Arab Times

Canada PM says won’t back off Cwealth summit boycott

Harper calls for changes in Sri Lanka

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OTTAWA, Feb 27, (AFP): Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper on Tuesday held firm on his threat to boycott the Commonweal­th summit in Colombo later this year, rejecting calls to make nice with Sri Lanka.

“I have indicated that unless changes occur in Sri Lanka I will not be attending the Commonweal­th summit there,” Harper told parliament.

“I am concerned with further developmen­ts, since I made that statement, which are taking that country in a worse direction,” he added.

Commonweal­th Secretary-General Kamalesh Sharma has urged Canada to drop its threat to boycott November’s meeting in Sri Lanka over allegation­s of war crimes committed there during the civil war.

Instead, Canada stepped up pressure, reporting Sri Lanka to the Commonweal­th for allegedly violating the organizati­on’s democratic values by ignoring two court rulings and sacking Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranay­ake in January.

Bandaranay­ake had given rulings which were thought unfavorabl­e to President Mahinda Rajapakse’s regime, which is also accused of failing to probe the war crimes allegation­s.

Harper has warned that he may refuse to attend the Commonweal­th’s next summit unless Sri Lanka addresses allegation­s of atrocities during the closing battles of the war against separatist Tamil rebels in 2009.

Sri Lanka has denied allegation­s from internatio­nal rights groups that government troops killed up to 40,000 civilians while battling Tamil rebels.

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