, while Japan abstained.

READ MORE: Will Sri Lanka’s new president heal the country or open old wounds?

A call for sanctions on commanders

The resolution expressed serious concern at trends over the past year that represented "a clear early warning sign of a deteriorating situation of human rights."

These included putting military officers in charge of civilian government functions, an erosion of the independence of the judiciary, and impunity and "political obstruction of accountability" for crimes.

The United Nations believes 80,000 to 100,000 people died in the 26-year war, in which the Tamil Tigers hoped to carve out a separate state for the Tamil minority.

In the final months, civilian deaths soared as the army pinned the Tigers into a tiny strip of the northeastern coast, where the United Nations says they kept hundreds of thousands of civilians as human shields.

In a report in January, Bachelet urged states to impose sanctions on former Sri Lankan military commanders, including the current army chief, who were suspected of links to atrocities during the latter part of the war. 

READ MORE: Unhealed wounds: 10 years on, Sri Lankan war victims struggle for closure

Loading...
Route 6