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It said as many as 40,000 civilians could have been killed in the conflict, citing “a number of credible” unnamed sources. The Government doesn’t have an official death toll for the war, according to D.C.A. Gunawardena, Director-General of the Department of Census and Statistics.
Five years after the war ended, the Government has “failed to act on its promises to investigate and bring to justice wartime atrocities,” Brad Adams, Asia Director for New York-based Human Rights Watch, said on 20 May. An international investigation “represents the best hope yet for victims awaiting justice,” the organisation said.
Sri Lanka’s $59 billion economy – roughly the size of the US state of Delaware – is among Asia’s fastest-growing since the end of the ethnic strife. It is forecast to grow 7.8% this year, compared with expansion of 7.3% in 2013.
De Vass Gunawardena, who is on a one-week visit to the US, said Sri Lanka is “open for business” and wants a broader relationship with America.
“Since after the war ended we’ve been really one sided on human rights,” he said. “We are at the crawling stage so far, so let us walk and then run perhaps.”