At
UN Screening
on Sri Lanka
Murders,
Kohona Tells
Press to Ask
Nambiar, Silva
Says It Was
53rd Div -
Lies Agreed On
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
September 6, updated
with video
-- Sri Lanka's
two top
diplomats at
the UN in New
York took
Press
questions
after they
screened "Lies
Agreed Upon,"
of which the
invitation
from the
president of
the UN
Correspondents'
Association
stated, "Sri
Lankan
Authorities
state, 'this
video directly
challenges the
assertions
contained in
the UK Channel
4 video, Sri
Lanka's
Killing
Fields.'"
Inner
City Press
asked Palitha
Kohona about
his role in
what are
called the
White Flag
murders of
surrendering
Tamil Tiger
leaders in May
2009. Kohona's
first answer
included the
suggestion
that "I think
you need to
talk to Mr.
Nambiar." Video here.
UN Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
chief of staff
Vijay Nambiar
has never
answered Inner
City Press'
questions on
this, but
Nambiar told
Al Jazeera
that he "spoke
to the foreign
secretary at
that time, Mr.
Palitha
Kohona."
But
Kohona on
September 6
answered Inner
City Press
that as
foreign
secretary he
has "no role"
in the
military.
Pressed, he
conceded that
he spoke with
Nambiar at a
reception in a
hotel, but
said he
couldn't
remember the
substance of
the
conversation.
Nambiar
said of
Kohona, as
well as
Gotabaya and
Mahinda
Rajapaksa,
that "the
response from
them was that
they would be
treated likes
normal
prisoners of
war, if they
raised the
white flag
they would be
allowed to
surrender."
And
then they were
killed, at
least
Balasingham
Nadesan and
Seevaratnam
Puleedevan.
Inner
City Press
asked Sri
Lanka's Deputy
Permanent
Representative
(and former
military
commander)
Shavendra
Silva about
paragraphs in
the UN Panel
of Experts
report which
say his 58th
Division was
involved in
the shelling
of hospitals
including the
PTK hospital.
Silva
first said
that his 58th
wasn't named.
Video here.
Once Inner
City Press
read out loud
the paragraph,
which names
the 55th and
58th
Divisions,
Silva said the
report is
incorrect, it
was the 53rd
Division, the
55th was
elsewhere.
Inner
City Press
asked about
the doctors in
"Lies Agreed
To," and
whether they
were in
government
detention when
they recanted
what they'd
previously
said about the
number of
killed and the
bombing of
hospitals. The
answer told to
"just look at
the video" and
judge how free
the doctors
were.
But Wikileaked
cables from
the US Embassy
in Colombo say
otherwise.
"In
a meeting with
the Ambassador
on May 20, the
Defense
Secretary
indicated that
it would
probably not
be safe to
free the
doctors until
after passions
had cooled.
More recently
a senior
contact in the
CID was
demoted
because he had
worked to
improve the
detention
conditions of
the doctors
and apparently
had expressed
too strong of
a desire to
improve their
welfare...
Credible local
NGO sources
have said the
families were
told the
doctors may be
released
following such
confessions
and they may
have had to
videotape
individual
confessions
for the
president."
Once
after Inner
City Press'
questions the
session was
called to a
close, Inner
City Press
asked Silva
why his
government
hasn't
responded to
the Panel of
Experts'
report. Kohona
had argued
that it is not
a UN report,
calling it the
"Darusman"
report for the
chairman of
the three
person panel.
Silva also
said let the
Sri Lankan
Lessons Learnt
&
Reconciliation
Commission
finish its
work.
The
LLRC is
harshly
criticized in
a report set
to be released
in Geneva on
September 7.
But it appears
that the
Rajapaksa
administration's
goal was to
get its
rebuttal video
shown in the
UN, while the
underlying
Killing Fields
documentary
was not shown
in the UN, in
what Rajapaksa
supporters
called a
"victory."
Silva, Pioli
& Kohona
at UN,
"Killing
Fields" not
shown
On
the podium
with Kohona
and Silva was
UNCA president
Giampaolo
Pioli, who was
the one who
agreed that
"Lies Agreed
Upon" could be
shown in the
UN. His
question to
Kohona was
about the Red
Brigades in
Pioli's native
Italy, now
represented in
that country's
parliament.
Kohona's reply
was that
Karuna,
formerly of
the LTTE, has
already been
incorporated.
Earlier
on Tuesday,
Inner City
Press asked
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's new
deputy
spokesman if
Ban has yet
taken the time
to watch
"Killing
Fields;" so
far, even from
Tuesday's
answer, it
does not
appear that
Ban has
watched it.
And so it goes
at the UN.
Note:
the
UN has
answered
multiple
requests from
Inner City
Press to ask
questions to
Vijay Nambiar
by pointing to
a single
statement he
made on the
topic of the
White Flag
murders, to Al
Jazeera. While
it never
aired, Inner
City Press
obtained the
certified
transcript,
which has
Nambiar
saying:
Nambiar
the
extent to
which I was
involved in
this was a
telephone
conversation,
a telephone
message I got
from a Sunday
Times
correspondent
through the UK
Foreign Office
and through
the UN
headquarters
where I was
asked to check
with the Sri
Lankan
authorities
regarding the
possible
protection
could be given
to two of the
Tamil
leaders...
When I
received this
call, I said
that I will
make an effort
and contact
the government
authorities,
which I did,
the same day
that is I
think it's the
17 and 18 of
May. I went
and I spoke
to the foreign
secretary at
that time, Mr.
Palitha Kohona,
the defense
secretary, and
subsequently I
spoke to the
president
also. So, I
raise this
question …the
Sunday Times
correspondent
talked about
their wanting
to
surrender…they
may want to do
it to a third
party…afraid
for their
lives…so I
raised this
with them and
suggested …the
response from
them was that
they would be
treated likes
normal
prisoners of
war, if they
raised the
white flag
they would be
allowed to
surrender.
Now that is
the extent to
which I was
involved.
Q:
This
is what
President of
Sri Lanka told
you..
Nambiar:
Yes…the
president also
in response to
my statement,
he said the
same thing, as
did the
foreign
secretary
and the
Defense
Secretary.
(Bold added.)
That
is, Gotabaya
and Mahinda
Rajapaksa --
and Palitha
Kohona. Watch
this site.
These
reports
are
usually also available through Google
News and on Lexis-Nexis.
Click
here
for a Reuters
AlertNet
piece by this correspondent about Uganda's
Lord's Resistance Army. Click here
for an earlier Reuters
AlertNet piece about the Somali
National Reconciliation Congress, and the UN's
$200,000 contribution from an undefined trust
fund. Video
Analysis here
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