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, September 2, 2016
UNFINISHED BUSINESS IN SRI LANKA
(Chance for change: UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon is received by
Harsha de Silva, Sri Lanka’s deputy foreign affairs minister, on his
arrival in Colombo yesterday. Eskinder Debebe/UN Photo)
By Alan Keenan.
The United Nations has a rare opportunity to help secure a sustainable peace, writes Alan Keenan
When UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon touched down in Sri Lanka
yesterday, he arrived in a very different country from the one he last
saw, immediately following the end of the civil war. Back then, in May
2009, he was shocked by the physical devastation and human toll of the
final months of war, when as many as 40,000 civilians are believed to
have been killed in the north and east. The internal review he ordered
faulted the United Nations for its “systemic failure” to protect human
rights and civilian lives at the war’s end.
Today, much of the physical damage has been repaired. Since 2015, a new
government led by president Maithripala Sirisena has championed a reform
agenda that includes important commitments to end impunity, promote the
rule of law, and encourage reconciliation. Yet political, social and
psychological wounds run deep throughout the country, threatening the
fragile progress made so far.
The UN has a mixed history in Sri Lanka. On Ban’s last visit, the
country was ruled by president Mahinda Rajapaksa and his powerful
family, riding high on the wave of triumphalism and Sinhala nationalism
that followed the military’s defeat of the Tamil Tigers. A panel of
experts Ban appointed in 2010 found credible allegations of war crimes
and crimes against humanity by both sides. Although it was denounced by
the government and its nationalist supporters, the panel’s report
contributed to the series of increasingly strong resolutions by the UN
Human Rights Council calling for accountability and reconciliation.
The defeat of Rajapaksa and election of Sirisena as president in January
2015 opened unexpected space in Sri Lanka for the Human Rights
Council’s resolutions to be acted on. It also marked a growing
acceptance that reconciliation required accountability for war crimes
and for corruption and the abuse of power.
Sirisena’s new government co-sponsored a landmark resolution adopted by
the Human Rights Council in October 2015, which committed his
administration to establishing offices on missing persons and
reparations, a truth commission, and a special court to hear cases of
alleged crimes during the war – including extrajudicial killings,
torture, rape and sexual violence. The government also promised to
investigate other human rights cases, restore the independence of the
judiciary and police, reduce the role of the military and agree on
constitutional reforms to address the political marginalisation of Sri
Lankan Tamils, which gave birth to the years of war and terror.
UN agencies are actively supporting the Sirisena government’s reform
agenda, but government efforts have been under-resourcedand weakened by
mixed messages and confused lines of authority. Clear direction from the
president and from prime minister Ranil Wickremesinghe has been
lacking. While there is much greater space for dissent, some improvement
in rights protections, and progress towards a new constitution, there
has been no decisive break with the culture of impunity. Meanwhile, key
sectors within the government are actively undermining reforms.
Take, for example, the government’s pledge to the Human Rights Council
that it would replace the Prevention of Terrorism Act with new laws
consistent with human rights standards. Despite that undertaking, police
continue to make arrests under this repressive legislation, and some
200 Tamils are still detained under its provisions, many held for years
without charge.
Security officials have reportedly interfered with police investigations
that implicate military intelligence units in murders and abductions
during the Rajapaksa years. Defence budgets have grown and the military
remains a powerful presence in Tamil majority regions, running hotels
and other businesses and occupying large amounts of private land. Tamils
are increasingly angry at the government’s failure to live up to its
promises on all these issues.
Ban should urge that the military cooperate with the police and
judiciary. He should also offer UN assistance for the Sri Lankan
military’s transition to peacetime duties in two ways: by helping to
assess its landholdings and assisting families returning to previously
occupied land, and by assisting with job training for retiring soldiers
and psycho-social support to veterans and families.
While parliament’s approval earlier this month of a bill to establish
the Office on Missing Persons is a welcome first step, Ban must press
the president and prime minister to implement all of its promises to the
Human Rights Council. A key element of these commitments is a special
court for war-related crimes, with the “participation… of Commonwealth
and other foreign judges, defence lawyers and authorised prosecutors and
investigators.” With nationalists arguing this is an infringement on
Sri Lanka’s sovereignty, the president and prime minister have reversed
position and rejected foreign judges.
Although the Sirisena government co-sponsored the Human Rights Council
resolution last year, it now seems to be dragging its feet. It appears
increasingly that the government does not intend to pass the legislation
needed to establish the special court before the Council meets in March
2017, a move that could help to evade further international scrutiny.
Ban must make clear his support for continued oversight by the UN Human
Rights Council until the government has passed the legislation needed to
establish a strong court with the legal basis and the expertise –
including international participation – to prosecute war crimes and
crimes against humanity. Even if the government succeeds in winning
approval for a constitution that reflects Sri Lanka’s ethnic, linguistic
and religious diversity, that will not be enough to ensure
reconciliation in the absence of accountability.
Ban should encourage Sirisena and Wickremesinghe to make a much stronger
public case – especially to Sinhalese communities – in support of their
transitional justice and constitutional initiatives. While resistance
from Sinhala nationalists and the Rajapaksa-led opposition is real,
strong public outreach and the government’s two-thirds parliamentary
majority provide a once-in-a-generation opportunity to address both the
causes and consequences of Sri Lanka’s thirty years of war. As part of
this, Ban should also urge that the design of the court and the truth
commission take into account the recommendations of public consultations
now under way across the island.
Finally, Ban should acknowledge the UN’s failure to protect Sri Lankans
during the final months of the war and its immediate aftermath, and
commit the UN to an active role defending rights through its ongoing
work in Sri Lanka. This should include an expanded presence of the
Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights and improved vetting of
the human rights record of military personnel who serve in UN missions –
particularly with respect to allegations of sexual abuse.
Above all, UN member states must back up Ban’s words with the right
combination of encouragement and pressure needed to deepen and sustain
the potentially historic transformation now under way in Sri Lanka. With
the UN’s help, Sri Lanka could yet build a state that respects the rule
of law and protects the rights of all its citizens. •