Wednesday, 19 June 2013
Home Tamil Affairs International Affairs Editorial Opinion Feature Culture & Community
Latest Entries:
'Time for action, not action plans'
Tamil Guardian 26 September 2012 Print ArticleE-mail ArticleFeedback On Article
   
The International Crisis Group's Sri Lanka Project Director, Alan Keenan, has slammed the Sri Lankan government's lack of action in investigating war crimes and called on the international community to demand action, not action plans from Sri Lanka.

Extracts have been reproduced below. See the full article here.
"Masters of prevarication, the Sri Lankan Government is once again stalling the UN's attempt to ensure an open assessment of the brutal final stages of the country's civil war. The regime is probably hoping interest will fade, but every day it refuses a fair examination of some 40,000 civilian deaths is another small step away from reconciliation between the Sinhalese-dominated state and Tamils, and toward the next ethnic conflict."

"Colombo's contempt for the international community seems to know no bounds. Six months after the UN Human Rights Council (HRC) requested that Sri Lanka address its culture of impunity and badly damaged rule of law, the regime has taken no concrete action."

"The Sri Lankan Government's recently announced 'national action plan' purports to implement the LLRC's recommendations, but in fact, it rejects that commission's central finding: the need to initiate independent investigations and restore the independence of the judiciary, police and other public bodies."

"The action plan proposes only flawed inquiries into alleged war crimes and other serious human rights violations, generally relying on the very institutions accused: the police and the military. It does nothing to establish independent institutions able to hold to account state agencies, President Rajapaksa (pictured) and his family, or the increasingly powerful military."

"As for all the other 'vast number of credible allegations' of war crimes cited by a UN panel of experts, the 'action plan' promises only that the military will 'complete ongoing disciplinary process being conducted in terms of Armed Forces statutes' and 'upon conclusion, take follow up action to prosecute, where relevant'. No information has been released about which incidents or military personnel may be under investigation. The Government gives itself five years to complete the process."

"Sri Lanka's human rights problems did not end with the war either. There have been scores of disappearances and political killings even since the LLRC report in December 2011, and prospects for reconciliation are further away than ever."

"Despite Government claims to have reduced the role of the military in the Tamil-majority north and east (a key demand of the HRC resolution) reports from the ground confirm continued military control over virtually all aspects of life. By refusing to restart negotiations with the main Tamil party, the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), or allow elections to the northern provincial council, the Government is fueling anger among Tamils and weakening support for the TNA's moderate, pro-engagement approach."

"The international community, especially member states of the Human Rights Council, must now demand action, not action plans. Sri Lankans of all ethnicities need independent and effective bodies to investigate the many serious human rights violations they have endured during the war and in the years since. They need independent police, judges and prosecutors, freed from the control of the president and the ministry of defence. Provincial council elections and demilitarisation in the north are crucial first steps to sustainable peace, and international development institutions, including the World Bank and Asian Development Bank, should condition assistance on both processes."
 
Share on Facebook Print ArticlePrint Article E-mail ArticleE-mail Article Feedback On ArticleFeedback On Article
 
 
HIGHLIGHTS
  Tamil Affairs
Tamil Guardian 18 June 2013
Assaulted #BoycottLKA activist calls for calm
Following the violent scenes of Tamil 'Boycott Sri Lankan Cricket' activists being assaulted by Sri Lankan cricket fans, on Monday night outside the Oval in London, Tamil Guardian spoke to one of the organisers, Thusiyan. [more]

Tamil Guardian 18 June 2013
UK university students condemn racist attacks
University Tamil societies from across the UK have released a statement condemning the racist attacks outside the Oval on Monday. 21 Tamil societies joined together to denounce the attacks and commend the peaceful campaign of the activists, [more]

Tamil Guardian 18 June 2013
Dr. Sivashankar released
A Tamil doctor, who was arrested in December 2012 after attempted to release a Tamil woman from a Sri Lankan military base, was released on Monday morning. [more]

Tamil Guardian 18 June 2013
British Council hosts international education event in Colombo

The British Council will hold a global education forum in Colombo, with attendees from several countries coming together to discuss international higher education issues. [more]

Tamil Guardian 18 June 2013
More coverage of yesterday's attack on Tamil activists by Sri Lanka fans at Oval
A Sri Lankan cricket fan launches a kick into the back of Tamil activist as police struggle to control the violent fans in London yesterday. [more]

Tamil Guardian 17 June 2013
Displaced Tamil housing needs ignored - TNA
TNA's Batticaloa MPs have complained that hundreds of Sinhalese families, unaffected by the war, will benefit from the Indian housing project in the East while displaced Tamils are ignored. [more]

Tamil Guardian 17 June 2013
BREAKING NEWS: Sri Lankan cricket fans assault #BoycottLKA activists
Sri Lankan cricket fans throw rocks and bottles at 'Boycott Sri Lankan Cricket' activists handing out leaflets outside the Oval, London. BST: 21:24 [more]

Tamil Guardian 17 June 2013
CHOGM to depict 'correct image of SL'

The Secretary of the Ministry of External Affairs, Karunathilake Amunugama said that through the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, the 'correct image of Sri Lanka could be depicted to the international'. [more]


Print Editions

 
 

Contact Tamil Guardian
www.tamilguardian.com