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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, June 26, 2018
The need to implement UNHRC resolution remains
By Jehan Perera-June 25, 2018, 9:47 pm
The
departure of the United States from the UN Human Rights Council will
weaken a global institution which has been mandated to protect and
uphold human rights throughout the world including Sri Lanka. The UN
body was established in 2006 with the aim of promoting and protecting
human rights around the globe, as well as investigating alleged human
rights violations and is made up of 47 member states, which are selected
by the UN General Assembly on a staggered basis each year for
three-year-long terms. Members meet around three times a year to debate
human rights issues and pass non-binding resolutions and recommendations
by majority vote.
The US government has justified its decision to leave the UNHRC on the
basis of the hypocrisy and double standards within the institution in
which countries that violated human rights are also present and pass
strictures on others. In the case of the United States this is focused
on the repeated criticisms of Israel, which is a close US ally. Sri
Lankans are also familiar with this type of justification for being
unwilling to follow the recommendations and criticisms of the UNHRC. The
previous government in particular took a strong and defiant stand
against UNHRC resolutions.
In both 2012 and 2014, the UNHRC passed increasingly strict resolutions
that were opposed by the then Sri Lankan government. These called for
the government to implement the recommendations of its Lessons Learnt
and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) and for the Office of the High
Commissioner to undertake a comprehensive investigation into alleged
serious violations and abuses of human rights and related crimes by both
parties in Sri Lanka during the period covered by the Lessons Learnt
and Reconciliation Commission.
The present government’s decision to co-sponsor rather than to oppose
the UNHRC resolution of 2015 helped it to become a drafting partner to
that particular resolution. The resolution called for promoting
reconciliation, accountability and human rights. As this resolution was
drafted in partnership with the Sri Lankan government it cannot be
simply dismissed or critiqued as something that the international
community alone wished to thrust on Sri Lanka, but as something that Sri
Lankan authorities too thought was necessary to implement to enable
national reconciliation to become a reality. This was evident at the
session of the UNHRC in March 2017 when the Sri Lankan government asked
for two more years to implement the resolution, which was granted
without difficulty.
The sudden withdrawal of the United States from the UNHRC has generated
an expectation that is being promoted by the nationalist opposition and
some members of the government that Sri Lanka will no longer have to
comply with the requirements of the UNHRC resolution of October 2015. At
that time the government promised to implement the resolution within a
two-year time frame. An assessment of developments over the past three
years will reveal that the countries that spearheaded the resolution on
Sri Lanka, including the United States, have been giving Sri Lanka the
time and space it requires, and asks for, to implement its commitments
without forcing it to keep to the original time frame.
SUPPORTIVE ROLE
In March 2017, the UNHRC without dissent agreed to give Sri Lanka the
two extra years that the government asked for to implement the October
2015 resolution. The international community represented on the UNHRC
recognized that it is only the Sri Lankan government that can deliver on
all of these, and not the international community which can at best
play a supportive role. The United States in particular said it was
pleased that Sri Lanka had agreed once again to co-sponsor the
resolution, and invited like-minded UN members to demonstrate support
for reconciliation and peace in Sri Lanka by adding their names to the
list of co-sponsors. In a statement, the US applauded the government for
its continuing efforts to promote reconciliation.
Therefore it is clear that the United States had ceased being a source
of hostile or coercive pressure on Sri Lanka as long as two years ago.
This also accompanied the foreign policy shift of the Sri Lankan
government away from overdependence on China. The March 2017 session
made it clear that the countries that are active on the UNHRC, including
the United States, were looking for signs of progress even though they
would have preferred the pace of change to be swifter. One of the
positive features of the present government is that it is constantly
making incremental changes in advancing the frameworks for good
governance and reconciliation.
Attention, rather than pressure, is what the UNHRC has been giving to
Sri Lanka for the past three years. The departure of the US from the
UNHRC is unlikely to reduce the attention that this international
institution gives to the country. As for pressure, there was very little
coercive or hostile pressure even when the United States was an active
member in the post-2015 period. The US embassy in Sri Lanka has assured
that it will continue to assist Sri Lanka to fulfil its international
commitments to advance the cause of reconciliation and lasting peace for
all Sri Lankans. It is more likely that the European countries,
particularly the EU, may be more strict in terms of asking for the
fulfilment of commitment than the United States, which has a more
political approach to international issues, including human rights.
KEEP COMMITMENTS
It is necessary that the government should fulfill the commitments it
made in that resolution. These commitments are ones that need to be kept
whether or not the government has international commitments because
these should be national commitments. These are for the
release of civilian land held by the military, release of prisoners held
without charge for years, demilitarization, removal of the Prevention
of Terrorism Act and establishing a truth seeking and
accountability mechanism to investigate and prosecute violations and
abuses of human rights and violations of international humanitarian law.
The release of yet another hundred acres of land by the military in the
North to the civilian population is a message that the process of land
returns is continuing. This is complemented by the government decision
to build a further 50,000 houses in the North for those who were
affected by the war. In addition, the government has been providing
livelihood assistance to war victims, rehabilitating ex-LTTE cadres, and
has recently passed a law that criminalises enforced disappearances,
set up an Office of Missing Persons, and is in the process of
establishing an Office of Reparations.
It is necessary for the government to seek to implement the remaining
commitments made in the UNHRC resolution, which include reducing the
military presence in the former war zones of the north and east, and
engaging in constitutional reform that would devolve more power to those
areas. These are necessary to bring about a lasting solution to the
ethnic conflict that has plagued the country since its independence and
prevented it from developing as a united and strong nation. The
government also needs to be more focused, and of one mind, in
communicating the truths about the need for reform and for change to the
larger population so that they understand them to be part of the
process of national integration and unification of hearts and minds in
the aftermath of decades of war and conflict.
The US departure from the UNHRC may weaken that global institution, but
it must not weaken Sri Lanka’s commitment to ensure the protection of
human rights and achieve reconciliation within our own country. This is
for the good of all Sri Lankan people and not simply giving in to the
international community. The US action should not be seen as leading to
a lessening of international attention on Sri Lanka. Nor should it be
seen as an opportunity for either this government or future governments
to evade engaging in the reforms that would bring a political solution
to the ethnic conflict and make national reconciliation a reality.