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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, November 25, 2013
Post-CHOGM Call For Accountability Needs To Be More Balanced
By Jehan Perera - November 25, 2013
Now that CHOGM is over, the payback time has come. With the
British Prime Minister putting his credibility on the line, and that of
his country, it can be expected that he will do his utmost to obtain
the support of other like-minded countries including the most powerful
in the world with whom the British have a special relationship.
During his visit to Sri Lanka the British Prime Minister
repeatedly declared that its government must investigate the issue of
human rights violations in the last phase of the war before the next
session of the UN Human Rights Council in March 2014. He said that if
an investigation was not completed by March, he would use the
UK’s ”position on the UN Human Rights Council to work with the UN
Human Rights Commission and call for a full, credible and
independent international inquiry”. Having made his announcement in Sri
Lanka and set a deadline, the British Prime Minister will now be under
further pressure to ensure that he carries out his promise that he would
push for an international probe if the Sri Lankan government did not do
so on its own. The government has to consider this as the price it
has to pay for its own determination to host CHOGM and to obtain
the highest level of participation from the Mother Country of
the Commonwealth.
The inclination of the Sri Lankan
government would be to defy international pressure in view of the public
support it is receiving within the country. Prime Minister Cameron has
come under severe criticism within Sri Lanka for issuing this ultimatum
to the government. Indeed, the main opposition party, the UNP,
which boycotted CHOGM on the grounds of the government’s
anti-democratic conduct in the run-up to the summit, and the attempted
physical assault on its leader by government allies, has nevertheless
publicly declared its own opposition to an international investigation.
It said that human rights violations, or any connected issues, should
be resolved within the country. It also blamed the government for
having created the background for an international investigation “by
turning CHOGM into an international human rights conference.” The
UNP’s position is reflective of the sentiments of the majority of
the Sinhalese people who have rallied to the side of the government
on account of Prime Minister Cameron’s threats.
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