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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, August 3, 2018
US embassy Colombo sidesteps query on Haley’s assessment of HRC as UN’s ‘greatest failure’-Bogollagama praises previous govt arranging Paisley visits
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Nikki
by Shamindra Ferdinando-August 1, 2018, 11:55 pm
The US embassy in Colombo sent The Island a statement that reiterated US
commitment to ensure the full implementation of the 2015 United Nations
Human Rights Council Resolution 30/1 on Sri Lanka in spite of the
superpower finding fault with the Geneva-based UNHRC in June 2018.
That statement was in response to The Island query: Against the
backdrop of Geneva body addressing accountability issues and taking
tangible measures in respect of Sri Lanka in accordance with 2015
Resolution spearheaded by the US (co-sponsored by
Sirisena-Wickremesinghe administration), don’t you think Ambassador
Nikki Haley’s assessment of the UN agency is not fair?
Sri Lanka defeated the LTTE militarily in May 2009.
In March 2011, three- member UN Panel of Experts (PoE) on the basis of
information received from ‘credible sources’ accused Sri Lanka of
killing at least 40,000 civilians on the Vanni east front.
US Ambassador Nikki Haley recently described the Human Rights Council
as the ‘greatest failure’ of the United Nations. Haley told the Heritage
Foundation think tank in Washington that the Geneva-based body had
"provided cover, not condemnation, for the world’s most inhumane
regimes. Judged by how far it has fallen short of its promise, the Human
Rights Council is the United Nations’ greatest failure," she said.
The following is the text of June 21, 2018 dated US embassy statement
headlined US Embassy Colombo Statement on US-SL Relations: Secretary
Pompeo has announced that the United States withdrew from the United
Nations Human Rights Council effective June 19, 2018. Ambassador Keshap
met senior Sri Lankan officials to convey the assurance of the United
States Government that we will remain fully engaged with the Sri Lankan
Government to help it meet its continuing and standing commitments to
the international community to advance the cause of reconciliation and
lasting peace for all Sri Lankans.
"Sri Lanka co-sponsored with the United States two UN Human Rights
Commission Resolutions: 30/1 in 2015 and Resolution 34/1 in 2017, and
the United States continues to extend its support to Sri Lanka to
fulfill these important commitments and obligations as articulated and
reaffirmed in these resolutions. Sri Lanka’s continued progress toward
fulfillment of these international commitments will facilitate further
growth of our bilateral relations and enhance Sri Lanka’s ability to
engage with friends and partners around the world.
We will follow Sri Lanka’s progress closely and look ahead to engaging
with Sri Lanka between now and March 2019 in the spirit of friendship
that has marked our recent relations. As Sri Lanka takes further steps
outlined in the Geneva resolution, the United States will also support
and expand our bilateral partnership."
Eastern Province Governor Rohitha Bogollagma, who had been Sri Lanka’s
wartime Foreign Minister, recently urged the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe
government to unilaterally renounce the Geneva Resolution. Bogollagama
asserted that there was absolutely no justification in expecting Sri
Lanka to subject herself to Geneva Resolution in the wake of the very
country that led the project quitting the UN body in disgust.
Asked whether he approved of the previous government’s attempt to
influence the UK Government not to press Sri Lanka at the UNHRC through
lawmaker Ian Paisley’s intervention, Bogollagama called it a wise
engagement. Bogollagama said that Ian Paisley in particular coming from a
Northern Irish political background and origin has quite a value to
reflect on the separatist war that was waged in Sri Lanka as much as the
IRA experience. "All countries do engage in such practices and this is
part of diplomacy."
Bogollagama pointed out how the LTTE sought the expertise of
internationally known persons to target successive Sri Lankan
governments.
Responding to another query, Bogollagama said that the failure on the
part of those who had undertaken such visits to declare them to relevant
authorities was a matter for ethical assessment by the giving
authority. Bogollagama said that perhaps all such visits should come
under equal scrutiny.

