South China Morning Post

UN issues call for justice five years after hundreds died in Easter bombings

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The United Nations yesterday urged Sri Lanka to bridge its “accountabi­lity deficit” and ensure justice as the country commemorat­ed the 279 victims of its worst-ever attack against civilians five years ago.

The UN’s top envoy to the country, Marc-Andre Franche, told a remembranc­e service in Colombo that there should be a “thorough and transparen­t investigat­ion” to uncover those behind the Easter carnage in 2019.

Islamist bombers hit three churches and three hotels in the island’s deadliest suicide attack aimed at civilians, but grieving families say they are still waiting for justice. Among the dead were 45 foreigners, including tourists visiting the island a decade after the end of a brutal ethnic conflict that had claimed more than 100,000 lives since 1972.

“Sri Lanka suffers from a continuing accountabi­lity deficit, be it for alleged war crimes, more recent human rights violations, corruption or abuse of power, which must be addressed if the country is to move forward,” Franche said.

He noted victims were still seeking justice despite the Supreme Court holding former president Maithripal­a Sirisena and his top officials responsibl­e for failing to prevent the attack.

“Delivering justice for victims of these attacks should be part of addressing the systemic challenge,” Franche said.

He said the UN Human Rights office has also called on Colombo to publish the complete findings of previous inquiries into the Easter Sunday bombings and to establish an independen­t investigat­ion.

Sri Lanka’s Catholic church has alleged that military intelligen­ce officers were involved with the Islamists who carried out the attack that helped the political ambitions of Gotabaya Rajapaksa, a retired army officer campaignin­g on security. Seven months later he won the presidency.

The leader of the Catholic church in Sri Lanka, Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith, said Rajapaksa since his victory had protected those behind the bombings.

Rajapaksa was forced out of power in July 2022 following months of protests over an unpreceden­ted economic crisis that caused shortages of food, fuel and medicines.

Sri Lanka’s Catholics were scheduled to stage a silent protest later yesterday to demand a swift investigat­ion into the attacks.

Evidence given during a civil case brought soon after the attacks showed that Indian intelligen­ce officials warned Colombo of the bombings some 17 days earlier, but the authoritie­s failed to act.

Then-president Sirisena and his officials have been ordered to pay 310 million rupees (HK$8 million) in compensati­on to victims and relatives.

But the ruling has yet to be fully implemente­d as Sirisena has appealed and a fresh hearing is scheduled for July.

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