Many in diaspora approve Liberal push for reconciliation in scarred Sri Lanka
OTTAWA — The message of tolerance at the heart of the Trudeau government’s international outlook is now being put to the test in one the world’s most ethnically scarred postwar countries — Sri Lanka.
The ultimate success of Canada’s re-engagement with Sri Lanka, which was formalized last month when Foreign Affairs Minister Stephane Dion visited the south Asian country, will have domestic political implications for the Liberals government in the years ahead.
That’s because Canada is home to hundreds of thousands of ethnic Tamils, the Sri Lankan minority group that fought a 26-year civil war against the mainly Sinhalese central government that ended in a final wave of bloodshed in May 2009.
In the aftermath, the previous Conservative government downgraded relations with Sri Lanka’s government as the Tamils continued to face persecution. At the same time, the Colombo government resisted international pressure for an independent investigation of war crimes committed by its military and the Tamil rebels in 2009.


