External affairs Minister GL Peiris, yesterday told the parliament in this regard to a question raised by main opposition leader Ranil Wickremesinghe.
"There are over 16,000 submissions received (by the panel). It was the government's responsibility to provide expertise on the fundamentals of the laws," Peiris said.
Wickremesinghe demanded the government to declare in parliament the reasons that had led to the appointment of the international experts.
President Mahinda Rajapaksa yesterday named Indian human rights activist Avdhash Kaushal and Pakistani lawyer Ahmer Bilal Soofi to form a five-member panel of foreign advisors that already includes British lawyer of Sri Lankan origin, Desmond de Silva, and Geoffrey Nice and US law professor David Crane, all former UN war crimes prosecutors.
Also Read
Peiris said there was no list of concerns raised by the local panelists and it was unfair for the government to ask them for such a list.
President Mahinda Rajapaksa's decision to appoint international experts has come under criticism of his nationalist allies, who suspect that members of government troops who fought the war with the LTTE would face war crimes charges as a result.
After maintaining that troops did not violate any humanitarian law while crushing the LTTE, Colombo has dubbed the move by the UN human rights council to set up an international investigation as an action which breached Sri Lanka's sovereignty.
The panel has so far entertained nearly 19,000 complaints of disappearances.