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LankaWeb – Did Sri Lanka commit war crimes ? International Legal luminaries Sir Geoffrey Nice and Rodney Dixon say NO

Posted on March 17th, 2021 By shenali Waduge The Mahinda Rajapakse government sought the legal opinion of a group of distinguished international legal luminaries who have been involved in war tribunals and who knew the laws related to conflicts. Reading these expert opinions against the PoE and the OISL reports as well as the biased and interfering statements of the OHCHR head, many would realize that the UNHRC has been compromised and the question is by whom! The legal arguments and the laws quoted by these two distinguished legal luminaries are worth reading to understand the nature of the bias and one-sided propaganda based vendetta that the UN/UNHRC and others have stooped to.

The EU s perverse agenda in Bosnia

The EU s perverse agenda in Bosnia Bosnia and Herzegovina flags flying outside parliament in the capital, Sarajevo (Photo: Jennifer Boyer) Berlin/Brussels, 4. Mar, 07:05 In its quest for a quick deliverable in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the European Union is trying to broker a deal that risks entrenching the power of Croat nationalists who are resisting moves to make the country more functional. There is a growing understanding that the country s constitution, part of the 1995 Dayton peace accords that ended the bloodiest conflict in Europe after World War II, needs changes in order for Bosnia to properly function. Read and decide Get instant access to all articles and 20 years of archives.

What are the real reasons behind Bosnia s migrant crisis?

But, delve a little deeper, and what emerges is a far more complex story. It’s a tale that highlights the dysfunctional nature of postwar Bosnia and Herzegovina and is an insight into how much both the European Union and local authorities want to keep migrants off their respective doorsteps. Bosnia has emerged as a staging post for EU-bound migrants in the last couple of years. Around 70,000 are estimated to have arrived in the country since January 2018, with only a small fraction claiming asylum. The majority try and make it into the EU via Croatia, to the north. But border closures as a result of COVID-19 and reports of illegal pushbacks mean many end up marooned in northern Bosnia.

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