COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) Hundreds of people held candles and photographs of loved ones as they marched in Sri Lanka's capital on Friday demanding that authorities provide information about relatives who were reported missing during the country's civil war.
The vigil, marking International Day of the Disappeared, coincided with a visit by United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay to assess the government's progress in investigating wartime abuses.
During the quarter-century civil war, which ended in 2009, an undetermined number of suspected rebels, journalists and activists were abducted by "white van squads" allegedly operated by pro-government paramilitaries. Many were never seen again.
Relatives say they also don't know the whereabouts of family members who surrendered to the army at the end of the war.
Pillay, who ends her weeklong visit on Saturday, is to report to the U.N. Human Rights Council next month on the status of the investigation into abuses allegedly committed by government troops and separatist Tamil Tiger rebels, including abductions and forced disappearances.