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Sri Lanka probe ‘clears military’

<img src=”http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/46055000/jpg/_46055240_exhume226ap.jpg” align=”left” width=”226″ height=”170″ alt=”An Action Against Hunger worker watches two of the 17 aid workers’ bodies being exhumed in September” border=”0″ vspace=”4″ hspace=”4″>

Sri Lanka’s top human rights panel has cleared the army of killing 17 people working for a French charity in 2006.

The head of the inquiry commission said he had been unable to find out who was to blame "because he ran out of funds".

The bodies of the Action Against Hunger workers were found in the north-eastern town of Muttur. Truce monitors blamed security forces, who denied the charge.

Heavy fighting had been going on in the area between troops and Tamil rebels fighting for an independent state.

Fifteen of the bodies were found lying down and shot at close range on 7 August 2006, in a case that caused an international outcry. Two other bodies were found later.

The aid staff – all but one ethnic Tamils – were working on tsunami relief projects in the area.

‘Incorrect’

"The evidence that was laid before us is that not a single witness stated before us that they saw the army around the place at the relevant time," the head of the commission, retired Supreme Court Judge Nissanka Udalagama, told the BBC’s Sinhala service.

"The entire town was taken over by the LTTE [Tamil Tiger rebels] at the time. The LTTE said on their website that they had taken over the town of Muttur," he said.

Defence spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella had earlier claimed that Muttur was under the complete control of the military at the time of the massacre.

Judge Udalagama said he "believed that information to be incorrect".

"We got the army to give evidence. The officer in charge of the contingent which came to Muttur from Jaffna gave evidence. He denied Rambukwella’s statement. We would have liked to have Rambukwella’s evidence, but because of time limits, we were unable to do so."

The report exonerates the army and navy, but says auxiliary police known as home guards could have carried out the killings.

"There was other evidence like the presence of Muslim home guards. They had access to the weapons. And it could have been LTTE," Judge Udalagama said.

The report also found the French charity to be at fault.

"They also have to take a portion of the blame, they have to enhance the compensation given to the people," Judge Udalagama said.

In 2007, a report by the International Commission of Jurists (ICJ) said there had been "a disturbing lack of impartiality and transparency in the investigation" by the police into the massacre.

The report said official reports indicated that police had decided from the outset that Tamil rebels were responsible for the killing of the aid workers, all but one of whom were ethnic Tamils.

The report said the collection of evidence had been incomplete and inadequate.

Impunity

Critics say Sri Lanka has a long history of failing to prosecute human rights abuses.

The Sri Lankan group University Teachers for Human Rights said the government had to be held to account "to stop this culture of impunity in the country".

"The way in which the government handled the whole investigation – the pressure put on witnesses, the video conferencing through which witnesses tried to bring out information on how it was stopped – all sorts of things basically show that the commission was not interested in finding the true culprits," a spokesman for the group, Gopalasingham Sridharan, told BBC Tamil.

"Unfortunately we are not aware about the full report, from the media we gather that they are absolving the security forces.

"We are now in preparation of another report to try to bring out all the facts again." </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

EU lifts Indonesian airline ban

A Garuda airliner (file pic)

The European Commission has taken Garuda Airlines and three other Indonesian carriers off its aviation blacklist, citing safety improvements.

The EU banned all Indonesia-based jets from its airspace in July 2007, after a series of air crashes in Indonesia.

The Yemeni airline, Yemenia, is not on the new list, despite safety concerns raised after one of its aircraft crashed last month, killing 152 people.

Many of the airlines blacklisted by the EU are African or Central Asian.

A Commission statement said "significant improvements and accomplishments of the Indonesian civil aviation authority are recognised in the area of safety".

Apart from Garuda, the ban was lifted on Airfast Indonesia, Mandala Airlines and Premiair.

The statement also said TAAG Angola Airlines could now operate again into Portugal "only with certain aircraft and under very strict conditions".

EU Transport Commissioner Antonio Tajani repeated his call for an international blacklist of airlines deemed to be unsafe.

He first proposed such a list after it emerged that the Yemenia jet that crashed off the Comoros had previously given EU inspectors cause for concern.

"It is high time that the international community rethinks its safety policy; those airlines which are unsafe should not be allowed to fly anywhere," he said in a statement.

