Monday, November 26, 2012

UN civil war report upsets Sri Lanka



Bharatha Mallawarachi, AAP November 24, 2012, 4:13 pm
Sri Lanka's government has criticised a United Nations report on the island's civil war, saying the allegations against the government are "unsubstantiated and erroneous".
In a response to an internal review the world body released last week, the external affairs ministry said on Friday the report "appears to be another attempt at castigating Sri Lanka for militarily defeating" the Tamil Tigers.
The UN report said the world body's own inadequate efforts to protect civilians in 2009 during the bloody final months of the civil war marked a "grave failure" that led to suffering for hundreds of thousands of people.
The report also accused UN staff in Sri Lanka's capital, Colombo, of not perceiving that preventing civilian deaths was their responsibility and accused their bosses at UN headquarters of not telling them otherwise.
A separate UN report released last year said up to 40,000 ethnic minority Tamil civilians may have been killed in the war's final months.
The report accused the government of working to intimidate UN staff, of withholding visas of those critical of the government and of planting false allegations against them in the media.
Those accusations against the government drew Friday's rebuke from the Sri Lankan foreign ministry.
"While this report is an internal review of the UN's action in Sri Lanka during the terrorist conflict, the ministry's attention has been drawn to certain issues with regard to allegations directed at the government of Sri Lanka, which are regrettably unsubstantiated, erroneous and replete with conjecture and bias," the ministry said in a statement.
It said the UN report did not mention the "intransigence of the LTTE, which held the people as a human shield, and even shot in cold blood those who tried to escape to gain their freedom." LTTE is the acronym for the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.
However, contrary to the government's assertion, the UN report was heavily critical of the rebels