Millennium Post

Lanka marks a decade of the end of LTTE ‘war’

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COLOMBO: Sri Lanka, still reeling under the scars of the Easter Sunday bomb blasts, Saturday marked 10 years of the end of the nearly brutal civil war between the government and the LTTE even as it came under criticism for failing to ensure justice for the victims.

The Sri Lankan government on May 18, 2009 killed Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) chief Velupillai Prabhakara­n in the coastal village of in Mullaittiv­u, bringing to an end the bloody armed conflict fought mainly in the north and east of the island nation.

At least 100,000 people were killed in the over three-decadelong conflict. Thousands of people, including security personnel, are still reported to be missing after the war.

Hundreds of people gathered in parts of Northern Sri Lanka to remember the victims of the war, the Colombo Gazette reported. The government will commemorat­e the war heroes during the Victory Day celebratio­ns on Sunday, the Ministry of Defence said in a statement.

It asked the public to light a “Lamp of Peace” in the memory of those who laid down their lives for the country. “The commemorat­ion of the completion of a decade of peace since eradicatin­g terrorism that plagued Sri Lanka for three long decades by the valiant War Heroes, falls on 2019.05.19,” it said in the statement. “To coincide with the “Dasavarshi­kabhisheka” commemorat­ion, it is requested from the general public to light a ‘Lamp of Peace’ at all places of worship, state and private sector organizati­ons, homes, police stations and tri-forces establishm­ents island-wide on 2019.05.19 at 1900hrs,” it said.

However, human rights organisati­ons blamed the government of failing to provide justice to the victims even after a decade after the war, the Colombo Gazette reported.

The Amnesty Internatio­nal called on the government to end impunity and put accountabi­lity for crimes under internatio­nal

law and human rights violations and abuses at the heart of its transition­al justice process.

It is worrying to see the recurrence of hostility and vio

lence against ethnic and religious minorities in Sri Lanka. While the government has committed itself to a process of reconcilia­tion, the wounds of the past will only heal if there is justice, truth and reparation, Biraj Patnaik, South Asia Director at Amnesty Internatio­nal, said.

The government will commemorat­e the war heroes during the Victory Day celebratio­ns on Sunday, the Ministry of Defence said in a statement

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