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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, May 4, 2017
As EU Parliament Considers Preferential Trade Status To Sri Lanka, Ensuring Human Rights Compliance Is Key

By Shreen Abdul Saroor –May 3, 2017
You see a shirt. The price is right: you buy it. “Made in Sri Lanka,” it says.
What you probably don’t think about is the real cost of that shirt, or how a preferential trade scheme called GSP+ brings that shirt to European markets and implicates human rights in Sri Lanka. On 27th April the European Parliament voted to defeat a resolution to deny returning this preferential trade status to Sri Lanka.
In 2010, the EU withdrew GSP+ status for Sri Lanka due to its bleak
human rights landscape. The Sri Lankan armed forces had just defeated
the Tamil Tigers, bringing an end to a 26-year civil war. U.N. experts
estimated that 40,000 or more died in the final months alone. The
government that won the war held onto power tightly, amidst
international alarm at widespread human rights violations against
journalists, civil society groups, war-affected Tamils, and religious
minorities. The EU told Sri Lanka that to maintain preferential GSP+, it
would have to comply with the 27 international conventions covered by
the GSP+ scheme, including the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights (ICCPR) and the Convention Against Torture (CAT). It
told Sri Lanka that several sections of the Prevention of Terrorism Act
(PTA), which facilitated the country’s thousands of enforced
disappearances, were incompatible with the ICCPR and needed to be
repealed. When the previous government doubled down on its intransigence
instead of complying, the EU withdrew Sri Lanka’s GSP+ status.
In 2015, a new Sri Lankan government took over. It reapplied for GSP+
membership and co-sponsored U.N. Human Rights Council resolution 30/1 to
commit to creating four transitional justice mechanisms to
comprehensively deal with the past and prevent future violations. Among
other commitments, the government promised the EU and the Human Rights
Council that it would repeal the PTA and enact new counter-terrorism
legislation.
Despite promises, there has been little action. The U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights recently described Sri
Lanka’s transitional justice measures since 2015 as “worryingly slow”
and “inadequate to ensure real progress,” with government officials
giving “unclear and often contradictory messages.” Of the four promised
transitional justice mechanisms, only the Office of Missing Persons has
legislation in place, but it remains inoperative and moves are underway
to eliminate a core provision allowing foreign technical assistance.
Officials have dismissed the report of public consultations task force the government itself
set up, despite over 7,300 participants from all ethnic communities
weighing in on the best way forward. Notably the PTA has yet to be
repealed. The government claims it will be replaced with a new Counter
Terrorism Act (CTA), but that legislation is being developed in secret
without any consultation with the Sri Lankan public, or even its
National Human Rights Commission. On 24th April Cabinet of
ministers have apparently hastily endorsed the draft CTA just to placate
EU members and secure GSP+. The draft CTA reportedly contains an
overboard definition of terrorism-related offences, excessive powers of
detention by police, and restricted legal access during the initial
stages of detention – all falling well below acceptable international
standards and the EU’s expectations for reinstating GSP+. Besides this
draft that was approved on 24th April is substantially worse than a
draft that had been presented to cabinet previously and it reintroduces
offences relating to gathering confidential information, and makes
speech that causes communal disharmony an offence. Meanwhile, the
government is dragging its feet on constitutional reforms, causing
moderate Tamil politicians to lose support against those hold hardline
position and oppose engaging with the government. War-affected women are
conducting street protests and hunger strikes to demand answers on
disappearances and release of lands held by the military.
Hence, despite promises made, too little has changed in Sri Lanka’s
human rights landscape since 2010. Nevertheless, on 11 January, the
European Commission proposed granting Sri Lanka GSP+ membership. On 18 January, the Commission commended the
Sri Lankan government for “committing to address historic and
long-standing problems that have caused conflict and negatively affected
the lives and living standards of all Sri Lankans.”
The war-affected community in Sri Lanka has voiced concerns over
reinstating GSP+. When the root causes for GSP+ revocation have not been
addressed, it seems counterproductive to reward the current government
for mere promises made. Nevertheless, realistically speaking, GSP+ is
now a virtual certainty. A majority of European Parliament would have to
oppose the measure, an outcome that seems all but impossible,
particularly given the decision to grant GSP+ status to countries with
poor human rights records like Pakistan.
