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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, August 31, 2016
Geneva Resolution being implemented – Mangala
Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera on Monday assured that the the process implementing the Geneva Resolution was on track
Strongly denying a dispute within the ruling coalition over the process,
Minister Samaraweera stressed that President Maithripala Sirisena had
been consulted before the Government of Sri Lanka (GoSL) co-sponsored
the Resolution at the Sept/Oct, 2015 sessions of the UNHRC in Geneva.
The Matara District MP vowed to proceed with the process regardless of
resistance by hostile elements hell-bent on sabotaging the peace
initiative.
Foreign Minister Samaraweera Monday evening called a special session
with the media, including members of the Foreign Correspondents
Association to explain the measures taken by the government to address
accountability issues. Having explained the circumstances under which
the GoSL had reached agreement on Resolution 30/1, Minister Samaraweera
declared the agreement as Sri Lanka’s biggest achievement recently.
Minister Samaraweera revealed that at the time the issue had been taken
up at the Geneva-based United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC), he
had been with President Maithripala Sirisena in New York. Foreign
Minister Samaraweera said that he had been able to obtain the
president’s advice, comfortably while Prime Minister Ranil
Wickremesinghe coordinated with Colombo-based diplomats involved in the
process.
Acknowledging the government’s failure to include a recommendation made
by the JVP relevant to the Office on Missing Persons (Establishment,
Administration and Discharge of Functions) Bill when it was presented to
parliament on Aug. 23, 2016, Minister Samaraweera said that it would be
accommodated to enable the process to go ahead.
Minister Samaraweera said that the Constitutional Council would soon
recommend to President Maithripala Sirisena seven members to the Office
of Missing Persons (OMP). In an obvious reference to recent media
reports pertaining to the appointment of Mano Tittawella as the
Secretary to the OMP, Minister Samaraweera insisted that a Secretary
hadn’t been appointed to the proposed office.
Declaring that the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe administration wouldn’t do
anything inimical to Sri Lanka’s interests, Minister Samaraweera
insisted that the Geneva Resolution co-sponsored by the GoSL wasn’t
meant to establish a hybrid court as propagated by various interested
parties. Responding to a query by the media, Minister Samarasinghe said
that foreign judges wouldn’t be included in the proposed judicial
mechanism under any circumstances though the GoSL could secure the
services of foreign experts. Minister Samaraweera said that hybrid
courts had been set up in some countries where the UN intervened.
Asked by The Island whether he could shed light on Jaffna District
Parliamentarian M.A. Sumanthiran on behalf of the Tamil National
Alliance (TNA) declaring in Washington on June 14, 2016 that Geneva
resolution 30/1 was subject to Sri Lanka agreeing to accommodate foreign
judges on a local judicial mechanism, Minister Samaraweera claimed that
he wasn’t aware of the said meeting. The Island pointed out that MP
Sumanthiran made the statement before the ‘Congressional Caucus for
Ethnic and Religious Freedom in Sri Lanka’ in the presence of Sri
Lanka’s Ambassador in Washington Prasad Kariyawasam.
Minister Samaraweera declined to indicate when the judicial mechanism would be ready or the members of the body.
Minister Samaraweera pointed out that the Paranagama Commission tasked
to inquire into accountability issues, too, received the backing for
foreign experts from several countries, including UK, Canada and
Australia. However, the GoSL was committed to ensure credible and
transparent process as requested by those affected by violence as well
as the international community.
Minister Samaraweera alleged that those who had accused the government
of betraying the war winning armed forces caused irreparable damage to
their reputation. Their relentless objections meant that they believed
the accusations directed at the military, therefore feared credible and
transparent investigations, Minister Samaraweera said.
Referring to varying figures mentioned by different parties, including
the ICRC in respect of the total number of disappearances reported
during the conflict, Minister Samaraweera said that the proposed OMP
would undertake a comprehensive inquiry in this regard. Emphasizing that
the country couldn’t further delay an inquiry, Minister Samaraweera
recalled how he teamed up with the then Opposition MP Mahinda Rajapaksa
during the second JVP inspired insurgency in the late 80s to represent
the interests of the families of the disappeared. "We set up Mothers’
Front to pursue inquiries into disappearances," Minister Samaraweera
said.
Samaraweera quoted MP Mahinda Rajapaksa as having said that he was ready
not only to take their cases to Geneva but go to Apaya (hell). Minister
Samaraweera said that now there was no requirement to go to hell as the
government had settled the issue. Inquiries could be conducted here,
Minister Samaraweera said.
The Minister alleged that the wartime Defence Secretary (Gotabhaya
Rajapaksa) had facilitated about 200 hardcore LTTE cadres to secretly
leave the country in the last week of the military offensive. The armed
forces brought the war to a successful conclusion on May 19, 2009.
In addition to the OMP and the proposed judicial mechanism, Samaraweera
also explained government efforts to finalise Draft Bill on the Truth
Commission by October and present it to parliament before the budget on
Nov. 10. "If we fail to do that, we will bring it to Parliament in
January.".