The
discovery of a mass grave containing more than 30 skulls in northern
Sri Lanka has fuelled speculation that there may be many more like it
containing the remains of thousands who went missing during the island
nation's nearly three-decade war.
The police have suggested that the Tamil Tiger rebels it defeated
five years ago could be responsible for the burial, uncovered near a
historic Hindu temple in the district of Mannar.
Sri Lanka is already under international pressure to address alleged
wartime human rights violations. A failure to probe the discovery could
fuel the anger of Western nations demanding an independent international
investigation into suspected abuses.
The remains, which workers stumbled on as they dug up roadside paving
for a water project, are yet to be identified. The first mass grave to
be found in the former war zone, it is spread over an area measuring
about 400 square feet (37 square meters) and is 5 feet deep.
"The bodies are buried in several layers. Unfortunately, the top
layer of the bodies have been destroyed by the road construction work,"
said Dhanajaya Waidyaratne, the Judicial Medical Officer in charge of
the excavation.
More than 100,000 people were killed in the war between the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and the government military
since it started in 1983 and thousands, mainly ethnic- minority Tamils,
are still unaccounted for or missing.
A U.N. panel has said around 40,000 mainly Tamil civilians died in
the ferocious final months of the conflict, but Sri Lanka has disputed
that figure. Both sides committed atrocities, but army shelling killed
most victims, it concluded.
Police Spokesman Ajith Rohana said initial forensic evidence suggested the bodies may have been buried at least 15 years ago.
"This area was controlled by the LTTE for over 20 years and there are
reports that hundreds of soldiers went missing in this area. But we
don't know for sure. The investigations are continuing," Rohana told
Reuters.
Residents and a religious leader in Mannar say, however, that the area was controlled mainly by the army from 1990.
"This grave has grown-up people and children, and there are some
holes in the skulls believed to be from gunshots," the Catholic Bishop
of Mannar, Rayappu Joseph, who went to inspect the mass grave and the
skeletons, told Reuters.
"We don't know who killed these people. This is an area that was held
by army for a long time. Wherever there has been LTTE or army camps, we
must dig."
A top military official denied that the area was under army control
during the war. "The area changed hands between the LTTE, the Indian
Peacekeeping Force and army over time," he said, declining to be named.
The former political proxy of the Tigers, the Tamil National Alliance
(TNA), which was voted to power in northern provincial polls last
September, said the mass grave was the tip of an iceberg and there must
be many more.
"The loss of lives, according to us, is between 75,000 to 150,000.
Where are those remains?" TNA legislator M.A. Sumanthiran told Reuters.
"They must be somewhere. If they were put into incinerators and
destroyed, we don't know. But we don't think more than 100,000 would
have been dealt with like that."
Last year, Sri Lanka set up a presidential commission to investigate a
mass grave with remains of more than 150 people in a central province.
The evidence was sent to China for forensic investigations and so far
there has been no conclusion.
Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights Watch, said it may be true that the LTTE was responsible for the latest find.
"Unless there is real transparency in the forensic investigation,
we'll never be sure," he said in an emailed comment. "But we know they
won't want to open a Pandora's Box that would incriminate many senior
figures."
(Reuters) -