The Borneo Post

Sri Lanka risks censure as president falters on war legacy

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C OL OMBO : President Maithripal­a Sirisena came to power in Sri Lanka promising justice for war crimes, breaking from his hawkish predecesso­r and presenting the island with its first real shot at a lasting peace.

But that optimism has been sorely tested as Sirisena, having missed a two-year deadline to investigat­e war- era abuses, declared he would never prosecute his soldiers, rejecting outright fresh UN calls for an internatio­nal trial.

“I am not going to allow nongovernm­ental organisati­ons to dictate how to run my government,” he said a day after the UN criticised Sri Lanka’s “worrying slow” progress in facing its wartime past.

“I will not listen to their calls to prosecute my troops.”

His defiant tone marked a sharp shift from the conciliato­ry approach that had earned praise from the internatio­nal c ommu ni t y, an d dr ew unfavourab­le comparison­s to Sri Lanka’s wartime leader Mahinda Rajapakse.

The st rongman resisted internatio­nal pressure to probe allegation­s government forces under his control killed up to 40,000 Tamil civilians in the final months of the war, which ended in May 2009.

“Si risena’s remarks are worrisome and alarmingly reminiscen­t of speeches by his rival and predecesso­r Mahinda Rajapakse,” the Internatio­nal Crisis Group’s Alan Keenan told AFP.

Sirisena has made inroads towards shedding Sri Lanka’s status as global pariah since defeating Rajapakse in January 2015.

A member of the majority Sinhalese community, he received the support of the Tamil minority after promising accountabi­lity for excesses carried out by the largely Sinhalese military.

In October 2015, he went one step further, agreeing to a UN Human Rights Council resolution which calledfors­pecialtrib­unalsandga­ve Sri Lanka 18 months to establish credible investigat­ions.

But the deadline lapsed without those commitment­s being met.

“We put too much trust in him, and he’s badly disappoint­ed us,” s a id Eswa r apatham Saravanapa­van, a politician from the war-ravaged Tamil heartland of Jaffna.

“We didn’t ask for handouts. All we wanted was justice.”

Tamils abroad, fed up with inaction, have been pressuring the Geneva-based rights council to censure Sirisena at meetings later this month, Saravanapa­van said.

In a new report last week the council acknowledg­ed Sri Lanka had taken some steps towards reconcilia­tion but cautioned the measures had been “inadequate, lacked coordinati­on and a sense of urgency”.

Sirisena’s blunt rejection of fresh demands for tribunals with foreign judges has raised concerns that no military personnel may ever be held accountabl­e.

But experts say the president is juggling pressures from a muscular army, which opposes any trials, and an unwieldy political coalition that helped bring him to power.

“The political constraint­s facing Sirisena from a popular military are considerab­le, and the participat­ion of foreign judges has always been a hard sell for many Sinhalese,” Keenan said.

There have been symbolic gestures towards reconcilia­tion. The national anthem was sung in Tamil during national day celebratio­ns last year for the first time in 67 years — an unthinkabl­e act under Rajapakse. — AFP

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