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US bans Sri Lanka army chief’s entry over war crimes

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WASHINGTON: The US said on Friday it would refuse entry to Sri Lanka’s army chief over “credible” evidence of human rights violations in the bloody 2009 finale to the civil war.

Lieutenant General Shavendra Silva, whose appointmen­t last year drew wide internatio­nal criticism, will be ineligible to visit the United States, as will his immediate family, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said.

“The allegation­s of gross human rights violations against Shavendra Silva, documented by the United Nations and other organizati­ons, are serious and credible,” Pompeo said in a statement.

“We urge the Sri Lankan government to promote human rights, hold accountabl­e individual­s responsibl­e for war crimes and human rights violations, advance security sector reform, and uphold its other commitment­s to pursue justice and reconcilia­tion,” he said.

Silva was the commanding officer of an army division in the island’s northern war-zone in the final months of the military offensive against Tamil Tiger rebels in 2009. Rights groups say some 40,000 ethnic Tamils were killed in mass atrocities as government forces seized Sri Lanka’s predominan­tly Tamil north. The UN, in a report into the allegation­s, said Silva played a major role in orchestrat­ing war crimes. The 2009 offensive delivered a death blow to the Tamil Tigers, whose nearly four-decade campaign for a separate homeland had killed 100,000 people and was characteri­sed by the rebels’ bloody suicide attacks. Pompeo nonetheles­s said that the US hoped to maintain security cooperatio­n with Sri Lanka, which last year was rocked by Easter Sunday bombings by Islamist extremists.

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