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India keeps Sri Lanka guessing on UNHRC resolution vote

Last Updated 04 March 2014, 20:40 IST

Brushing aside opposition from the DMK and other parties in Tamil Nadu, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Tuesday met Sri Lankan president Mahinda Rajapaksa. 

However, the Singh did not give him any assurance on which way India will vote on a UNHRC resolution for an independent international probe into rights abuses during the war with the LTTE.

The draft resolution, tabled at the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva on Tuesday, briefly figured during the 25-minute meeting Singh had with Rajapaksa here on the margins of the BIMSTEC Summit.

“There was no substantive discussion on the draft resolution. Given that it has important implications for both Sri Lanka and India, it was felt that the two sides should remain in touch on the issue,” External Affairs Ministry spokesperson Syed Akbaruddin told reporters after the talks.

The resolution sponsored by the US, the UK, Montenegro, Macedonia and Mauritius urged the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay to assess progress toward accountability and reconciliation, monitor relevant national processes and to investigate alleged violations and abuses of human rights and related crimes in Sri Lanka.

Parties in Tamil Nadu, especially the DMK, which snapped its alliance with the UPA last year, have attacked the prime minister on his plans to meet Rajapaksa. 

They said it would be construded as a betrayal of Tamil interests.  They want India itself to move the resolution in the UNHRC seeking punishment for those responsible for the alleged war crimes in Sri Lanka. 

The resolution welcomed Pillay’s recommendation on the need for an independent and credible international investigation in the absence of a credible national process with tangible results.

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(Published 04 March 2014, 20:40 IST)

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