Sri Lanka's Tamil party opposes inquiry into alleged human rights violation

Sri Lanka's Tamil party opposes inquiry into alleged human rights violation
Sri Lanka's Tamil party opposes inquiry into alleged human rights violation
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The News Minute | January 29, 2015 | 06.20 pm IST

Sri Lanka's main Tamil party Thursday said it would oppose any domestic inquiry into the alleged human rights violations during the final stages of the country's civil war and reiterated its call for an international probe.

Tamil National Alliance (TNA) spokesperson Suresh Premachandran told reporters that the Tamil minorities in the island nation had no faith or trust in a domestic inquiry, noting that numerous domestic commissions were futile in the past.

"We categorically oppose any domestic inquiry. Tamils have no faith or trust in a domestic investigation and we reiterate our call for a UN-backed international probe," Xinhua news agency quoted Premachandran as saying.

He also urged the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights to table a report on Sri Lanka as scheduled at the UN Human Rights Council session in March.

The report on Sri Lanka will be presented by UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Prince Zeid Ra'ad Zeid Al-Hussein with a comprehensive investigation on Sri Lanka's civil war.

Sri Lanka's senior advisor on foreign affairs Jayantha Dhanapala was in Geneva to discuss the UN Human Rights Council's investigation into alleged violations of human rights by both parties in Sri Lanka with the high commissioner.

He is also expected to brief the high commissioner of the government's efforts to conduct its own inquiry into the war allegations.

Sri Lanka's newly elected government led by Maithripala Sirisena said earlier this month it would conduct its own probe and appoint a domestic independent commission, consisting of professionals, to investigate the final stages of the war against rebels of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) which ended in 2009.

Sri Lanka has been under continuous pressure from the UN and human rights watchdogs to have an international probe but the request had been turned down by former president Mahinda Rajapakse's government.

With IANS

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