Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Civil war missing are dead, says Gotabaya

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Britain’s Prince Harry arrived in Canada to join his wife Meghan and son Archie, as the couple prepare for a new life after agreeing to stop using their royal titles as part of a deal to end a crisis in the Windsor family. Harry was shown arriving on Vancouver Island by Sky News, just days after reaching an arrangemen­t with Queen Elizabeth and senior royals that will see him and his wife Meghan leave behind their royal roles to seek an independen­t future.

COLOMBO: Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has acknowledg­ed for the first time that more than 23,500 people missing for a decade since the end of the country’s protracted Tamil war are dead.

Rajapaksa, who played a key role in the campaign that crushed the Tamil separatist rebels, told a UN envoy that steps would be taken to provide death certificat­es for those reported missing.

“President Rajapaksa outlined his plans to address the issue of missing persons,” said a statement on the president’s meeting with UN resident coordinato­r Hanaa Singer. “He explained that these missing persons are dead.”

Some 5,000 security forces are among the 23,500 people never accounted for.

The statement said most of the missing civilians had been conscripte­d by the LTTE, which was crushed in a major offensive that ended in May 2009. “The families of the missing attest to it. However, they do not know what has become of them and so claim them to be missing,” the president said. Under law, families cannot access property deeds, bank accounts or inheritanc­es left by missing relatives unless they can prove they are dead.

The last government set up an Office on Missing Persons in 2018 to investigat­e those never traced after the 37-year Tamil separatist war, as well as during a Marxist uprising. Rights groups claim at least 40,000 ethnic Tamil civilians were killed in the final stages of the separatist war.

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