Yahoo - AFP, Amal Jayasinghe, 3 January 2016
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A Tamil
woman holds a baby girl at a camp for internally displaced people
in the
northern town of Vavuniya (AFP Photo/Lakruwan Wanniarachchi)
|
Colombo
(AFP) - Up to 100,000 people still living in camps six years after the end of
Sri Lanka's brutal ethnic war will be given land to build homes within six
months, President Maithripala Sirisena told AFP Sunday.
The leader,
elected last January, has won praise for starting to hand back land after the
end of one of South Asia's longest and bloodiest ethnic wars, which pitted the
government against Tamil separatists. But he is also under international
pressure to do more to reconcile the ethnically divided nation.
"It is
an ambitious target, but I will see that all the internally displaced people
are given land to build homes," the president said in an interview with
AFP.
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Sri Lankan
President Maithripala Sirisena
during an interview with AFP in Colombo
on
January 3, 2016 (AFP Photo/Lakruwan
Wanniarachchi)
|
Sirisena
said he would give land to civilians displaced by war in the embattled northern
and eastern provinces, and also the northwestern coastal region of Puttalam, by
the middle of this year. The families set to receive the land are currently staying
in camps in those areas.
During a
visit to the northern city of Jaffna last month, where much of the civil war
fighting took place, Sirisena said he visited a refugee camp that has been home
to about 1,300 families for the past 25 years.
"This
is an unacceptable situation. I want to end this problem once and for
all," he said.
"For
many people the main issue was lack of land and that is something we will
resolve in the next six months."
As part of
a parallel scheme, he is also planning to free up additional private land
occupied by the military, mainly in the former war zones in the northern and
eastern provinces, starting in the next two weeks.
He said he
would return to Jaffna this month to formally hand over about 700 acres (283
hectares) of land as part of the plan, in line with his election promise.
Sirisena,
64, came to power with the backing of Sri Lanka's minority Tamils and Muslims,
on top of the majority Sinhalese who supported him, on the back of pledges to
ensure ethnic reconciliation and end corruption and nepotism that plagued his
predecessor's rule.
Soon after
his election, Sirisena ordered security forces to return thousand of acres of
private land they occupied in the Jaffna peninsula, the de facto capital of
Tamil Tiger rebels.
The area
saw some of the bloodiest fighting during the war that claimed over 100,000
lives between 1972 and 2009.
Sirisena
said Sunday the new land pledges were in addition to that previously promised,
although he has not specified the total area of land to that will be handed
out.
War
crimes probe
He said the
government was also working on a mechanism to investigate allegations of war
crimes in the final stages of the conflict, but said it could take time.
"We
can't rush the accountability process," Sirisena said. "Some people
want it to be like instant noodles. We can't do that. We have to be responsible
and respect rule of law."
Sirisena's
predecessor Mahinda Rajapakse's regime faced repeated UN censure over his
failure to investigate allegations that at least 40,000 Tamil civilians were
killed by troops under his command while crushing Tiger guerrillas in 2009.
However,
Sirisena said the international community has changed its attitude towards his
government, which has already established nine independent commissions to run
the police, the elections office, the judiciary and the public service among
others.
"There
is a big change in the way the leading democratic nations of the world view us
today. We have tremendous international good will and support," he said.
"Their
expectation is that we ensure democracy and good governance and that is what
are committed to."
Sirisena
said he will mark his first year in office on January 9 by calling for
proposals on constitutional reforms to ensure that Sri Lanka remains peaceful.
"We
can either have a brand new constitution or amend the one we already
have," the president said.
"My
preference is to abolish the executive presidency and go back to a
(parliamentary-style) system we had till 1978" which would see a greater
dispersion of power.


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