Sri Lanka showed off its military hardware during a victory parade yesterday to celebrate the first anniversary of the defeat of Tamil Tiger rebels, amid growing criticism over alleged rights abuses in the last phase of the quarter-century civil war.
The conflict that killed more than 80,000 people ended last May, when government forces crushed the rebels who had fought for a separate state for ethnic minority Tamils, claiming decades of discrimination by the Sinhalese majority.
Artillery, tanks and multi-barrel rocket launchers were featured in the parade down Colombo’s main thoroughfare, Galle Face, facing the Indian Ocean.
PHOTO: AFP
Thousands of troops, including disabled soldiers in wheelchairs, also joined in.
Warplanes and helicopters flew over Galle Face while navy gunships sailed along the coast.
Celebrations came as Sri Lanka faced growing international criticism for not examining abuses allegedly committed during the last phase of the war.
According to UN documents, more than 7,000 civilians died in the last five months of the conflict. Rights groups say they have photographic and video evidence and have called for war crime investigations.
Government troops were accused of shelling a small strip of land where hundreds of thousands of people were boxed-in during the war’s final stages. The rebels were accused of killing non-combatants trying to leave the area they controlled and firing artillery from civilian-populated regions that led to retaliatory military fire.
Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa yesterday denied allegations that civilians were targeted during military operations and said offensives were carried out only to wipe out “terrorism.”
“Not a single bullet was fired at civilians from your weapons,” he said in his address to troops at the parade.
Rajapaksa last month appointed the “Lessons Learned and Reconciliation Commission” to investigate alleged human rights abuses during the war. Sri Lankan officials have refused calls to establish an international tribunal.
The UN, meanwhile, plans to appoint a panel of experts to look into human rights issues in Sri Lanka despite opposition from the government.
UN Undersecretary-General for Political Affairs B. Lynn Pascoe on Thursday said he expects Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to announce the appointment of the panel early next week.
Pascoe declined to comment on its functions, but the UN has previously said the panel would advise Ban “on the way forward on accountability issues related to Sri Lanka.”
Sri Lanka strongly opposes its formation. Rajapaksa in March called it “totally uncalled for and unwarranted.”
Yesterday’s parade had been planned for last month, but was delayed because of heavy rains and floods.
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