Imperial Valley Press

Sri Lanka govt faces pressure over torture, rape allegation­s

-

GENEVA (AP) — Sri Lanka’s government faced increasing pressure Friday to answer for alleged human rights violations following an Associated Press investigat­ion that found more than 50 men who said they were raped, branded or tortured as recently as this year.

The men’s anguished descriptio­ns of their abuses come nearly a decade after Sri Lanka’s civil war ended and days ahead of a review of the Indian Ocean nation by the U.N.’s top human rights body.

Doctors, psychologi­sts, lawmakers and rights groups have appealed to the United Nations to investigat­e the new allegation­s published by The Associated Press on Wednesday. The AP reviewed 32 medical and psychologi­cal evaluation­s and interviewe­d 20 men who said they were accused of trying to revive a rebel group on the losing side of Sri Lanka’s 26-year civil war. All the men are members of the country’s Tamil ethnic minority.

Although combat ended in 2009, they say the torture and abuse occurred from early 2016 to as recently as July of this year.

Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., the top ranking Democrat on the subcommitt­ee that oversees U.S. foreign aid, said the U.S. Senate Appropriat­ions Committee has made aid to the government conditiona­l on its compliance with internatio­nal standards for arrest and detention, as well as accountabi­lity for war crimes.

Sri Lanka has received $76 million in U.S. foreign assistance since 2015.

“These accounts of torture are horrific and contradict the Sri Lankan government’s professed commitment to reconcilia­tion and justice,” Leahy said, adding “I will be looking for convincing evidence that torture has ended and those responsibl­e are being punished.”

Several doctors wrote to U.N. Human Rights chief Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein and called for an independen­t investigat­ion.

“As forensic experts, we have collective­ly seen many hundreds of Sri Lankans who have fled their country following torture over the years,” the physicians’ letter said. “We continue to receive a worrying number of cases from Sri Lanka despite the change of government.”

One of the men in the AP investigat­ion said he was held for 21 days in a small room where he was raped 12 times, burned with cigarettes, beaten with iron rods and hung upside-down. Another man described being abducted from home by five men, driven to a prison, and taken to a “torture room” pocked with blood splatters on the wall.

Most of the men say they their captors identified themselves as members of the Criminal Investigat­ions Department, a police unit that investigat­es serious crimes. Some, however, said it appeared their interrogat­ors were soldiers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States