International
UN adopts resolution on Lanka war crimes
UN adopts resolution on Lanka war crimes
March 23, 2012 | 12:00 AM
AFP/UN
The UN Human Rights Council yesterday passed a resolution urging Sri Lanka to conduct a credible investigation into alleged war crimes committed during its battle against Tamil Tiger separatists in 2009. Sri Lanka bristled as its ally India turned its back on Colombo during the council’s contested vote on the US-led resolution, while rights groups said the result sent a “strong message for justice”. Tabling the resolution, the United States said Colombo had been given three years to hold its own investigations into allegations of serious violations, but “given the lack of action... it is appropriate” that the 47-member-state council pushed it to do so. In Washington, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton hailed the council’s action, saying it “encourages the government of Sri Lanka to continue on the path toward reconciliation following 27 years of civil war”. “The United States, together with the international community, sent a strong signal that Sri Lanka will only achieve lasting peace through real reconciliation and accountability, and the international community stands ready to help,” she said. Rights groups say up to 40,000 civilians died in the final months of Colombo’s military campaign to crush the Tamil Tigers, who waged a bloody decades-long campaign for a separate homeland for minority Tamils. The government has denied its troops were responsible for any non-combatant deaths, but UN mandated experts have accused the Sri Lankan army of killing most of the civilian victims in their final offensive against the separatists in 2009. The United Nations estimates some 100,000 people died during Sri Lanka’s ethnic conflict between 1972 and 2009. US envoy Eileen Donahoe noted in particular that India’s backing was “very helpful because they are such a close neighbour”. “We see India’s support as nothing but positive,” she said. But Sri Lanka called the move “distressing” with its Foreign Minister G Peiris saying: “The most distressing feature is... that voting at the Human Rights Council is now determined not by the merits of a particular issue but by strategic alliances and domestic political issues in other countries.” Sri Lanka’s human rights envoy Mahinda Samarasinghe also dismissed the bill, saying it was a “misconceived, unwarranted and ill-timed resolution which embodies several harmful elements that clearly violate important principles that will have adverse ramifications, not only for my country, but many other countries”. He insisted that Sri Lanka must be given time to allow its domestic investigations to run their course and warned that the resolution would be counter-productive. It would “also undermine the principle of non-interference in matters within the domestic jurisdiction of a country”, he added, a point backed by China and Russia. International rights activists welcomed yesterday’s decision as a step in the right direction. “Many countries have recognised that this resolution is an important first step toward serious action to investigate the many abuses by both sides during the conflict,” said Juliette De Rivero, advocacy director at Human Rights Watch. Amnesty International’s Sam Zarifi said it was an “opportunity to end the longstanding impunity for human rights violations that have marked the country for decades”. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton yesterday welcomed a UN resolution urging Sri Lanka to “credibly investigate” allegations of war crimes during its battle against Tamil Tiger separatists in 2009. Thursday’s Human Rights Council resolution in Geneva “encourages the government of Sri Lanka to continue on the path toward reconciliation following 27 years of civil war,” the chief US diplomat said in a statement. “The United States, together with the international community, sent a strong signal that Sri Lanka will only achieve lasting peace through real reconciliation and accountability,” Clinton said. “And the international community stands ready to help,” she said.
| Sri Lankan disabled soldiers express their solidarity with the government during a demonstration in Colombo yesterday |
March 23, 2012 | 12:00 AM