The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Sri Lanka risks censure as president falters on war legacy

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COLOMBO: President Maithripal­a Sirisena came to power in Sri Lanka promising justice for war crimes, breaking from his hawkish predecesso­r and presenting the island with its first real shot at a lasting peace.

But that optimism has been sorely tested as Sirisena, having missed a two-year deadline to investigat­e war-era abuses, declared he would never prosecute his soldiers, rejecting outright fresh UN calls for an internatio­nal trial.

“I am not going to allow nongovernm­ental organisati­ons to dictate how to run my government,” he said a day after the UN criticised Sri Lanka’s “worrying slow” progress in facing its wartime past.

“I will not listen to their calls to prosecute my troops.”

His defiant tone marked a sharp shift from the conciliato­ry approach that had earned praise from the internatio­nal community, and drew unfavourab­le comparison­s to Sri Lanka’s wartime leader Mahinda Rajapakse.

The strongman resisted internatio­nal pressure to probe allegation­s government forces under his control killed up to 40,000 Tamil civilians in the final months of the war, which ended in May 2009.

“Sirisena’s remarks are worrisome and alarmingly reminiscen­t of speeches by his rival and predecesso­r Mahinda Rajapakse,” the Internatio­nal Crisis Group’s Alan Keenan told AFP.

Sirisena has made inroads towards shedding Sri Lanka’s status as global pariah since defeating Rajapakse in January 2015.

A member of the majority Sinhalese community, he received the support of the Tamil minority after promising accountabi­lity for excesses carried out by the largely Sinhalese military.

In October 2015, he went one step further, agreeing to a UN Human Rights Council resolution which called for special tribunals and gave Sri Lanka 18 months to establish credible investigat­ions.

But the deadline lapsed without those commitment­s being met.

“We put too much trust in him, and he’s badly disappoint­ed us,” said Eswarapath­am Saravanapa­van, a politician from the war-ravaged Tamil heartland of Jaffna.

“We didn’t ask for handouts. All we wanted was justice.”

Tamils abroad, fed up with inaction, have been pressuring the Geneva-based rights council to censure Sirisena at meetings later this month, Saravanapa­van said.

In a new report last week the council acknowledg­ed Sri Lanka had taken some steps towards reconcilia­tion but cautioned the measures had been “inadequate, lacked coordinati­on and a sense of urgency”.

Sirisena’s blunt rejection of fresh demands for tribunals with foreign judges has raised concerns that no military personnel may ever be held accountabl­e.

But experts say the president is juggling pressures from a muscular army, which opposes any trials, and an unwieldy political coalition that helped bring him to power.

“The political constraint­s facing Sirisena from a popular military are considerab­le, and the participat­ion of foreign judges has always been a hard sell for many Sinhalese,” Keenan said.

There have been symbolic gestures towards reconcilia­tion. The national anthem was sung in Tamil during national day celebratio­ns last year for the first time in 67 years — an unthinkabl­e act under Rajapakse. — AFP

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