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, January 31, 2014
Sri Lanka Human Rights Commissioner Exposes His Bias; C’wealth Capacity Building Turns To Dust
January 31, 2014
The Sri Lanka Human Rights Commission that is consistently touted by the
Rajapaksa Administration as one of its domestic mechanisms to address
human rights concerns put forward by the international community has
exposed itself badly following a interview granted to the
state-controlled press by its Commissioner yesterday.
Commissioner Prathibha Mahanama who
heads an institution that is supposed to be a recourse for citizens
whose rights are being abused by the agencies of the state, told the
Daily News that the Northern Provincial Council resolution seeking an international war crimes inquiry was a ‘sinister political agenda’ two months ahead of the UN Human Rights Council sessions in Geneva. “We all know the allegiance that existed between the formerLTTE terrorist group and the Tamil National Alliance that
represents the Northern Provincial Council,” Sri Lanka’s Human Rights
Commissioner told the Rajapaksa state media which carried a major story
on his comments yesterday.
“Their move has come just two months ahead of the Geneva UN Human Rights
Council sessions. There is nothing but a sinister political agenda that
is at play to discredit the government and the country. This has placed
the country’s national security under threat,” Mahanama, who is a loyal
acolyte of Secretary to the Ministry of Defence Gotabaya Rajapaksa said,
reflecting the sentiments often expressed by members of the defence
establishment – against whom the most heinous allegations of rights
abuses in the country are being made.
Mahanama claimed that passing of a resolution by the Northern Provincial
Council calling for an international investigation into the alleged
massacre of civilians in the final stages of the war was “similar to the
unilateral declaration of a State of Eelam by Varadaraja Perumal, then
Chief Minister of the North-Eastern Province and the leader of the Eelam
People’s Revolutionary Liberation Front (EPRLF) in 1990.”
It is deeply ironic that Commissioner Prathibha Mahanama and the Human
Rights Commission he heads is touted by the regime as an example of the
robust human rights protection mechanism that is in place in Sri Lanka.
It is even more ironic that it was for the HRC headed by Mahanama that
the Commonwealth Secretariat spent the better part of its year assisting
with building capacity so that the Commission could engage in a more
efficient and credible process to investigate rights abuses in the
country. The Secretariat’s interest in the Commission was motivated by
the need to convince Commonwealth Member States that Sri Lanka was doing
enough to address the mounting human rights charges against the
Rajapaksa Administration domestically to warrant it assuming the Chair
of the organisation.
Mahanama’s remarks to the state owned press, however, makes a mockery of these efforts.
If there was any doubt how Mahanama would view any allegation against
the state for violating human rights it is clear when he views a call
for credible investigation into alleged violations of humanitarian law
as being sinister agendas aimed at ‘discrediting’ the country and posing
national security threats.
Making further remarks in the Daily News, Mahanama said Washington and
London were “hell bent” on bringing a resolution against Sri Lanka at
the UNHRC in March. “They are trying to take advantage of the situation
to promote their sinister political agenda by virtue of this
opportunity,” he said of the TNA.