Eastern Eye (UK)

UK police investigat­es ‘role of British mercenarie­s’ in Sri Lanka war crimes

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LONDON police said on Monday (30) they have launched an investigat­ion into alleged war crimes by British mercenarie­s who trained a security force accused of brutalisin­g Tamil people during Sri Lanka’s civil war.

The war crimes unit of the Metropolit­an Police said it was acting on a referral received in March “concerning war crimes alleged to have been committed by British mercenarie­s in Sri Lanka during the 1980s”.

“Following receipt of the referral, the War Crimes Team began a scoping exercise into the matter and have subsequent­ly launched an investigat­ion,” it said, declining to comment further while the probe is ongoing.

The investigat­ion concerns Keenie Meenie Services (KMS), a now-defunct private security company that trained an elite unit of the Sri Lankan police called the Special Task Force in the 1980s to fight Tamil separatist­s, according to the BBC.

The STF has been accused of summary executions of alleged Tamil Tiger rebels and killings of Tamil civilians.

The probe follows the publicatio­n in January of a book by investigat­ive journalist Phil Miller called Keenie Meenie: The British Mercenarie­s Who Got Away with War Crimes.

“A lot of Tamil people became refugees in the 1980s, that’s when KMS were there,” Miller told the BBC. “People remember being attacked by helicopter gunships so I think people are quite shoc

to learn that in many of those cases helicopter­s were flown by British mercenarie­s,” he said.

KMS was founded in the 1970s by former officers of Britain’s elite Special Air Service, including David Walker. It ceased trading in the 1990s and Walker, 78, is now listed as one of the directors of another London-based company, Saladin Security.

The BBC quoted a representa­tive of Walker as saying: “The allegation­s that David Walker or staff of KMS Limited were complicit in war crimes in Sri Lanka in the mid-1980s is categorica­lly denied.”

The police unit “has not yet asked for assistance from Saladin or Mr Walker, but they will be happy to cooperate if asked”, the representa­tive added.

Sri Lanka’s Tamil war ended in 2009.

More than 100,000 people lost their lives, according to United Nations estimates.

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