COLOMBO, Sri Lanka – A United Nations report that gives credence to
allegations of human rights abuses during the bloody end of Sri Lanka's civil
war has given some victims' families hope for justice, while others say the U.N.
action comes too late.
The three-member panel of experts says there are credible reports that
serious human rights violations — including possible war crimes and crimes
against humanity — were committed by both the government and Tamil Tiger rebels
in the last months of the decades-long war.
Tens of thousands of ethnic Tamil civilians perished simply from being caught
in the fighting, says the report released Tuesday. It urges U.N.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to immediately investigate the claims.
The government strongly denounced the content as unverified and biased and
the report itself as a personal initiative by Ban and not an official U.N.
document.
The allegations "are presented as a narrative account of events during the
last stages of the humanitarian operation," instead of in a legal context,
External Affairs Minister Gamini Peiris told Colombo-based diplomats Thursday.
"The events are therefore recounted as a true 'horror story' aimed at arousing
emotion and causing revulsion and contempt."
The Tigers, crushed at the end of the war in 2009, are virtually nonexistent
as an organization now and have no way to respond to the findings.
The violent 26-year war, waged by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam for an
independent state for ethnic minority Tamils, caused up to 100,000 deaths on
both sides — including at least 7,000 in the last five months alone, the U.N.
has said.
Since the war ended, civilians in former war zones have been forced into
silence about what they witnessed. Having faced restrictions even in
commemorating their dead since the war, they don't dare to demand justice. Many
refused to speak with The Associated Press altogether for fear of reprisals,
while some spoke on condition that only one name be used.
But some ethnic Tamil civilians said this week that the report gives hope
that justice for the victims can be served and that the harsh postwar conditions
they live under will ease.
"There was nobody to help us during the war. Children died before our eyes,"
said one man, who only gave his name as Kanustus. He lost his daughter and
several other family members during the war and sustained shrapnel wounds to a
hand and leg.
"There must be an investigation, and the truth must be told. We know many
countries know the truth but pretend not to know," he said.
Others said the U.N. move came too late and would amount to little — belying
a mistrust that stems from what the report itself says were missed opportunities
by U.N. bodies and officials to take steps during the war to save civilian
lives.
"I don't trust the U.N.," said a Tamil housewife called Rose. "We expected
till the end that they will come to our help, but it was not to be."
Ethnic Tamil lawmaker Suresh Premachandran welcomed the U.N. report while
saying the government "has not taken a single step toward reconciliation" with
the shell-shocked Tamil community.
Instead, he said, the military has assumed an overwhelming role in civilian
life and taken over ethnic Tamil property — allegations the government has
denied.
"Whatever is said by the panel must be implemented," Premachandran said. The
government is "dividing the people more by alienating the Tamil people. ... The
Tamil people are so much suppressed."
The U.N. panel gave credence to allegations that the government
systematically shelled hospitals, food distribution lines and no-fire zones
where civilians had been asked to gather in the last months of the war. Beaches
near Red Cross ships carrying away wounded evacuees were also bombarded.
On the other side, the Tigers are accused of forcibly recruiting children,
using civilians as human shields and shooting those who tried to flee their
grip.
"We were in a situation where we couldn't even bury our dead relatives," said
32-year-old Sujitha. Ten of her relatives were killed in the conflict, she said.
"The dead will never return. I don't know what good (the report) will bring, but
the world must know the truth."
Rebel families also sought an investigation that could bring closure along
with justice. Prabhakaran Bobitha, whose husband was in rebel intelligence when
he was arrested at the war's end, said an independent U.N. investigation could
help reveal his fate.
"They must tell me what happened to my husband," she said, two years after
she last saw him and two other rebels being loaded into an army jeep.
The U.N. secretary general said Monday he would launch an investigation only
if Sri Lanka's government agreed.
The government, however, has warned against such a probe, saying it would
only damage reconciliation efforts between the Tamil minority and the Sinhalese
majority that controls government and the armed forces.
The Foreign Ministry said the U.N. report's release at this stage was
"divisive, and disrupts our efforts to reinforce peace, security and stability
in Sri Lanka. It feeds into the political agendas of interested parties."
Among the majority Sinhalese, many feel it's unfair to investigate a
government that defeated a group engaged in a terror campaign for decades.
"A 30-year war ruined this country, and we are the people who witnessed the
horror and destruction of that war," said Jagath Dissanayake, a 37-year-old
house builder. "I think these so-called rights protectors want to give a new
lease of life for the defeated terrorists." AP