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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, October 6, 2018
Sri Lanka: What happened to our Foreign Policy?

President Donald Trump, who took the floor on 25 September, the day on which President Sirisena delivered his address, made no apology for a defiant articulation of his policy
( October 3, 2018, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) My
approach in this article is to make as little comment as possible, and
to let the documentation, consisting of authoritative Resolutions,
Statements and other material, speak for itself.
I. Address by President Sirisena at the United Nations General Assembly
In his address at the UNGA on 25 September 2018, President Maithripala
Sirisena made the following strong remarks: “My request here is to let
us solve our problems. Independence of a country is very important …..
As a sovereign State, we need no foreign influence or threats. As such, I
reiterate my request to all, as a strong nation, to allow us to sort
out our problems as a sovereign nation, that moves forward while
protecting our rights”.
This is a very clear and, indeed, emphatic statement. The obvious
question, however, is whether it reflects continuity even at the basic
level with previous solemn commitments or whether there is total
inconsistency and contradiction.
II. United Nations Human Rights Council Resolution 30/1 of 1 October 2015
This is a Resolution by none other than the Government of Sri Lanka
itself. Sri Lanka co-sponsored a Resolution proposed by the United
States, adopted the Resolution as its own and called upon all Member
States to support it unreservedly. The result was the unanimous adoption
of the Resolution by the Human Rights Council.
It requires little perception to observe how startlingly intrusive this
Resolution is, in content and spirit. No sovereign and independent
country, firmly resolved to reject foreign influence, could possibly
have agreed to, much less proposed, such a Resolution.
The Resolution “welcomes and encourages the positive engagement between
the Government of Sri Lanka and the High Commissioner and the Office of
the High Commissioner (for Human Rights) …… in exploring appropriate
forms of international support for, and participation in, Sri Lankan
processes for seeking truth and justice.” (Para 2).
It “notes with appreciation the proposal of the Government of Sri Lanka
to establish a judicial mechanism with a special Counsel ….. and affirms
in this regard the importance of participation in a Sri Lankan judicial
mechanism, including the special counsel’s office, of Commonwealth and
other foreign judges, defence lawyers and authorized prosecutors and
investigators” (Para 6).
It “encourages the Government of Sri Lanka to reform its domestic law to
ensure that it can implement effectively ….. the recommendations of the
report of the Office of the High Commissioner” (Para 7).
It “encourages the Government of Sri Lanka to introduce effective
security sector reforms as part of its transitional justice process”
(Para 8).
It “encourages the Government of Sri Lanka to undertake further efforts
to tackle the considerable work that lies ahead in the areas of land use
and ownership, in particular the ending of military involvement in
civilian activities” (Para 10).
It “welcomes the commitment of the Government of Sri Lanka to review the
Public Security Ordinance and to review and repeal the Prevention of
Terrorism Act, and to replace it” (Para 12).
It “welcomes the commitment of the Government of Sri Lanka to a
political settlement by taking the necessary constitutional measures,
encourages the Government’s efforts to fulfil its commitments on the
devolution of political authority” (Para 16).
It “encourages the Government of Sri Lanka to continue to co-operate
with special procedure mandate holders, including by responding formally
to outstanding requests” (Para 19).
It certainly defies reason how a Government, conscious of its
independence and its sovereign right to make decisions on behalf of its
people, free of foreign influence, could make such sweeping pledges to
foreign countries with regard to matters as crucial as the involvement
of foreign judges in war crimes trials against its Armed Forces, the
reform of its Armed Forces and Police, limits on land utilization by the
military, repeal of pivotal legislation governing security, devolution
of power within the country and implementation of foreign directives in
respect of this awesome array of issues. Indeed, one would be hard put
to conceive of a more comprehensive foreign-led programme.
III. United Nations Human Rights Council Resolution 34/1 of 23 March 2017
Like its predecessor, this Resolution is the direct initiative of the
Government of Sri Lanka. It does not seek to depart from its previous
commitments, made with all gravitas to the international community, by
one jot or tittle. On the contrary, its reaffirms in full all its
commitments, and makes only the tame plea for a further two years for
complete delivery on all its pledges. Furthermore, it specifically
confers on the High Commissioner for Human Rights a wide-ranging
supervisory authority. This Resolution “requests the Office of the High
Commissioner to continue to assess progress on the implementation of its
recommendations and other relevant processes related to reconciliation,
accountability and human rights in Sri Lanka” (Para 4).
Again, it is difficult to imagine a clearer antithesis to independent,
nationally oriented derision making and implementing power exercised by a
sovereign Government.
IV The High Commissioner’s Conception of His Role in Relation to Sri Lanka
UNHR Chief at the time, Prince Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, was quite
categorical in his statements defining his role vis-à-vis our country,
with total acquiescence and indeed encouragement at every point, by the
Government of Sri Lanka.
He declared: “The report and the Human Rights Council Resolution suggest
international participation in the accountability mechanisms set up to
deal with international crimes and gross human rights violations”
(Statement to the Council on 9 February 2016). He enjoyed the strongest
support of the President and the Prime Minister of Sri Lanka. As part of
the same Statement, Prince Al-Hussein asserted: “I was reassured this
morning to hear both the President and the Prime Minister state their
firm conviction in this regard”.
Four months later, the High Commissioner stated: “I remain convinced
that international participation in the accountability mechanisms, as
stipulated in the Human Rights Council’s Resolution, would be a
necessary guarantee for the credibility, independence and impartiality
of the process” (Statement to the Council on 29 June 2016).
