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COLOMBO: The Sri Lankan military today (Sunday) launched an investigation after social media posts showing soldiers forcing Muslims to kneel on the streets for reportedly flouting lockdown rules emerged.
According to the reports, the Sri Lankan troops ordered Muslim civilians to raise their hands in the air while kneeling on a road in the town of Eravur. Local residents said they considered the order to be degrading and humiliating.
Meanwhile, officials have acknowledged that troops had no power to mete out such punishments. The victims were on their way to two restaurants to buy food.
In a statement issued today, the Sri Lankan army said, “An initial Military Police investigation has already commenced after certain photos went viral depicting an alleged harassment in the Eravur area.”
It said the officer in charge had been removed and the soldiers involved ordered to leave the town. “The army will adopt the strictest disciplinary action against all errant army personnel,” the military added, in a rare display of willingness to investigate its own.
Sri Lanka is under a month-long lockdown to contain a third wave of coronavirus infections. The number of deaths from the virus has increased more than fourfold to 2,531 since the start of the wave in mid-April.
The military, which is facing allegations of war crimes in a decades-long Tamil separatist war that ended in 2009, has been deployed to help police and health authorities enforce virus restrictions.