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Sri Lankan soldier gets death penalty for killing 8 Tamil civilians in Jaffna

A Sri Lankan soldier was on Thursday sentenced to death for killing eight Tamil civilians, including four minors, by slitting their throats in Jaffna nearly 15 years ago, in a rare case of the military being held to account for its actions.

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A Sri Lankan soldier was on Thursday sentenced to death for killing eight Tamil civilians, including four minors, by slitting their throats in Jaffna nearly 15 years ago, in a rare case of the military being held to account for its actions.

Staff Sergeant Sunil Ratnayake was given capital punishment by a two-judge High Court in Colombo while four of the soldier's colleagues were acquitted due to lack of direct evidence against them.

The massacre at the village of Mirusuvil in the Jaffna peninsula came to light when another man in the group of civilians escaped the military attack and raised the alarm. Court heard that the victims were killed by slitting their throats and burying them in a mass grave in Jaffna. The incident had occurred on December 19, 2000.

They had gone to check the ruins of their bombed homes following a ferocious bout of fighting between Tal Tiger guerrillas and troops in that area.

Instead of the usual sweeping such allegations under the carpet, the then government of President Chandrika Kumaratunga suspended the entire unit of soldiers and subsequently arrested five men who were indicted in 2003.
Following the lengthy legal process, the final decision was delivered today in a rare case of military being held to account for its actions.

"Today's sentencing showed that the military was following due process in dealing with abuses committed during the war," army spokesman Jayanath Jayaweera said.

"This is a good example to show the system is working well," Brigadier Jayaweera told reporters. Sri Lanka's army faces allegations that it killed at least 40,000 Tamil civilians in the final months of fighting that ended in May 2009.

The previous government of strongman Mahinda Rajapaksa maintained that not a single civilian was killed by troops, while his successor Maithripala Sirisena has agreed to probe the allegations.

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