TORONTO (AP) Canada's prime minister said he'll boycott next month's Commonwealth summit in Sri Lanka due to human rights concerns and he's threatening to cut off funding to the organization of former British territories over the decision to host the meeting there.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper said in a statement early Monday that the Sri Lankan government has failed to uphold the Commonwealth's core values. He said Canada remains disturbed by ongoing reports of intimidation and incarceration of political leaders and journalists, harassment of minorities, reported disappearances and allegations of extra-judicial killings.
Canada is the world's largest home of expatriate Tamils, the Sri Lankan minority. Western nations have been pressing Sri Lanka to account for thousands of civilians who are suspected to have died in the final months of the quarter-century war that ended in 2009, when government forces crushed resistance by Tamil rebels who were fighting for an ethnic homeland.
While Sri Lanka has enjoyed peace in the past four years, rights groups have accused the government of squelching dissent and suppressing the judiciary.
Australia and Britain have been pushing for engaging with Sri Lanka rather than isolating it and have encouraged countries to participate in the Commonwealth leaders' meeting in Sri Lanka. Human rights groups have urged a boycott.