No. To be fair there were some recommendations in the LLRC about reconciliation, about actually dealing with the hundreds of names that are still missing. Some people estimate they are in fact in the thousands. The notion of having a process whereby war crimes can be addressed, they have made these recommendations, and I think they are worthwhile.
The Government of Sri Lanka has not shown the slightest interest in engaging on any of the substantive recommendations. They have been ragging their puck around the edges, but not really engaging on matters that would be most substantial in building a measure of confidence that this is a genuine effort to go forward together with due respect for all the ethnic groups in the country, not just the Sinhalese.
If I may say, the problem has been in a sense a terrible terrorist-driven war for 30 years. There have been things like suicide bombers. This was not invented in the Middle East. This was invented in Sri Lanka. There's a lot of relief about the war coming to an end, but we also have to understand the Tamil Tigers were as brutal with large parts of the Tamil population as they were with their perceived enemies.
One can understand the sense of relief, but the notion of going forward by trying to build some common sense of citizenship, of trying to work through these problems together, there is no simply no indication of that, and I'd be very surprised if we saw any from the present administration in that country.