[Interestingly, there is hardly any difference between the Sinhala
chauvinists and the Tamil LTTE in terms of their attitudes towards
dissenters. Only, the LTTE was perhaps even more brutal.]

 Protesters Demand End to UN Probe into Sri Lankan War Crimes

Anjana Pasricha | New Delhi 06 July 2010


[image: Sri Lankan protesters wave their national flags and burn an effigy
of U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon outside the U.N. office in Colombo,
Sri Lanka, 06 Jul 2010] Photo: AP

*Sri Lankan protesters wave their national flags and burn an effigy of U.N.
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon outside the U.N. office in Colombo, Sri Lanka,
06 Jul 2010*

<http://del.icio.us/post?url=http://www1.voanews.com/english/news/asia/Sri-Lankans-Protest-at-UN-Human-Rights-Office-97839904.html&title=Protesters+Demand+End+to+UN+Probe+into+Sri+Lankan+War+Crimes>

*Protesters in Sri Lanka led by a Cabinet minister have surrounded the
United Nations office to demand the world body end a probe into allegations
of human rights abuses during the country's civil war.*

The protesters, led by Housing Minister Wimal Weerawansa, first broke
through police barricades at the United Nations office in Colombo on
Tuesday, then held sit-in demonstrations to block the entrance and exits
from the building. They also burnt an effigy of U.N. Secretary-General Ban
Ki-moon.

*The minister demanded that the U.N. scrap a three-member panel established
last month to advise whether human rights violations took place during the
civil war that ended last year with the defeat of Tamil Tiger rebels.
*
Minister Weerawansa says that the U.N. panel is intended to take the
country's political leaders before international courts. Sri Lanka's
government has been fending off growing pressure to allow an independent
investigation into alleged war crimes, having already said it will not
cooperate with the panel and refusing visas to its members.

The head of the Center for Policy Alternatives in Colombo, Paikiasothy
Saravanamuttu, says the demonstration to the U.N. office was politically
led, but there is a measure of popular support.

"Nationalist sentiment is being whipped up, saying Sri Lanka is being
targeted. But there is a certain amount of public sentiment that is very
much in tune with the government's argument that there is an international
agenda to target Sri Lanka on human rights," said Saravanamuttu.

Over the past year, Sri Lanka has faced growing international demands to
allow a credible investigation into alleged war time abuses. But the
government has refused to buckle under the pressure, calling this an
infringement of its sovereignty.

It ignored a July 1 deadline set by the European Union to deliver written
pledges on improving human rights, prompting the EU to withdraw preferential
trade concessions to Sri Lanka on Monday.

The government has shrugged off the EU's decision, saying it will take steps
to help export businesses which are affected.

Sri Lanka denies widespread accusations by human rights groups that the
rebels and the army were responsible for thousands of deaths of civilians in
the last phase of the war. It says the military operation ended terrorism in
the country, and wiped out the Tamil Tigers, a ruthless guerrilla group
which led a three decade war for a homeland for ethnic Tamils.

http://www1.voanews.com/english/news/asia/Sri-Lankans-Protest-at-UN-Human-Rights-Office-97839904.html


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