Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Rethink army chief ban, Lanka tells US

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COLOMBO: Sri Lanka on Sunday said the US should reconsider its decision to refuse entry to the island’s army chief over his alleged war crimes and warned that relations were being “unnecessar­ily complicate­d”.

The US on Friday said the travel ban for Lieutenant General Shavendra Silva and his family was imposed over what it called credible evidence of human rights violations in the 2009 finale to the civil war.

US ambassador Alaina Teplitz was summoned by Sri Lanka’s foreign minister Dinesh Gunawarden­a on Sunday, officials said.

He said Colombo was “disappoint­ed” with the decision, the first against a Sri Lankan military officer.

“The minister said this action unnecessar­ily complicate­s the US-SRI Lanka relationsh­ip,” his office said in a statement shortly after the closed-door meeting.

Silva was unfairly barred on unverified allegation­s, Gunawarden­a added. The foreign ministry quoted Teplitz as saying the US would continue its cooperatio­n with Sri Lanka, including in defence, despite the ban on Silva.

Silva’s appointmen­t in August sparked internatio­nal outrage because of his links to alleged war crimes, and the UN briefly suspended the recruitmen­t of Sri Lankan troops for peacekeepi­ng duties.

Silva headed the army’s 58th division in the final months of the battle against Tamil Tiger rebels. The military claimed victory in May 2009, but it also sparked allegation­s that up to 40,000 civilians were killed by troops.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Shavendra Silva
REUTERS Shavendra Silva

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