UK admits to funding Sri Lanka’s Police whilst condemning violence
COLOMBO – Parliamentary Under-Secretary for the British Foreign Office, Vicky Ford, admitted that the UK’s Conflict, Stability and Security Fund (CSSF) had been used to fund police training in Sri Lanka whilst also highlighting Britain’s condemnation of the attacks on peaceful protesters.
Her remarks follow violent clashes in Colombo between supporters of the Rajapaksa clan and anti-government demonstrators which resulted in at least 10 dead and over 300 injured. The government of Sri Lanka responded to the violence in the capital by sending in the military and giving police orders to shoot anyone “looting public property or causing harm to others”. A move human rights organizations condemned as providing a “licence to kill”.
The day prior to Ford’s statement Britain’s Minister for South Asia, North Africa, the United Nations, and the Commonwealth, condemned the violence and stressed that “fundamental rights including the right to peaceful protest, must be protected”.
In November 2021, Police Scotland informed the UK High Commission in Sri Lanka that they will not extend their training contract with Sri Lanka’s police force in March 2022 due to ongoing human rights concerns. Yet in January 2022, UK Foreign Office stressed that “Police Scotland’s decision does not mean that there will be no future program of UK-funded support to the Sri Lankan police.”
In her statement, Ford did not detail if the government would recommence training instead stating:
“The British High Commission recently commissioned a review to look at the impact of UK support to the Sri Lankan police to date, identify lessons learned and make recommendations with regards to future programs. The current project contract and CSSF program cycle concluded on March 31, 2022. The British High Commission is considering its approach to any future CSSF program and the review will be taken into account alongside a number of factors”.
Britain’s refusal to rule out possible training contracts with Sri Lanka’s police followed harsh condemnation from human rights experts and Tamil activists.
“Sri Lanka’s police force is one of the most brutal in the world,” said Kavi, a Tamil activist. “They have tortured, raped and killed. They continue to commit crimes with almost absolute impunity. Britain needs to apply pressure on Sri Lanka to bring those police officers to justice, not give them training.”
Members of the Scottish Parliament (MSP), Mercedes Villalba told The Sunday Post that there is “no evidence to suggest previous support from British police helped improve human rights in Sri Lanka”.
“In fact, there have been reports that abuses ‘surged’ during the pandemic. It is therefore inexcusable for the UK government to countenance further support for Sri Lankan forces”.
Sri Lanka’s armed forces, including its police force, have a long history of rights abuses and impunity.
In one particularly egregious case last year, the parents of a Tamil youth who was beaten to death in Batticaloa said the accused police officer boasted of committing at least nine different murders.
-TG