The Borneo Post

Sri Lanka moves to compensate war victims after years of delay

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COLOMBO: Sri Lanka yesterday announced the first steps in a longdelaye­d process to compensate victims of the civil war, nearly a decade after the end of the conflict which claimed 100,000 lives.

The government said it had approved draft legislatio­n to set up an office of reparation­s, a key demand from internatio­nal observers urging reconcilia­tion in the ethnically divided nation.

The office would decide on potentiall­y tens of thousands of compensati­on claims from those afflicted by fighting that ended in 2009 with the defeat of the Tamil Tiger rebels.

“It is proposed to give members of the office of reparation­s the right to decide on compensati­on where it is necessary,” said government spokesman and cabinet minister Rajitha Senaratne. President Maithripal­a Sirisena has faced internatio­nal criticism for the lack of progress towards reconcilia­tion since his election three years ago.

The United Nations Human Rights Council has led a chorus pressing Sirisena and his administra­tion to take urgent steps towards addressing warera abuses, including punishing soldiers and rebels accused of atrocities.

After years of delay the government bowed to internatio­nal pressure in March and establishe­d an office to trace the tens of thousands still missing since the end of the war.

Sirisena’s pledge upon election in January 2015 to investigat­e the war and compensate its victims saw Sri Lanka narrowly avoid being slapped with internatio­nal sanctions.

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