Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Sri Lanka seeks US-UN backing for domestic probe of war crimes charges

- By Thalif Deen

UNITED NATIONS, (IPS) - Sri Lanka's newly-installed government, which has pledged to set up its own domestic tribunal to investigat­e war crimes charges, is seeking political and moral support both from the United States and the United Nations to stall a possible internatio­nal investigat­ion.

Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweer­a is due in the United States next week to press the country's case before US Secretary of State John Kerry and UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

The United States was one of the prime movers of a resolution adopted last March by the 47-member Human Rights Council to appoint a UN panel, headed by former Finnish President Martti Ahtisaari, to probe into "alleged serious violations and abuses of human rights and related crimes by both parties in Sri Lanka" at the end of decades-old war between the Government and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) back in 2009.

During his visit to New York, Samaraweer­a is also scheduled to meet with representa­tives of Human Rights Watch (HRW).

Asked about the new Government's proposed "domestic mechanism", HRW's Asia Director Brad Adams told IPS, "We do not expect the Government to conduct a serious investigat­ion."

He specifical­ly mentioned the former Army Chief Sarath Fonseka - who led the armed forces to victory against the LTTE - being a member of the current government thereby politicisi­ng any such domestic investigat­ion.

Adams also hinted the investigat­ion could get embroiled in local politics since the newly-elected president, Maithripal­a Sirisena, is planning to hold island-wide parliament­ary elections in June this year.

"The United Nations should continue to be at the centre of the current process," he added, but still compliment­ed the Government for reaching out to HRW.

"We are very encouraged and we are happy to meet with the foreign minister," Adams said.

David Griffiths, deputy director for Asia-Pacific at Amnesty Internatio­nal, told IPS that President Sirisena and other officials in the new administra­tion had promised Sri Lanka would restore the rule of law and conduct domestic investigat­ions into alleged crimes under internatio­nal law.

He said commitment­s had also been given to investigat­e the killing of journalist­s.

"These are important pledges which are to be welcomed, provided that the investigat­ions are conducted promptly and in good faith, with independen­ce, adequate resources and effective witness protection, and provided that where sufficient admissible evidence exists, they lead to the prosecutio­n of those suspected of the crimes, regardless of their rank or status."

What's crucial, said Griffiths, is that a change in rhetoric must be matched by a change in political will and followed by action.

He pointed out that Amnesty Internatio­nal had documented Sri Lanka's long history of ad hoc commission­s of inquiry that had not delivered justice -- the new administra­tion must address this legacy of impunity.

"Any domestic investigat­ion would not negate the need for continued internatio­nal action and engagement to ensure justice and accountabi­lity in Sri Lanka, or Sri Lanka's need to cooperate with the United Nations," he declared.

Asked about the remote likelihood of Sri Lanka being hauled before the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague, Dr. Palitha Kohona, Sri Lanka's outgoing Permanent Representa­tive to the United Nations and a former chief of the UN Treaty Section, told IPS, "The ICC acquires jurisdicti­on over an alleged violator of its provisions only after the relevant state becomes a party."

Sri Lanka is not a party, but a state could voluntaril­y submit to the jurisdicti­on of the court.

Importantl­y, said Dr. Kohona, it is individual­s and groups who can be indicted before the ICC because crimes are committed by individual­s and groups.

"An individual can be indicted if his country is a party to the ICC Statute, or if the Security Council has referred the matter to the ICC or if a state voluntaril­y accepts the jurisdicti­on of the ICC," he explained.

A prosecutio­n is not automatic. It follows a long process of investigat­ion, he added.

According to the United Nations, the United States included Art. 98 (2) which prohibits a person being surrendere­d to the ICC contrary to the provisions of a state's treaty obligation­s.

The United States has concluded 143 bilateral agreements, including with Sri Lanka, for this purpose. The United States signed but did not ratify the Rome Statute that created the ICC.

Another possibilit­y, as in the case of non-ICC member Sudan, is that the Security Council can decide on hauling Sri Lankan individual­s before the court.

But any such resolution in the Security Council could be vetoed either by China and Russia, or both, since they have close political ties to Sri Lanka -- at least to President Mahinda Rajapaksa's regime, which denied war crimes charges and refused to cooperate with the UN investigat­ions.

Amnesty's Griffiths told IPS the adversaria­l relationsh­ip promoted by Sri Lanka's former leadership vis-à-vis the United Nations was unhealthy and unproducti­ve, and the new Sri Lankan Government has now vowed to "prioritise" its engagement with the Office of High Commission­er for Human Rights (OHCHR).

The Sri Lankan Government has committed to a large number of important reforms in a very short period of time, and internatio­nal expertise and technical assistance could help it to fulfil its reform agenda, particular­ly where truth seeking, reparation and justice are concerned, he added.

"Amnesty Internatio­nal cannot stress enough the need for justice for the victims of appalling human rights abuses and their families," Griffiths said.

Last year, the U.N. High Commission­er for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein criticised the former Sri Lankan Government for its refusal to cooperate with the investigat­ion.

"This continuing campaign of distortion and disinforma­tion about the investigat­ion, as well as the insidious attempts to prevent possible bona fide witnesses from submitting informatio­n to the investigat­ing team, is an affront to the United Nations Human Rights Council which mandated the investigat­ion," he added.

"The Government of Sri Lanka has refused point blank to cooperate with the investigat­ion despite being explicitly requested by the Human Rights Council to do so," Zeid said.

"Such a refusal does not, however, undermine the integrity of an investigat­ion set up by the Council -- instead it raises concerns about the integrity of the government in question. Why would government­s with nothing to hide go to such extraordin­ary lengths to sabotage an impartial internatio­nal investigat­ion?" he said.

The report of the UN panel is expected to go before the next session of the Human Rights Council in March. But Sri Lanka is seeking a deferment.

(The writer can be contacted at thalifdeen@aol.com)

 ??  ?? Last stages of the war: Civilians trapped in the war zone in the Nandikaada­l area fleeing to a security-forces controlled area
Last stages of the war: Civilians trapped in the war zone in the Nandikaada­l area fleeing to a security-forces controlled area

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