COLOMBO,
Sri Lanka (AP) — An international rights group on Tuesday called Sri
Lanka's report on its 26-year civil war an attempt to whitewash growing
evidence of alleged government atrocities.
Two years after the conflict ended, Sri Lanka
conceded for the first time this week that troops caused civilian
deaths in the last months of fighting against Tamil Tiger rebels. But
its war report takes no responsibility for those deaths or for any
alleged violations of the rules of war, New York-based Human Rights Watch said.
Sri Lanka has been under increasing international pressure to allow for an independent investigation into alleged human rights violations by both troops and rebels, which a U.N. experts panel said could amount to war crimes.
However, it denies allegations that troops committed rights violations and executed prisoners, and says the civilian deaths were unavoidable given the magnitude of the fighting and ruthlessness of the opponent.
It does not say how many civilians may have been killed, though the U.N. panel has said tens of thousand perished in just the last months of the war.
The
report says the government was forced to go to war after unsuccessful
attempts to broker peace with the independence-seeking rebels, and that
its military operation followed international laws while accusing the
rebels of abuses including using civilians as human shields and conscripting child soldiers.
The government's report "is yet another feeble attempt to convince the world, despite growing evidence to the contrary, that government forces committed no crimes."
The troops are alleged to have deliberately shelled civilians in a no-fire zone, targeted hospitals and blocked food and medical aid, according to the U.N. panel.
Footage allegedly taken by front-line soldiers and aired on Britain's Channel 4 television appears to show blindfolded prisoners being shot at close range and the naked bodies of women being loaded into a tractor trailer.
Defense Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa on Monday accused Channel 4 of "promoting baseless accusations whose sole purpose is to discredit Sri Lanka."
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