AFP
Ex-President
Mahinda Rajapaksa’s brother denounced Monday the UN Human Rights Chief’s visit
to Sri Lanka as a “big joke”, as the former regime stepped up opposition to an
UN-backed war-crimes probe.
Former President Rajapaksa and his brother, ex-Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa, have signed a petition against the probe
Former President Rajapaksa and his brother, ex-Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa, have signed a petition against the probe
into allegations of thousands of civilian deaths during the
final months of Sri Lanka’s separatist war.
Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein arrived on Saturday for a four-day
visit to gauge the island’s progress in investigating war-time atrocities,
before he delivers an assessment to the UN Human Rights Council in March.
Gotabaya Rajapaksa accused authorities of arranging for Zeid
to meet only sympathisers of Tamil rebels, who were crushed by Government
troops in 2009 following a war for a separate homeland for ethnic Tamils.
“He can’t come here for a day and expect to understand the
situation. He is only meeting one side,” Gotabaya, who was Defence Secretary
during the war’s finale, told reporters in Colombo. “It is a big joke.”
Flanked by the ex-President, Gotabaya repeated the former
regime’s longstanding position that no war crimes were committed by Government
troops in the final push.
After defeating Rajapaksa at presidential elections a year
ago, his successor Maithripala Sirisena agreed to investigate allegations
troops killed up to 40,000 Tamil civilians in the final months.
Zeid on Sunday visited the former war zones of Jaffna and
Trincomalee in the island’s north and northeast.
He told local Tamil leaders on the Jaffna peninsula, which
saw some of the worst fighting, that there should not be a general amnesty, but
a swift legal process to deal with rebel detainees.
“As a general principle it is not acceptable to grant
amnesties to those convicted of the most serious crimes – war crimes or crimes
against humanity,” a spokesman for the Rights Chief told AFP.
But the UN would welcome a release of those against whom
there was insufficient evidence.
More than 200 suspected Tamil separatists remain in prison,
many without charge.
Tamil political and civil society groups have long demanded
their unconditional release, though the Government has refused a blanket amnesty.
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