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UN chief urges war crimes probe in Sri Lanka

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Sat, 06 Jun 2009 12:00a.m.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon

The UN chief lent credence Friday to the possibility of war crimes in Sri Lanka, saying an international probe is needed to examine the military actions of the government and defeated Tamil Tiger rebels during the civil war.

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, at a closed-door briefing for Security Council members, called for a credible inquiry to be undertaken with international backing and full support from Sri Lanka's government.

He declined to elaborate on exactly how the inquiry should be done, but he urged an examination of what he said were serious allegations of violations of international humanitarian laws, according to diplomats and UN officials who attended.

"Any inquiry, to be meaningful, should be supported by the members of the United Nations, and also should be very impartial and objective," Ban told reporters Friday at UN headquarters.

"I would like to ask the Sri Lankan government to recognise the international call for accountability and full transparency," he said. "And whenever and wherever there are credible allegations of violations of humanitarian law, there should be a proper investigation."

The council met informally rather than in its usual chambers to allow Sri Lanka's UN Ambassador Hewa M.G.S. Palihakkara to attend without requiring a formal agenda item.

Ban said he also told the council that Sri Lanka must refrain from any victory dance after routing the Tamil rebels last month and ending a quarter century of civil war.

"It is very important at this time to unite and heal the wounds, rather than enjoy all this triumphalism in the wake of the end of conflict," he said.

What options the United Nations has for ensuring a credible investigation remains unclear. UN officials say at least 7,000 civilians died in the war's final stages and put the number of deaths since the war began in 1983 at 80,000 to 100,000.

Some 300,000 Tamils are in displacement camps, and aid groups have been seeking access to them.

AP

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06 Jun 2009 03:20p.m.

san wrote:

How about the millions tamil tigers killed including indian prime minister..where were you then ? you or the South africanTamil national ms Pillay have no right to intervine or critcise srilanka's internal affires.that's a crime too.Destroying Iraq isn't a crime.. what did you do?