"We should gradually move towards an international strategy based on co-operation between countries around the world."</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

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Tough love

Barack Obama before leaving Ghana

By Will Ross
BBC News, Ghana

He may only have been in Africa for 21 hours but it was long enough for Barack Obama to send out his inspiring message across the continent – "A New Moment Of Promise," he called it.

He urged Africans to stop laying the blame elsewhere and to take control of their own destiny.

He encouraged the younger generation to catch the "Yes We Can" fever that had assisted his own rise to the White House.

Strengthening democracy from the grassroots requires some brave foot soldiers and Mr Obama singled out the work of civil society groups such as Zimbabwe’s Election Support Network, which struggled to ensure people’s votes counted in the face of a violent state-driven clampdown.

A young girl in Ghana

"Make no mistake: history is on the side of these brave Africans, and not with those who use coups or change constitutions to stay in power. Africa doesn’t need strongmen, it needs strong institutions," Mr Obama stated.

Ghana is a case in point – one of the reasons for Ghana’s successful election late last year was its strong electoral commission.

Along the West African coast the Sierra Leone People’s Party was voted out of power in 2007 amid growing anger at government corruption.

The election worked because the National Electoral Commission, headed by Christiana Thorpe, was strong and did not buckle under pressure to fix the vote.

The strong institutions are certainly lacking in Barack Obama’s African home – Kenya.

When Mwai Kibaki was announced the winner of the 2007 election, the head of the government-appointed electoral commission, Simon Kivuiti, admitted that he did not know for sure if Mr Kibaki had won.

"He said if you want to play ball on the international level you have to play by the international rules"

Kwesi Aning
Kofi Annan Peacekeeping Institute

In quotes: Ghana speech

During his speech Barack Obama did not name and shame leaders – that is not his style.

But his denunciation of Africa’s "strong men" will have made a few leaders squirm in their presidential palaces.

Mr Obama seemed to be adding his voice to the collective despair across West Africa as Niger’s president, Mamadou Tandja, tears up the rule book in an attempt to stay in power.

Cameroon’s Paul Biya, Senegal’s octogenarian President Abdoulaye Wade, Uganda’s Yoweri Museveni and several others have also changed the rules in order to remain in office.

Mutual responsibility

The question is whether those leaders are going to play the blindest bit of attention to the words of an African-American who is far more popular than they are.

They may well have reached for the television remote control and found something less uncomfortable to watch.

Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni

Barack Obama said the partnership between Africa and America must be one of mutual responsibility.

"He threw the ball into our own court and said if you want to play ball on the international level you have to play by the international rules," said Kwesi Aning of the Kofi Annan Peacekeeping Institute.

It will not be easy to change some old, corrupt habits but if Africa plays its part Barack Obama is promising a great deal in return including assistance to boost agriculture, trade and healthcare.

But, in a difficult economic climate, the US may be hard pushed to fulfil some of its promises.

In Uganda, for example, there is mounting concern as funding constraints are forcing health centres to stop enrolling new patients for US-funded anti-retroviral treatment under the President’s Emergency Plan for Aids Relief (PEPFAR) initiative which George Bush started.

Being an African-American means Barack Obama is listened to as a brother in Africa rather than as a condescending visitor.

Whiff of hypocrisy

People agreed with him rather than dismissing him when he hit out at some of the practises holding back the continent.

"No business wants to invest in a place where the government skims 20% off the top, or the head of the Port Authority is corrupt.

"No person wants to live in a society where the rule of law gives way to the rule of brutality and bribery. That is not democracy, that is tyranny and now is the time for it to end," he said.

Inside the conference centre, Ghanaian politicians cheered, applauded and gave a standing ovation. Some smelt hypocrisy there.

"The political leaders were clapping and cheering the speech. But when we plead for an end to the same problems that Obama highlighted we are threatened, abused and sidelined," said Mr Aning.

He commended the speech for being honest, direct and lacking spin but suggests the same cannot be said for some of the politicians who were listening to it.

"You have the power to hold your leaders accountable," Mr Obama said, aiming his message at the youth.

But it can be dangerous trying to stand up and call for better governance.

In March, two Kenyan human rights activists – Kamau Kingara and John Paul Oulo – were gunned down in broad daylight shortly after helping an investigation into extrajudicial killings by the Kenyan police.

"It won’t be easy. It will take time and effort. There will be suffering and setbacks," Mr Obama stated as he called for the continent to take responsibility for its future.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.