(Reuters) -
Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron on Saturday said he would push
for an independent inquiry into allegations of war crimes at the end of
Sri Lanka's 26-year civil war, drawing an angry response from the island
nation's president.
"People who are in glass houses
must not throw stones," President Mahinda Rajapaksa said, after Cameron
said Sri Lanka should conduct its own investigation by March 2014 or
face an international inquiry.
Cameron
has been the most vocal critic of Sri Lanka's rights record during a
summit of Commonwealth nations being held in the capital Colombo. The
normally sedate event has been shaken by the row over atrocities during
the final months of the civil war and subsequent abuses.
The
Sri Lankan army crushed Tamil Tiger separatists in the final battle of
the civil war in 2009, in a strategy partly drawn up by Rajapaksa's
brother, defence secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa.
Some
300,000 civilians were trapped on a narrow beach during the onslaught
and a U.N. panel estimates 40,000 non-combatants died. Both sides
committed atrocities but army shelling killed most victims, it
concluded.
"Let me be very clear.
If an investigation is not completed by March, then I will use our
position on the U.N. Human Rights Council to work with the U.N. Human
Rights Commission and call for a full, credible and independent
international inquiry," Cameron told reporters.
Rajapaksa's
reaction appeared to be a reference to Northern Ireland, which suffered
decades of sectarian violence between Protestants wanting the province
to remain British-ruled and Catholics wanting unification with the Irish
republic, until a 1998 peace deal.
The
Sri Lankan president made a veiled reference to the Bloody Sunday
shootings, when British soldiers killed 14 unarmed protesters in 1972.
It is a topic he has spoken of before.
"We
have done what we can but there are other countries after 40 years they
still couldn't publish a report," he said. Britain published the
results of an inquiry into the killings in 2010.
RECONCILIATION
Cameron
visited the former war zone of Jaffna and urged Rajapaksa to do more to
seek reconciliation and devolve power to the Tamils. In a meeting on
Friday, Rajapaksa told Cameron it was only four years since the war
ended and the country needed time to overcome its problems.
The
U.N. Human Rights Commission next meets in March to assess Sri Lanka's
progress on addressing human rights abuses, including the allegations of
war crimes. It was not immediately clear what form an international
inquiry would take. Sri Lanka has in the past refused to allow the
United Nations unfettered access to former war zones.
Since
the end of the civil war, harassment of government critics, including
attacks on journalists and rights workers, have continued. A heavy army
presence on the former Tamil Tiger strongholds in the north angers some
local ethnic Tamils who feel they are treated as enemies of the state.
The
Sri Lankan government, which includes several of Rajapaksa's family
members, disputes the number of civilian deaths. It says criticism of
its rights record amounts to foreign interference in its affairs.
"We
are not going to allow it, definitely we will object," the president's
brother, Economic Development Minister Basil Rajapaksa, said in response
to a question about the possibility of an international inquiry.
Government
supporters have protested in several towns in the past days, accusing
Britain of neo-colonialism. The president said he had saved lives by
ending the war and had appointed a commission to investigate what
happened to missing people. Critics say Sri Lanka's investigations are
not impartial.
The Commonwealth
groups 53 nations, mostly former British colonies, and is headed by
Queen Elizabeth. It has little power or economic clout but has played a
role in resolving disputes.
Sri
Lanka had predicted that 37 of the Commonwealth's member states would
send leaders to the summit, but 27 showed up. The leaders of Canada and
Mauritius boycotted the event because of concerns about human rights.
India's prime minister stayed away because of pressure from India's
ethnic Tamils.
Since the civil war
ended, the government has made rapid progress rebuilding the war-torn
north, especially road projects. Elections in the northern province in
September resulted in a landslide victory for a Tamil opposition party
formerly linked to the Tigers.