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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, April 25, 2013
WHY
COMMONWEALTH SECRETARY GENERAL SHARMA MUST SHOW LEADERSHIP ON SRI
LANKA
April
25 2013
AN
URGENT BLOG POST BY CALLUM MACRAE –DIRECTOR
OF NO FIRE ZONE
Can I first apologise for the lack of blog postings
over the past month – it has been a very busy time as we prepare to launch the
next stage of our international outreach campaign.
This
is a vital moment in the ongoing campaign for truth and justice in Sri
Lanka.
Tomorrow,
Friday 26th April,
the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group will gather in London. There they
will discuss growing calls for the next meeting of the Commonwealth Heads of
Government (CHOGM) to be taken away from Sri Lanka. CHOGM is scheduled to be
held in Colombo in November this year.
The
idea that CHOGM should be hosted by a regime accused of such serious war crimes
is abhorrent to most people who believe and hope the Commonwealth should be a
force for good – a community of nations working towards human rights and
justice.
That
the Sri Lankan government would then become the chair of the Commonwealth for
the next two years is even more disturbing. A regime embroiled in an
increasingly desperate and dishonest campaign to delay and deny the serious
evidence of war crimes - and the growing international determination to call
them to account – is in no position to defend the core values of the
Commonwealth.
At
this critical time for the Commonwealth attention will focus increasingly on the
role of the Commonwealth Secretary General, Karmalesh Sharma.
Many
will be looking to him to provide the kind of leadership which can strengthen
the Commonwealth’s role in encouraging human rights, justice and an end to
impunity.
He
can ensure that this issue is confronted. Indeed many would argue he has a clear
duty to do that. If the Commonwealth drifts blindly into allowing itself to be
headed by a regime accused of such appalling war crimes and crimes against
humanity it would be catastrophic. But I see no signs so far that Mr Sharma has
any intention whatsoever of acting to prevent that happening. I hope I am
wrong.
There
is a curious Commonwealth procedure which provides for the Secretary General to
exercise his “good offices” to resolve this kind of situation before serious
action is taken. It is suggested that a two month period be allowed for that.
Mr Sharma has been formally exercising his “good offices” for considerably more
than two months now. And in that time things in Sri Lanka have got worse, not
better. Repression of Tamils in the north has increased. Tamil newspapers
have been violently attacked. A journalist from the Sunday Leader – whose
founding editor was assassinated four years ago – has also been shot.
Now
violently ultra-nationalist groups led by extreme Buddhist monks - tacitly
endorsed by the President’s brother, the Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa -
have launched attacks on minority Muslims. The country’s judiciary is in crisis
following the politically motivated impeachment of the country’s Chief
Justice.
Sri
Lanka is rapidly sinking into a despotic morass – it is increasingly seen as a
pariah state.
On
Friday Secretary-General Kamalesh Sharma will report on the question of Sri
Lanka’s hosting of CHOGM to the members of the Commonwealth Ministerial Action
Group (CMAG) committee.
He
owes it not just to the future of the Commonwealth, but also to its values of
truth and justice – to ensure that CMAG discusses taking CHOGM away from Sri
Lanka.
On
the webpage of the commonwealth…
...we
– the citizens of the commonwealth – are invited to put a comment or a question
to Mr Sharma, by sending a message, with ‘Ask
Sharma’ in the subject line, to this address:
I
suggest that as many of us as possible do that over the next 24 hours. Lets make
sure that today we ask him – politely and respectfully – what he intends to do
about Sri Lanka and CHOGM. And if he believes that a regime accused of such
terrible war crimes – and likely to be embroiled ever more seriously in such
allegations over the next two years – is really fit to lead the
Commonwealth.
The
calls from around the world are growing. Last week 900 Commonwealth lawyers
meeting in South Africa called for Sri Lanka to be suspended from the Councils
of the Commonwealth due to its breaches of the rule of law and of the
independence of the judiciary, as well as the gross harassment of members of the
legal profession.
That
call has now been endorsed by the Law Society of South Africa and echoed by the
International Bar Association.
The
tide is turning – the calls for justice growing. The Commonwealth must not be
left behind.


