Army accused of ignoring sex crime claims
COLOMBO: When a Haitian teenager alleged that she had been raped by a Sri Lankan peacekeeper, Colombo sent a highranking general suspected of war crimes to lead the investigation.
The general didn’t interview the accuser or medical staff who examined her, but he cleared the peacekeeper — who remained in the Sri Lankan military.
“A suspected war criminal is the wrong person to conduct an investigation into alleged crimes committed by a peacekeeper,” said Andreas Schuller of the European Centre for Constitutional and Human Rights, a Berlin-based group that helped launch the complaint.
It wasn’t the first time that accusations against Sri Lankan peacekeepers were swept aside. In 2007, a group of orphaned Haitian children identified 134 Sri Lankans who gave them food for sex in a child sex ring that went on for three years, an Associated Press (AP) investigation found.
In that case, which was corroborated by UN investigators, the Sri Lankan military repatriated 114 of the peacekeepers, but none was ever jailed.
In fact, Sri Lanka has never prosecuted a soldier for sexual misconduct while serving as a peacekeeper abroad, the AP found.
A culture of impunity that arose during Sri Lanka’s civil war has seeped into its peacekeeping missions. The government has consistently refused calls for independent investigations into its generation-long internal conflict, marked by widespread reports of rape camps, torture, mass killings and other alleged war crimes by its troops.
Despite those unresolved allegations, the UN has deployed thousands of peacekeepers from Sri Lanka. This is a pattern repeated around the world: Strapped for troops, the UN draws recruits from many countries with poor human rights records for its peacekeeping programme.
An AP investigation last month found that, in the past 12 years, an estimated 2,000 such allegations have been levelled at UN peacekeepers and personnel.
Many of today’s 110,000 or so peacekeepers come from unstable and violent countries. Troops in the Democratic Republic of Congo, for example, also have been accused of rape, torture and killings during the longstanding war in their country; as peacekeepers, they have faced allegations of sexual abuse and exploitation.
Robert Blake, who served as the US ambassador to Sri Lanka from 2006 to 2009, was one of many officials who pressed the Sri Lankan government for more transparency into alleged wartime abuses. As for the peacekeepers, he said: “You are there to keep the peace. If they themselves are guilty of atrocities, clearly they are not suitable candidates for peacekeeping operations.’’
Eight years after Sri Lanka’s war ended, people who fled the country are increasingly coming forward to give horrific accounts of being raped.
One woman said she was kidnapped by masked men, taken to what she believes was an army camp, and repeatedly raped.
One of her tormentors was brought to the room she shared with four other women. “He was asked to take his pick,” she told the International Truth and Justice Project. “He looked around and chose me. And took me to another room and raped me.”
She identified him from photographs. The AP found that the soldier, an officer, went on to become a UN peacekeeper.
During the last months of the civil war that ended eight years ago, Maj Gen Jagath Dias led an army division whose troops were accused of attacking civilians and bombing a church, a hospital and other humanitarian outposts. Nevertheless, when a teenager said she was raped by a peacekeeper in Haiti, Mr Dias was dispatched to investigate the 2013 case.
In an interview in the garden of his mother’s home here, he explained the charges were groundless, even though he never interviewed the woman. He also flatly denied the allegations of war crimes at home, telling the AP that his 57th Division only targeted areas where rebels were firing on troops.
Yet evidence presented against Mr Dias by two human rights groups in Europe led authorities to threaten a criminal investigation in 2011 while he was serving as a deputy ambassador to Germany, Switzerland and the Vatican. He was soon recalled to Sri Lanka, where he was later promoted to army chief of staff.
Mr Dias described allegations against Sri Lanka’s soldiers as unfair. “If a soldier has raped a woman, he should be court-martialed, no doubt,” he said. “But where is the evidence? Allegations are just allegations.”