Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

India should stop treating SL as an ally: Karunanidh­i

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This probe should be held outside of Sri Lanka at a ‘common location’ as that alone would ensure that the ‘true culprits’ would be found to ensure action could be taken against them

The DMK on Thursday (22) demanded that India should stop treating Sri Lanka as a ‘friendly country’ and take steps for a credible internatio­nal inquiry into allegation­s of war crimes against the Lankan army during the conflict with the LTTE, the PTI said.

Citing the report by retired judge Maxwell Paranagama, tabled in the Sri Lankan Parliament on Tuesday (20), DMK Chief M. Karunanidh­i stated that while backing a recent UN Human Rights Council report, the Paranagama panel had recommende­d that internatio­nal judges should have a role to ensure the credibilit­y of any investigat­ion into war crimes. “India should not treat Sri Lanka as a friendly country any more and should support efforts to hold a credible and independen­t internatio­nal probe into war crimes committed by the Sri Lankan army (besides) human rights violations and genocide,” he said.

This probe should be held outside of Sri Lanka at a ‘common location’ as that alone would ensure that the ‘true culprits’ would be found to ensure action could be taken against them, he said in a statement.

The DMK President referred to Paranagama, as saying that there was evidence to suggest that footage obtained by the Channel 4 documentar­y ‘No Fire Zone’ showing Sri Lankan soldiers executing Tamil prisoners was genuine even as surrenderi­ng LTTE leaders were also allegedly killed.

In the report, dated August 2015, retired Judge Maxwell Paranagama had said that “There are credible allegation­s, which, if proved to the required standard, may show that some members of the armed forces committed acts during the final phase of the war that amounted to war crimes giving rise to individual criminal responsibi­lity.”

The probe panel commission­ed by former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, during whose tenure hostilitie­s between the Army and rebel LTTE peaked, resulting in large civilian casualties, had said that to the list for investigat­ion must be added cases of all those who were ‘hors de combat’ (out of action due to injury or damage) and those who allegedly perished while in the custody of the Sri Lankan army.

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