Group Seeks Ex-Sri Lankan President’s Arrest in Singapore

Group Seeks Ex-Sri Lankan President’s Arrest in Singapore
Sri Lanka's President Gotabaya Rajapaksa presents his national statement as a part of the World Leaders' Summit at the UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) in Glasgow, Scotland, Britain, on Nov. 1, 2021. Andy Buchanan/Pool via Reuters
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COLOMBO, Sri Lanka—A rights group gathering evidence on Sri Lanka’s alleged rights abuses said it filed a criminal complaint with Singapore’s Attorney General, seeking to arrest an ex-Sri Lankan president for his role in what they say are alleged war crimes during the island nation’s civil war that ended more than a decade ago.

Lawyers from the International Truth and Justice Project—an organization administered by a South Africa-based nonprofit foundation—filed the complaint, requesting the immediate arrest of ex-Sri Lankan president Gotabaya Rajapaksa for his role as the secretary of defense during Sri Lanka’s civil war, which ended in 2009, the group said in a release on Sunday.

Rajapaksa is believed to be living in Singapore after fleeing from Sri Lanka due to months of massive protests against him over the country’s economic meltdown. Rajapaksa fled the country in mid-July after angry Sri Lankan protesters stormed his residence. He first went to nearby Maldives and then flew to Singapore.

The group said “the 63-page complaint argues that Rajapaksa committed grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions during the civil war in 2009 when he was secretary of defence and that these are crimes subject to domestic prosecution in Singapore under universal jurisdiction.”

Rajapaksa was one of the most powerful officials—holding title of secretary to the ministry of defense—in the administration of his elder brother president Mahinda Rajapaksa, who ruled Sri Lanka from 2005 to 2015.

According to the National Defense University’s global and national security affairs journal PRISM, the government of Mahinda Rajapaksa found itself battling tactics like suicide bombings employed by separatists, with threats to kill the head of the army, Lieutenant General Sarath Fonseka, and a successful assassination of the army’s third in charge.

Sri Lanka’s civil war, where a Marxist insurrection captured public sentiment in favor of creating an independent state for ethnic minority Tamils, resulted in the death of 100,000 people, according to conservative United Nations estimates. The actual number is believed to be much higher.

A report from a U.N. panel of experts said at least 40,000 ethnic minority Tamil civilians were killed in the final months of the war alone, in fighting that involved terrorist tactics by Marxist groups like the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam fighters, also known as the Tamil Tigers, who forced civilians to accompany their militants as human shields.

Following the conflict, Gotabaya Rajapaksa became Sri Lanka’s president in 2019 but had to flee in mid-July due to public protest over his failure to resolve an unprecedented economic crisis that has dealt a severe blow to the livelihood of many Sri Lankans.

“The economic meltdown has seen the government collapse but the crisis in Sri Lanka is really linked to structural impunity for serious international crimes going back three decades or more,” said the ITJP’s executive director, Yasmin Sooka.

“This complaint recognizes that it’s not just about corruption and economic mismanagement but also accountability for mass atrocity crimes,” she added.

Protests Continue

After Rajapaksa fled the country, the prime minister, Ranil Wickremesinghe, became the acting president and last week, lawmakers in Sri Lanka’s 225-member parliament elected Wickremesinghe to serve as president for the remaining period of Rajapaksa’s tenure. Wickremesinghe was sworn in last week.

Sri Lankans have taken to the streets for months to demand their top leaders step down to take responsibility for the economic chaos that has left the nation’s 22 million people struggling with shortages of essentials, including medicine, fuel and food. The protesters have focused on Rajapaksa’s family.

Wickremesinghe also has drawn their ire as a perceived Rajapaksa surrogate. The protesters accuse Rajapaksa and his powerful family of siphoning money from government coffers and of hastening the country’s collapse by mismanaging the economy. The family has denied the corruption allegations, but the former president acknowledged that some of his policies contributed to Sri Lanka’s crisis.

The political turmoil has threatened efforts to seek rescue from the International Monetary Fund. Still, earlier this week, Wickremesinghe said bailout talks were nearing a conclusion.

The head of the IMF, Kristalina Georgieva, told the Japanese financial magazine Nikkei Asia this week that the IMF hopes for a deal “as quickly as possible.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.