But last year, the brutal conflict caught up with Witness #205.
Raped, branded and beaten, he is one of more than 50 men who say they were abducted and tortured under Sri Lanka's current government. The men's previously unpublished accounts conjure images of the bloody civil war that ended in 2009.
The men agreed to tell their stories to The Associated Press and to have the extensive scars on their legs, chests and backs photographed in July and August.
The AP reviewed 30 medical and psychological evaluations and conducted interviews with 20 men. The strangers said they were accused of trying to revive the Tamil Tiger rebel group and tortured between early 2016 to as recently as July of this year.
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"The army was not involved and as for that matter I'm sure that police also were not involved," Sri Lanka army commander Lt. Gen. Mahesh Senanayake told the AP in an interview last week in Sri Lanka. "There's no reason for us to do that now."
The Sri Lankan government minister in charge of the police agreed to an interview with the AP last month but did not follow through.
Sri Lanka's current government was elected in 2015. Many had hoped the new leadership would bring long promised reforms.
Piers Pigou, a South African human rights investigator, said he has not seen torture of this scale in his 40-year career.
Sri Lanka has so far failed to investigate war crimes allegations stemming from its 26-year civil war. At the end of August, human rights groups in South America filed lawsuits against Sri Lanka's ambassador to Brazil, a former general accused of overseeing military units that attacked hospitals and tortured thousands at the end of the war.
Upon his return, Sri Lanka President Maithripala Sirisena said neither the former general nor other "war heroes" would be touched a pledge that drew criticism from human rights groups.
The country also participates in UN peacekeeping missions. Recently, the Indian Ocean nation was asked to sit on a UN leadership committee trying to combat sexual abuse.
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