Sri Lanka considers war reparations
UN to issue war crimes report tomorrow, findings of ‘serious nature’
UN to issue war crimes report tomorrow, findings of ‘serious nature’
Sri Lanka’s new unity government is planning a range of measures to ensure reconciliation after decades of war, including creating an office for war reparations and a truth commission, foreign minister Mangala Samaraweera said on Monday.
“The government of Sri Lanka recognises fully that the process of reconciliation involves addressing the broad areas of truth seeking, justice, reparations and non-recurrence,” Mr Samaraweera told the United Nations Human Rights Council.
He said that the country aimed to create a “Commission for Truth, Justice, Reconciliation and Non-Recurrence” with help from authorities in South Africa and other countries that have set up their own truth commissions.
The government also wanted to set up an office to “facilitate the implementation of recommendations relating to reparations” made by the proposed truth commission and other entities, he said.
“The best guarantee for non-recurrence is of course a political settlement that addresses the grievances of the Tamil people,” Mr Samaraweera told the council.
The UNHRC will on Wednesday release a long-awaited report on Sri Lanka’s alleged war crimes during the war against the LTTE in which at least 1,00,000 people died.
The report had initially been scheduled to be published in March, but UN rights chief Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein had recommended it be delayed for six months to give the country’s new government a chance to cooperate with investigators. Mr Hussein praised the new government’s efforts on Monday but said that it was time to press on with the report.
“Its findings are of the most serious nature,” he told the main UN rights forum in Geneva.
“This council owes it to Sri Lankans — and to its own credibility — to ensure an accountability process that produces results, decisively moves beyond the failures of the past and bring the deep institutional changes needed to guarantee non-recurrence,” he said.
Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena came to power in January promising reconciliation and accountability for alleged war crimes committed by troops under the command of then President Mahinda Rajapaksa.
During his decade in power, Mr Rajapaksa resisted Western pressure to investigate allegations that up to 40,000 ethnic Tamil civilians were killed by his troops in the final months of the war in 2009.
