A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, April 28, 2013
Canada 'appalled' at Sri Lanka Commonwealth meeting
The
Canadian foreign minister tells Channel 4 News he is "appalled" the Commonwealth
heads of government meeting will still take place in Sri Lanka despite concerns
over human rights in the country.-26
APRIL 2013
Canada's foreign minister
John Baird said it was "not a good day for the Commonwealth" that its
secretariat was going ahead with plans to host the heads of government meeting
(CHOGM) in Sri Lanka in
November.
Sri
Lanka will also take on the chairmanship of the Commonwealth after the summit -
amid mounting
concerns that some of the Commonwealth's key democratic values are being
ignored in the country.
Alleged
war crimes committed at the end of Sri Lanka's three-decade long civil
war, which ended when the government crushed the Tamil Tiger rebels in 2009,
have never been properly investigated and attempts at reconciliation since then
have effectively failed amid an ongoing atmosphere of government
repression.
We are appalled that Sri Lanka is going to be hosting this summit.Canadian Foreign Minister John Baird
Mr
Baird, speaking in London after a meeting of Commonwealth foreign ministers,
told Channel
4 News: "We are appalled that Sri Lanka is going to be hosting this
summit.
"The
Canadian prime minister has been very clear that unless we saw progress on
accountability, on reconciliation, and some sort of change on the growing
authoritarian trend we've seen in the country, that he wouldn't attend the
summit."
However,
at this point Canada is the only Commonwealth country taking such a strong
position on Sri Lanka. At a press conference earlier, the Commonwealth Secretary
General Kamalesh Sharma, a former Indian diplomat, confirmed that the meeting in
Sri Lanka was still going ahead.
He
added: "All member states subscribe to the same principles and values equally.
Interacting with them [Sri Lanka] on many fronts as I have been doing at all
levels, I am fully persuaded that they are sincere in subscribing to and
following those values [of democracy and protection for human rights]."
Will the Queen attend?
The
Queen is also due to attend the meeting in Sri Lanka as head of the
Commonwealth. Prime Minister David Cameron is also on the list, but the British
government has as yet made no decision about a possible boycott in protest at
the situation in Sri Lanka.
Sri
Lanka's record on human rights has been questioned at the highest level across
the international community, with particular focus on abuses committed at the
end of its civil war in 2009. The UN
has twice voted to urge the country to properly and transparently investigate
killings and disappearances from the period.
Recent
events such as the impeachment of the country's chief justice, reports
of torture of Tamils deported from the UK, and the shooting
of a journalist have only heightened concerns. The government denies all
allegations of abuses.
Earlier
this year, former foreign secretary David
Miliband described the idea of the Queen visiting Sri Lanka for CHOGM as
"grotesque".

However,
speaking today in London, Australian foreign minister Bob Carr said he hoped
that engaging with Sri Lanka would allow the Commonwealth to check how much
progress the country was actually making on human rights.
"It's
a view that many of us hold that in the lead up to CHOGM, this Commonwealth with
its adherence to democratic values is in a good position to engage with the
government of Sri Lanka and monitor progress," he said.
But
Canada's foreign minister John Baird said there was no sign that this had made
any difference so far - and referred to fears that the Commonwealth position on
Sri Lanka was making the body look increasingly irrelevant in the modern
world.
"We
had hoped that the leader's summit being in Colombo at the end of this year
would see progress on accountability for the war crimes that took place at the
end of the war, that it would mean some meaningful effort at reconciliation with
the Tamil population, and that we would see improvements in good governance and
respect for human rights.
"Regrettably,
we haven't seen any of these three - and in fact they've gotten worse...It's
obviously not a good day for the Commonwealth."-26
APRIL 2013

