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Friday, 4 July 2014 01:15 - - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}
Minister Rambukwella said the UNHRC Resolution calling for investigations into atrocities committed by the LTTE as well as government troops was a strategic move to treat a legitimate government and a defeated terrorist organisation as equals.
“We are clear that a legitimate government and a terrorist organisation cannot be treated as equals,” he charged.
“The LTTE is a dead organisation,” the Spokesman said, just months after his government announced that the Tigers were regrouping in the Northern Province.
“As far as the Government of Sri Lanka is concerned, there is no one left on the ground level to hold accountable for LTTE crimes,” Minister Rambukwella emphasised.
Repeatedly questioned by journalists whether the Government did not seek to try Tiger members still among the living, including Adele Balasinhgam, Kumaran Pathmanathan and Karuna Amman, Minister Rambukwella responded that the Government had found rehabilitation and reintegration of these former LTTE leaders into the political mainstream was a better way.
“We are happy and content with our system. We are not interested in prosecuting people. We are looking at rehabilitation and absorption,” he explained.
He said that the Government of Sri Lanka had already concluded investigations into crimes and atrocities by the Tigers, from the Alfred Duraiyappah assassination right up to the Kebethigollewa attacks in 2006. “All of the evidence is there, we have provided it,” the Minister said, adding that the Government had no faith in the UN probe.
Questioned about whether the Government would permit Sri Lankan citizens to freely testify before UN investigators, the Spokesman said the Government would have to wait until the process started to decide if there was a need to take action. “We will have to decide whether there are provisions to do so,” he noted.