Sri Lanka's new Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera today briefed two top visiting US State Department officials about the measures taken by the government to address the human rights concerns following the over three-decade long civil war with the LTTE.
Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Nisha Desai Biswal and Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights and Labor Tom Malinowski met Samaraweera as they became the first foreign officials to visit Colombo after the recent parliamentary elections.
"Now that we have achieved political stability I outlined measures being taken to address concerns regarding the alleged human rights violations including independent domestic mechanisms," Samaraweera said.
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The two day visit of the US officials assumes significance as the UN Human Rights Council is due to release its war crimes report on Sri Lanka in Geneva next week.
The new Sri Lankan government opted for a domestic mechanism to address human rights concerns raised in the resolution when the Mahinda Rajapaksa administration was in power.
"We continued the dialogue that began following the election of President Maithripala Sirisena and my appointment as the Foreign Minister," said Samaraweera, who was sworn in yesterday as Foreign Minister.
The Tamil minority and rights groups had raised concerns on a local mechanism, saying that it will not be independent and the findings may be used for a cover up.
The official visit is aimed to further strengthen the bilateral economic ties and promote reconciliation and justice in Sri Lanka.
Biswal will head off to New Delhi tomorrow.
The UN rights body's report was delayed from March as a show of goodwill to the appointment of Sirisena as the new President in January this year.
The report covers investigations on the alleged human rights violations by Mahinda Rajapaksa government and the LTTE during the final phase of the military clashes which ended in 2009.
In contrast to the Rajapaksa administration, the Sirisena government has improved its relations with the US. It was signified in the visit in May by US Secretary of State John Kerry who became the first US Secretary of State to make an official visit to Colombo since 1972.