INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
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Adm Wijeguneratne denies the charges
Sri Lanka's top military officer
has been remanded in custody, accused of covering up civil war-era murders.Chief of Defence Staff Ravindra Wijeguneratne appeared in court
after warrants for his arrest were issued.Prosecutors say he protected the main suspect, a naval intelligence officer who allegedly murdered
11 young men in the final stages of the conflict with separatist Tamil rebels in 2008-9
The officer is in custody
Admiral Wijeguneratne denies the allegations.The court in the capital, Colombo, remanded him in custody until 5 December.Three warrants for
his arrest were issued in early November, but it took the admiral until now to present himself before the magistrates court, dressed in his
military uniform and flanked by navy officers and supporters.His application for bail was rejected
Several journalists say they were attacked while covering proceedings.Tens of thousands of Tamils - and the rebel leadership - were killed
at the end of the conflict, in which both sides were accused of atrocities
Human rights groups have long called for prosecutions, but there have been none so far
The naval officer the admiral is accused of protecting was detained in August
The bodies of the 11 young men, most of them Tamils, have never been found.Police have previously said in court most of the abductions took
place in Colombo in 2008-09, and were an attempt to extort ransom by a group led by some navy officers
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The fate of thousands of Tamils has been in question since the final stages of the war
The 26-year civil war left at least 100,000 people dead on both sides of the conflict
The Tamil Tigers said they were fighting for a homeland for minority Tamils in northern Sri Lanka
There are still no confirmed figures for tens of thousands of civilian deaths in the last months of battle
The final months of the war saw hundreds of thousands of Tamil civilians trapped in territory held by the Tamil Tigers (LTTE) in the
While government forces were accused of indiscriminate shelling leading to massive casualties, the Tamil Tiger rebels were alleged to have
used civilians as human shields and shot people trying to escape
Allegations persist to this day that the army killed rebel leaders and others after they surrendered or were captured - and the UN admitted
in 2012 that it could and should have done more to protect civilians.Channel 4 and the UN have documented numerous atrocities committed
One investigation said it was possible that up to 40,000 people had been killed in the final five months alone
Others suggest the number of deaths could be even higher.