Senators Urge War Crimes Probe

Thousands of civilians died in the final months of the war when the Sri Lankan military launched a decisive offensive against ethnic Tamil rebels. Sri Lanka set up a commission to investigate alleged abuses, but rights groups say the military is not being held to account.

The Obama administration has called for steps toward accountability but has not called for an international investigation.

Senators Urge Obama Administration to Seek International War Crimes Probe in Sri Lankaby ‘The Washington Post,’ January 29, 2013

(AP)— Two senators are urging the Obama administration to seek an independent international investigation into allegations of war crimes in Sri Lanka.

Democrats Bob Casey of Pennsylvania and Patrick Leahy of Vermont sent a letter Tuesday to outgoing Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, saying Sri Lanka’s government has done nothing to bring to justice those responsible for atrocities in the civil war that ended in 2009.

Thousands of civilians died in the final months of the war when the Sri Lankan military launched a decisive offensive against ethnic Tamil rebels. Sri Lanka set up a commission to investigate alleged abuses, but rights groups say the military is not being held to account.The Obama administration has called for steps toward accountability but has not called for an international investigation.

Senators Press for War Crimes Probe

by Agence-France Press, January 30, 2013

WASHINGTON — Two US senators on Tuesday renewed calls for an international investigation into potential war crimes in Sri Lanka, accusing Colombo of failing to address legitimate concerns.

Senators Patrick Leahy and Bob Casey, prominent voices on foreign policy in President Barack Obama’s Democratic Party, said the island had failed to carry out recommendations from its own Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC).

“The Sri Lankan people deserve better. In fact, as the government of Sri Lanka fails to implement LLRC recommendations, the outlook for human and political rights in Sri Lanka appears to be getting worse,” the senators wrote in a letter to outgoing Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

The senators voiced concern over the recent impeachment, backed by President Mahinda Rajapakse, of the chief justice and highlighted charges of human rights groups that authorities have intimidated the media.

“Accountability is a necessary precursor to reconciliation and a stable democracy in Sri Lanka,” the senators wrote.

“It is clear to us that the LLRC process is mired in bias and delays, and only an independent, international investigation will achieve real accountability,” they wrote.

Sri Lanka has been accused of killing as many as 40,000 civilians in 2009 in a final offensive that defeated the Tamil Tigers, who had waged a decades-long insurgency and were also criticized for tactics such as suicide bombings.

Sri Lanka has denied that any civilians were killed and rejected an international probe.

The Obama administration has stopped short of supporting human rights groups’ calls for an international probe in Sri Lanka but has gradually lost patience with Rajapakse.

US officials announced Monday in Colombo that the United States for the second straight year will bring a resolution before the UN Human Rights Council to pressure Sri Lanka over its record.

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