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Lanka to look into war abuse charges

Sri Lanka on Saturday said it will conduct its own investigation into allegations of war abuses including those by its armed forces, the country’s Foreign Minister said, rejecting calls for setting up an international tribunal.

‘The Sri Lankan attorney general has started the inquiry into the alleged war abuses and human rights violations that occurred during the last few months of end of the civil war,’ G M Peiris, told reporters at a news conference held here at the end of his four-day US trip. ‘The investigations would include alleged violations by the security forces too,’ he said.

Peiris made these comments after meeting Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, where he presented a detailed reconciliation plan to the US administration. During the meeting, Clinton strongly urged ‘accountability’, in probing the war crimes allegations ‘to strengthen reconciliation, public confidence inside and outside Sri Lanka, and, frankly, to speed the healing of the country,’ according to the State Department spokesperson Victoria Nuland.

The meeting comes in the wake of strained ties between Washington and Colombo over the American sponsorship of a UN human rights resolution calling on Sri Lanka to conduct an independent probe into civilian deaths in the final phase of the country’s civil war.

Nuland said that Colombo had presented a ‘serious and comprehensive’ plans for recommendations of a probe into human rights abuses that now needed to be made public and put into practice. Peiris said talks were also held on reducing Sri Lanka’s dependence on Iranian oil.

President Mahinda Rajapaksa, while addressing the nation during the official celebrations to mark the third anniversary of the end of the civil war on Saturday, said that Sri Lanka is ready to accept development assistance from its foreign partners but will not tolerate interference in its reconciliation process.
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