Brisingr
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WASHINGTON The United States has urged Sri Lanka to probe allegations of war crimes committed by government troops and Tamil rebels during the final months of their decades-old conflict.
"Ultimately, as appropriate, (they should) bring to justice those who are found guilty," State Department spokesman Ian Kelly told reporters.
The request followed publication of a State Department report that, Kelly said, contained "credible" claims of atrocities committed by both sides in the ethnic conflict.
The Sri Lankan government moved quickly to dismiss the report's findings which the foreign ministry said were "unsubstantiated and devoid of corroborative evidence".
Among the claims detailed in the report was the accusation that, in the final few days of fighting, senior Tamil Tiger leaders reached a surrender agreement with government forces but were then executed.
It also cited allegations that government troops or government-backed paramilitaries abducted and sometimes killed Tamil civilians, particularly children and young men.
The report also said not enough food, medicine and clean water reached a no-fire zone and civilian camps even though the government had pledged to guarantee sufficient supplies there.
The report covered the period from January -- when fighting intensified -- until the end of May, when Sri Lankan troops finally defeated the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
The alleged incidents "may constitute violations of international humanitarian law or crimes against humanity", the report said in its executive summary.
Kelly said the allegations were based on reports by the US embassy in Colombo, international organizations on the ground in Sri lanka, as well as the media and non-government organizations.
The Sri Lankan Foreign Ministry warned of groups with "vested interests" who were seeking through "fabricated allegations and concocted stories" to undermine the government's rehabilitation and national reconciliation work.
"The people of Sri Lanka therefore have every reason to be concerned that this report to the US Congress, may be abused for a similar end," it said.
But Brad Adams, Asia director at the New York-based Human Rights Watch, said the report should "dispel any doubts that serious abuses" were committed during the conflict's final months.
"Given Sri Lanka's complete failure to investigate possible war crimes, the only hope for justice is an independent, international investigation," he added.
To read the full report of US State Department
http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/131025.pdf
Now after going thro this report it is evident that SL Army matched equally to LTTE in unleashing brutality over innocent civilians. LTTE is a banned terrorist organisation because they indulged themselves in unlawful activities. To follow suit should SriLanka be banned for committing the same crime???
"Ultimately, as appropriate, (they should) bring to justice those who are found guilty," State Department spokesman Ian Kelly told reporters.
The request followed publication of a State Department report that, Kelly said, contained "credible" claims of atrocities committed by both sides in the ethnic conflict.
The Sri Lankan government moved quickly to dismiss the report's findings which the foreign ministry said were "unsubstantiated and devoid of corroborative evidence".
Among the claims detailed in the report was the accusation that, in the final few days of fighting, senior Tamil Tiger leaders reached a surrender agreement with government forces but were then executed.
It also cited allegations that government troops or government-backed paramilitaries abducted and sometimes killed Tamil civilians, particularly children and young men.
The report also said not enough food, medicine and clean water reached a no-fire zone and civilian camps even though the government had pledged to guarantee sufficient supplies there.
The report covered the period from January -- when fighting intensified -- until the end of May, when Sri Lankan troops finally defeated the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
The alleged incidents "may constitute violations of international humanitarian law or crimes against humanity", the report said in its executive summary.
Kelly said the allegations were based on reports by the US embassy in Colombo, international organizations on the ground in Sri lanka, as well as the media and non-government organizations.
The Sri Lankan Foreign Ministry warned of groups with "vested interests" who were seeking through "fabricated allegations and concocted stories" to undermine the government's rehabilitation and national reconciliation work.
"The people of Sri Lanka therefore have every reason to be concerned that this report to the US Congress, may be abused for a similar end," it said.
But Brad Adams, Asia director at the New York-based Human Rights Watch, said the report should "dispel any doubts that serious abuses" were committed during the conflict's final months.
"Given Sri Lanka's complete failure to investigate possible war crimes, the only hope for justice is an independent, international investigation," he added.
To read the full report of US State Department
http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/131025.pdf
Now after going thro this report it is evident that SL Army matched equally to LTTE in unleashing brutality over innocent civilians. LTTE is a banned terrorist organisation because they indulged themselves in unlawful activities. To follow suit should SriLanka be banned for committing the same crime???