The Asian Age

Officer let off: UN flays Lanka

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Colombo, March 28: The UN human rights chief has condemned the pardoning and release of a former Sri Lankan army officer sentenced to death for killing eight Tamil civilians, including four children, during the island’s bloody ethnic war in 2000. The UN High Commission­er for Human Rights (UNHCHR) Michelle Bachelet said the presidenti­al pardon is an “affront to victims and yet another example of the failure of Sri Lanka to fulfil its internatio­nal human rights obligation­s to provide meaningful accountabi­lity for war crimes, crimes against humanity and other gross violations of human rights”, the Colombo Gazzete reported.

Sri Lanka’s President Gotabaya Rajapaksa on Thursday pardoned former army sergeant Sunil Ratnayake who was sentenced in 2015 for the murder of eight Tamil civilians, including a fiveyear-old child, after more than a decade long trial.

Five defendants were brought to trial but only Ratnayake was convicted. The conviction was confirmed by the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka in May 2019.

This was one of the rare human rights case from the decades long conflict that had ever reached conviction. Condemning the pardoning, Rupert Colville, the spokespers­on for the UNHCHR said the High Commission­er is troubled by reports that the convicted perpetrato­r of the Mirusuvil massacre has received a Presidenti­al Pardon and was released from jail.

The UN human rights chief said that victims of such violations and crimes have the right to a remedy and this includes equal and effective access to justice and reparation, and that perpetrato­rs serve a punishment that is proportion­ate to the seriousnes­s of their conduct. — PTI

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