Colombo (TIP): Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has appointed a three-member panel to probe the findings of the previous commissions appointed by the state to investigate human rights abuses committed during the last phase of the armed conflict with the LTTE in 2009.
The move comes as the UN rights body in its next session starting from February is to examine Sri Lanka’s rights progress in the backdrop of UNHRC resolutions, which called for the island nation’s rights accountability.
Rajapaksa appointed a judge of the highest court, a former chief of the police and a retired bureaucrat to the three-member panel, according to a gazette dated Thursday.
They have been tasked to find out if the previous panels had revealed any serious human rights violations, whether they made any recommendations, whether they were implemented and what are the steps needed to be taken to implement such recommendations. Sri Lanka, under the previous government, had co-sponsored two United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) resolutions which called for independent investigations into alleged rights abuses committed by both the LTTE and the government troops during the last phase of the armed conflict. The government of Gotabaya Rajapaksa in 2019 announced they were withdrawing from co-sponsorship of resolutions and blamed the previous government of betraying Sri Lanka’s sovereignty by doing so.
PTI
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