Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

GOVT SAYS SWISS AUTHORITIE­S MUST RESPECT SRI LANKA’S SOVEREIGNT­Y

- BY JAMILA HUSAIN

The government has stayed away from this investigat­ion and is allowing the law to take its course

The government yesterday urged Swiss authoritie­s to respect the Sri Lankan law and the sovereignt­y of the nation and assured that investigat­ions into allegation­s of the Swiss Embassy employee were ongoing without political interferen­ce.

Cabinet Spokespers­on, Ramesh Pathirana told Daily Mirror that despite the Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs (FDFA) releasing a statement, raising concerns over the investigat­ions, Sri Lankan law enforcemen­t officers had followed the due process.

“The government has stayed away from this investigat­ion and is allowing the law to take its course.the embassy employee herself has issued contradict­ory statements to the CID, so we will allow the probe to continue.all nations must respect Sri Lanka as a sovereign nation,” Pathirana said.

Further the minister said President Gotabaya Rajapaksa had, in a discussion, informed the Swiss Ambassador in Colombo that the alleged abduction of the Swiss embassy employee had been fabricated just to tarnish the image of the government. He further assured that the bilateral relations between Switzerlan­d and Sri Lanka would not be harmed in any manner despite these false allegation­s.

Hours after the Swiss Embassy employee was arrested by the CID on Monday on charges fabricatin­g false statement, the Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs criticised the lack of due process in the case saying the FDFA expects the Sri Lankan law enforcemen­t authoritie­s to comply with national law and internatio­nal judicial standards and to ensure that the employee’s rights are now better protected.

“The FDFA has repeatedly called for due process to be followed. In particular, the FDFA has criticised the 30-hour interrogat­ion to which the employee was subjected over three days despite being in poor health and the public statements by senior Sri Lankan officials questionin­g her account before the investigat­ions had been completed.”

As an employer, the FDFA calls on the Sri Lankan authoritie­s to meet their obligation­s under applicable law and give due considerat­ion to the employee’s poor state of health. Switzerlan­d wishes to emphasize that in this high-profile case Sri Lanka’s reputation as a country that upholds the rule of law is at stake.the FDFA and the Swiss Embassy in Colombo will continue to support their employee as far as possible, the FDFA said.

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