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, March 1, 2017
“We have much to lose” — UNHCHR
( February 28, 2017, Geneva, Sri Lanka Guardian) Without
commitment to fundamental human rights, to the dignity and worth of the
human person and to the equal rights of men and women and of nations
large and small, our world will become chaos, misery and warfare.
Opening ceremony of the 34th session of the Human Rights Council in Geneva
Statement by Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights
Just a few hundred yards from where we are today, the League of Nations
was dissolved, finally and formally on 8 April 1946. Aside from some
successes, it was stymied by military aggressions, the absence of the
United States and the withdrawals of Germany, Italy, Japan and the USSR.
Its treatment of colonialism was undermined from the outset by
rejection of the principle of non-discrimination.
In reaction, the authors of the United Nations Charter placed this
principle of non-discrimination in the second paragraph of the preamble.
We, the peoples of the United Nations vowed “to reaffirm faith in
fundamental human rights, in the dignity and worth of the human person,
in the equal rights of men and women and of nations large and small.”
This commitment was made immediately after the determination “to save
succeeding generations from the scourge of war” – before all other
language devoted to peace and security; before all language devoted to
development.
This is, I believe, an important point for us to grasp. Human rights was
placed in the preamble of the UN Charter not as the last or a third
pillar or as some literary flourish. It was there, it came first, human
rights was viewed as the necessary starting condition, because on 26
June 1945, the day of the Charter’s signing, killing on a scale hitherto
unknown to humans had only just come to an end, with cities across the
world pulverized and still smoking, monuments to immense human
malevolence and stupidity.
The delegations understood that only by first accepting fundamental
human rights could all else – durable peace, and success in development –
become possible. It is a point, which even today – perhaps especially
today – needs to be absorbed, by many political actors who only see
human rights as tiresome constraints – or indeed, by people who have
enjoyed many of their rights since birth, and simply do not realise how
much they mean.
When a State accedes to a human rights treaty, enshrines those
obligations in constitutional and domestic law, and implements them,
then with the passage of time the average citizen – the individual
holder of those rights – may take them for granted. It is like breathing
air. One does not think several thousand times a day about the need to
inhale oxygen – even though one’s very existence depends on it
happening, each time. Only when the air supply is cut off does its
significance become shockingly acute.
Similarly, it is only when rights are no longer upheld, the individual
concerned understands with sharp clarity just how critical they were to a
meaningful, dignified existence.
For political leaders who today wage campaigns against universal human
rights, or threaten withdrawal from international or regional treaties
and the institutions which uphold them, it is worth recalling what the
world has achieved over seven decades – and what we all stand to lose if
their threats succeed in choking off universal human rights.
After the creation of the UN, ground-breaking multilateral rights-based
treaties were negotiated and adopted: the fourth Geneva Convention, the
Refugee Convention, and the two great international Covenants which,
alongside the Universal Declaration, form the universal bill of human
rights.
The two Covenants, together with other core international human rights
treaties and their treaty bodies, were constructed to protect a broad
range of civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights. To
strengthen prohibitions against torture, enforced disappearance, racial
discrimination, discrimination against women. They upheld child rights,
the rights of migrant workers, and persons with disabilities.
Today they are reinforced by this Council, with its independent experts and Universal Periodic Review.
My Office, working with regional and national institutions and civil
society at all levels, ties it together as one system – a singular point
of reference, which we commonly refer to as the normative framework of
international human rights law, for the promotion and protection of
human rights for all people, everywhere.
But what has this actually meant to people around the world? How
consequential will it be? After all, even before World War II notable
progress had been achieved in a number of countries: ending slavery;
expanding universal suffrage and worker’s rights; ending use of the
death penalty, and placing limits on the cruelty of war.
And yet World War II destroyed all – almost. Because the flicker of
progress could not be extinguished, and in the seven decades after the
War it grew again, and its momentum was even stronger. Colonialism was
ended, segregation and apartheid were removed. Pervasive dictatorial
rule was rolled back, and the rights of an independent and free press
re-asserted. Social protections were strengthened. Women’s rights came
to the fore, and so too children’s rights, the rights of indigenous
people and the LGBTi community, and many others – all of them determined
to be free from discrimination and injustice.
As transportation compressed distances and travel, and people moved and
mixed on a scale never seen before, it also became clear: humanity is
indivisible.
Without a commitment to fundamental human rights, to the dignity and
worth of the human person and to the equal rights of men and women and
of nations large and small, our world will become chaos, misery and
warfare.
Of all the great post-war achievements, it is this assertion of the
universality of rights in human rights law that may be the most
noteworthy.
Ever-growing numbers of people now know that torture is prohibited in
all circumstances. That arbitrary arrest and detention, the denial of
due process, repression of peaceful protests and free speech – including
the role of the press – are violations of rights. They know they have a
right to development, to decent food, water, health, housing, education
and more.
The people know. They know the “dignity and worth of every human being.”
The unprecedented marches of 21 January this year were not, I believe,
about a particular individual or government – although many saw them as
such. I believe the marches were for the rights of women, the human
rights of women, for all of us, for a fair and inclusive humanity. I was
proud members of my staff took part. We must stand up for human rights.
When humans understand fully they have rights, it is next to impossible
to make them un-know it.
To those political actors who, as in the days of the League, threaten
the multilateral system or intend to withdraw from parts of it, the
sirens of historical experience ought to ring clear. We will not sit
idly by. For we have much to lose, so much to protect. And our rights,
the rights of others, the very future of our planet cannot, must not be
thrown aside by these reckless political profiteers.
I ask you to uphold the rights of all, and to stand with us.