The High Commissioner was particularly explicit in his attitude to war
crimes allegations against Sri Lanka’s Armed Forces. In the following
year, he commented in his statement to the Council: “The consistent
failure to effectively investigate, prosecute and punish serious crimes
appears to reflect a broader reluctance or fear to take action against
members of the security forces. Combined with a general lack of trust in
the impartiality of the justice system regarding past violations, this
continuing unwillingness or inability to address impunity reinforces the
need for international participation in a judicial mechanism ….. For
this to be credible, it should include a special counsel, foreign judges
and defence lawyers, and authorized prosecutors and investigators”
(Statement on 22 March 2017).
What is truly remarkable, however, is the vigorous support extended at
all times to these postures by the Government of Sri Lanka. In his
Statement of 9 February 2016, the High Commissioner, having baldly
asserted that “The country’s history over the past few decades is
littered with judicial failures,” went on to add: “The Prime Minister
commented on it at great length, and with admirable candour, during a 27
January debate in Parliament.” It is much too late in the day to
reverse these disastrous trends.
V. Contrasting Approaches Asserting National Sovereignty
In sharp contrast with the diffident and submissive attitudes
underpinning the behaviour of Sri Lankan leaders, representatives of the
current Administration of the United States of America at the 73rd
Session of the United Nations General Assembly, struck a different note
altogether.
President Donald Trump, who took the floor on 25 September, the day on
which President Sirisena delivered his address, made no apology for a
defiant articulation of his policy: “America is governed by Americans.
We reject the ideology of globalism, and we embrace the doctrine of
patriotism. Around the world, responsible nations must defend against
threats to sovereignty, not just from global governance, but also from
other, new forms of coercion and domination.”
A key official in his Administration, John Bolton, was devastatingly
scathing in his denunciation of “self-styled global governance.” He had
this trenchant comment to make in New York on 10 September this year:
“This Administration will fight back to protect American
constitutionalism, our sovereignty and our citizens. No committee of
foreign nations will tell us how to govern ourselves and defend our
freedom.”
While the Government of Sri Lanka belatedly laments foreign influence
and threats, here is a sharply contrasting robust rejection of
capitulation. Bolton minced no words in defining the Trump
Administration’s policy with regard to the International Criminal Court:
“We will not co-operate with the ICC. We will provide no assistance to
the ICC. We will not join the ICC. We will let the ICC die on its own.
After all, for all intents and purposes, the ICC is already dead.”
It must not be forgotten that the United States, having co-sponsored the
Resolution against Sri Lanka, subsequently relinquished its membership
of the Human Rights Council. In doing so, its representatives
characterized the Council as “a cess pool” riddled with hypocrisy,
double standards and self-serving motivations. The U.S. has now
withdrawn from the Council, but Resolutions 30/1 and 34/1 still remain
valid and binding, and Sri Lanka has to abide by the consequences.
Tragically, co-sponsorship of these Resolutions by the Government of Sri
Lanka itself effectively silenced a considerable swath of the globe
which, until then, had steadfastly stood for, and staunchly defended,
our country’s independence and sovereignty.
VI. Conclusion
The co-sponsorship of the Resolutions of 2015 and 2017 by the Government
of Sri Lanka itself makes the Resolutions intrinsically distinct from
Resolutions sponsored at the HRC by a foreign State. This circumstance
signifies that the Resolutions are emblematic of the intent and stance
of the Government of Sri Lanka: foreign involvement and collaboration
are essential for post-war reconstruction and reconciliation. A domestic
and autochthonous process was deliberately and repeatedly eschewed
during the last three years in favour of the former. That this
collaboration is all-pervasive is explicitly indicated by the
all-encompassing language of the Resolutions which contemplate core
domestic issues including constitutional reforms, devolution of power,
defence and public security restructuring, and alienation of State land –
matters within the exclusive purview of the Parliament of Sri Lanka.
The far-reaching implications of the involvement of the international
community in each of these matters necessarily means that the Government
of Sri Lanka intended and adopted the position that it is incompetent
or unable to exercise its sovereign powers and capacity to steer the
nation on its own, and required external intervention even in respect of
matters admittedly fundamental to the spirit of the nation. This is
further buttressed by the Prime Minister’s own statement in Parliament
impeaching the credibility and independence of Sri Lanka’s judicial
system, which was strongly relied upon by the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights in his justification for international
participation in the proposed accountability mechanism.
In surrendering the State’s sovereign right to chart the course of its
post-war future, the Government of Sri Lanka alienated its mandate to
nations whose representatives, at the very same session of the United
Nations General Assembly, emphasized in uncompromising terms the
precedence of patriotism over globalism, and the paramount need for
nations to withstand threats to sovereignty from purported global
governance (vide the remarks of President Trump) and vowed to protect
their own defence personnel from international or foreign scrutiny and
prosecution, going so far as to threaten international institutions such
as the International Criminal Court with dire sanctions, should such
institutions pursue action against their military personnel (vide the
speech by John Bolton, National Security Adviser of the United States).
I read President Sirisena’s speech at UNGA with growing bewilderment, as
I wondered whether co-sponsorship of the 2015 and 2017 HRC Resolutions
was the work of his Government or that of some other entity wholly
remote from, and entirely unconnected with, the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe
Administration. The reason for my perplexity is the evident reality that
speeches at UNGA in New York, however lofty in aspiration, have no
inherent impact whatsoever on Resolutions, approved and adopted at the
HRC in Geneva. They are mere straws in the wind. This is more so, when
the country in question has sponsored the Resolutions and urged the rest
of the world the give them unqualified support. No practical
consequences of any kind flow from exhortations at the General Assembly,
unless and until the Government of Sri Lanka takes concrete steps to
withdraw its own substantive Resolutions, and initiates action to have
them rescinded, at the Human Rights Council. This is the bottom line.
Professor G. L. Peiris served
as the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Sri Lanka and now playing an
active part of the joint opposition under the Sri Lanka Podujana
Peramuna
