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Rediff.com  » News » Rajapaksa vows to guard SL army from intl probe
This article was first published 12 years ago

Rajapaksa vows to guard SL army from intl probe

Last updated on: May 27, 2011 13:46 IST

Image: Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa is escorted by the military to a cabinet meeting
Photographs: Reuters

Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa on Friday vowed to protect the country's military from possible international scrutiny over allegations of human rights violations during its prolonged conflict to end ethnic violence.

"We will not betray you", Rajapaksa told his troops during a ceremonial parade to mark the second anniversary of the war victory over the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.

"Our forces carried firearms in one hand and a human rights charter in the other during the war", the president said adding, "We are proud of the humaness of our military campaign".

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'Sri Lanka can solve its own problems'

Image: A pro-government supporter shouts behind police barriers outside the British High Commission in Colombo
Photographs: Reuters

He said, Sri Lanka will not give into any pressure from overseas as it is capable of solving its own problems. "Sri Lanka can solve its own problems and human rights cannot be guaranteed by only including them in the constitution", Rajapaksa said.

The president's remarks come in the backdrop of a recent United Nations report which accused Sri Lankan army and the Tamil rebels of serious rights violations and potential war crime and recommended setting up of an Independent International inquiry.

The report received the backing from Western nations and more recently from Indian government.

"We have established genuine human rights by eliminating terrorism", Rajapaksa said of his military campaign which crushed the LTTE's military machinery ending its over three decades old campaign to set up a separate Tamil homeland.

'LTTE supporters still trying to destroy Lanka'

Image: A resettled Tamil IDP bathes her son in Vavuniya
Photographs: Reuters

Reiterating his government's position that UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon's three-member panel had been swayed by representations made by the pro-LTTE Tamil diaspora, Rajapaksa charged that LTTE supporters were still trying to destroy Sri Lanka through false propaganda against the island.

The 'Victory Day' parade was held in Colombo with the participation of over 9000 troops from the three services.

Rajapaksa's speech was followed by a colourful parade of the troops and a 21-gun salute. On display were military hardware seized from the LTTE during the military campaign.