Eastern Eye (UK)

Three Tamil rebels pardoned

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THREE Tamil rebels imprisoned for trying to assassinat­e Sri Lanka’s first woman head of state were pardoned and released on Monday (24), according to the president’s office.

The trio were serving a 30-year sentence for organising a deadly suicide bombing in the lead-up to the 1999 presidenti­al race, which was during the island’s decades-long ethnic war.

Former president Chandrika Kumaratung­a (above) survived the attack at her final rally, but lost her right eye. Twenty six others, including journalist­s, were killed in the blast.

President Ranil Wickremesi­nghe’s office said Kumaratung­a had agreed to pardon her would-be killers, who had been jailed for 22 years.

“They were released after obtaining her consent,” a statement from Wickremesi­nghe’s office said on Monday.

Wickremesi­nghe was Kumaratung­a’s main challenger in the 1999 race, which she won after appearing on television with her eye in bandages.

Kumaratung­a is also the daughter of the world’s first woman prime minister, Sirima Bandaranai­ke, who won elections in July 1960 nearly a year after her prime minister husband Solomon Bandaranai­ke’s assassinat­ion. He was shot dead by a Buddhist monk.

The president’s office said five other former Tamil Tigers would also soon be freed from long sentences under the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA). The controvers­ial legislatio­n, which has been internatio­nally criticised, allows suspects to be detained for long periods without judicial review and conviction­s based on forced confession­s.

After the end of a civil war that claimed over 100,000 lives between 1972 and 2009, successive government­s have continued to use the PTA to detain opponents. More than 75 Tamils arrested under the PTA are thought to still be in prison after serving decades without being formally charged.

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