Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

ARMY REJECTS UN CHARGES AGAINST LT. COL. AMUNUPURE

Will comply with written request

- BY DARSHANA SANJEEWA

The Sri Lanka Army said yesterday that it would prove that a Commander of its 200-strong contingent assigned to the UN peacekeepi­ng force in Mali Lt. Col. Kalana Amunupure was not guilty of any Human Rights abuses in the last stages of the war.

Will recall the Commander according to the formalitie­s

We have been informed that there was a request to recall the commander who is leading the UN peacekeepi­ng contingent in Mali

Military Spokesman Brigadier Sumith Atapattu said however, that it would comply with the UN request and take steps to recall Lt. Col. Amunupure, when an official request was received.

“We have been informed that there was a request to recall the commander who is leading the UN peacekeepi­ng contingent in Mali,” he said.

“But it was only a verbal request. We will recall the Commander according to the formalitie­s following an official request. If the UN does not want him there, we have to recall him.

“However, we do not agree with the allegation. He has not done anything wrong. He has not committed any war crime. We will appeal and send him back,” Brigadier Atapattu said.

He said this was the second UN peacekeepi­ng mission of Lt. Col. Amunupure.

The Brigadier said the first 200-strong Combat Convoy Company (CCC) contingent led by Lt. Col. Kalana Amunupure was scheduled to return upon completion of their oneyear tenure in Mali this December.

He said 20 officers and 240 other rankers commanded by Lieutenant Colonel K. L. I. Karunanaya­ke with Major P. G. J. Suriyasena as his Second-in-command, would undertake responsibi­lities in Mali as replacemen­t for the first CCC.

Last week, the United Nations asked the Sri Lankan Government to immediatel­y recall the commander of the Sri Lankan UN peacekeepi­ng force in Mali following its review of his Human Rights records.

UN Spokesman Stephane Dujarric announced that the request for Lt. Col. Amunupure to leave Mali was made “based on recently received informatio­n.” He gave no details.

A total of 19, 000 members of the Sri Lanka Army have to-date served in UN peacekeepi­ng missions either as Combat Troops, Military Observers (156), Staff Officers or as Assistants to Staff Officers in several parts of the world.

During their overseas duties, three Sri Lankan Peacekeepe­rs had died during 2005 and 2007.

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