UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon dismissed on Tuesday objections by Sri Lanka to his plan to establish a panel to look into possible human rights abuses there and said he would set it up without delay.
Ban told a news conference he was within his rights to appoint the commission of experts to probe possible violations during Sri Lanka's civil war despite a complaint from President Mahinda Rajapaksa this month that the move was unwarranted. The UN chief also rejected as based on a "misunderstanding" a letter from non-aligned countries at the UN charging that he was exceeding his authority.
Rights groups and Western governments are pressing for some kind of accountability for thousands of civilian deaths in the last months of the island's 25-year war against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), who aimed to create a separate homeland for the island's Tamil minority. Rights groups have accused Sri Lanka and the LTTE of war crimes during the conflict's final phase last year and have demanded an independent probe, as has UN special rapporteur for extrajudicial executions Philip Alston.
Ban said the appointment of the UN panel accorded with a joint statement with Sri Lanka issued after he visited Sri Lanka just after the end of the war last May. "The panel I am establishing will advise me on the standards, benchmarks and parameters based on international experience that must guide any accountability process such as the one mentioned in the joint statement," he said. "I am convinced that it is well within my power as the secretary-general of the United Nations to ask such a body to furnish me with advice of this nature," he said, adding that the group would report to him directly.
"This does not in any way infringe on the sovereignty of Sri Lanka."
A statement issued by Rajapaksa's office on March 6 said the panel would be perceived as interference with the campaign for an April 8 general election and "would compel Sri Lanka to take necessary and appropriate action in that regard."
Ban said that despite the Sri Lankan objection and the non-aligned countries' letter there would be "no delay" in the establishment of the panel. He gave no further details of when it would be set up or who would serve on it.
The Sri Lankan government has denied charges of deliberately targeting civilians and other human rights breaches during the conflict with the Tigers.
Ban has come under pressure from critics who said that the timing of his visit, days after the end of the fighting, appeared to endorse the government's victory.
















It is now ten months since the ghastly war ended in Sri Lanka. The unimaginable humanitarian disaster, and once the United Nations put it as a bloodpath, has the memories of every human abuses that the mankind can think of. Mr. Gordon Weiss, ex-UN resident representative in Sri Lanka said in an interview that as many as 40,000 would have been killed in the last days of the war, for which the death count is not known to anybody except the military forces and the civilians who were on the ground at that time. For reasons unknown and known only to few in the classified circles at the UN, Mr. Weiss could not say a word about the 40,000 count during his tenure in Colombo.
It is a welcome sign from the Secretary General, though delayed beyond imagination. It is left to the Secretary General to show his sincerity in appointing an independent panel and rectify all the allegations about his bias for variety of reasons.
Hopefully, the humanity will prevail and the so-called protectors of humanity at the helm will do their duty without influence and intimidation.
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