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 20, 2019
Sri Lanka: 4Ds Diplomacy - Deny, Deceive, Delay And Destroy
The Sri Lankan government is trying to employ its time-tested tactics of delay and destroying the process of international justice mechanism as conducted at home for seven decades.
Already four years including a two-year extension granted to the Sri
Lankan Government by the Human Rights Council in 2017, there is little
progress in addressing the key goals set out in the Human Rights Council
adopted resolution on 1st October,2015 (A/HRC/30/1), titled “Promoting
reconciliation, accountability and human rights in Sri Lanka”. This
resolution was co-sponsored by Sri Lanka and legally implied that it
accepted and assented to the resolution in full, and thereby commended
it to other members of the Human Rights Council.
Several United Nations high officials and observers are on record that
none of the measures so far adopted to fulfill Sri Lanka’s transitional
justice commitments are adequate to ensure real progress. It is too
naive to say that the progress is slow but the entire process seems to
have come to a virtual halt. The World Governments are coming to terms
with the ground realities in Sri Lanka with little evidence that
perpetrators of war crimes committed by members of the Sri Lankan armed
forces are being brought to justice.
Any power or the international institution trying to impart a sense of
justice to the Sri Lankan government are best advised to learn from the
failure of the Indian government in pleading with the successive Sri
Lankan governments to implement the provisions of the Indo-Sri Lanka
Accord-1987, especially the 13th Amendment to the constitution of Sri
Lanka for over three decades.
The refusal of the Sri Lankan government authorities to comply with its
own commitment given at the Human Rights Council reveals two distinct
but inter-related realities of international politics and the
limitations of global institutions. For the Tamils, this trait of Sri
Lankan government co-sponsoring the resolution (A/HRC/30/1) is neither
unusual nor unprecedented. This is a characteristic instinct of Sinhala
survival in the face of overwhelming crises and walking out of this
commitment is being executed through bargains of time and
diplomatic maneuvers. There are several historical and contemporary
instances to this effect. The international governments including the
sponsors of the resolution (A/HRC/30/1) are also responsible for
allowing the Sri Lankan government to wriggle away from its own
commitment as co-sponsor.
The Sri Lankan government is trying to employ its time-tested tactics of
delay and destroying the process of international justice mechanism as
conducted at home for seven decades. After presenting the prospects of
drafting a new constitution to the UNHRC it has successfully diverted
the attention of the global community to the deliberations and divisions
within the Sinhala polity than the original commitments it had made
through the resolution (A/HRC/30/1).
The current Sri Lankan Government is now trying to seek Cabinet approval
for a truth and reconciliation mechanism, when its leaders accepted to
address justice and accountability in post-war Sri Lanka. The Sri Lankan
Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe has recently called to the masses
for a process of truth telling, regret , and forgiveness, similar to the
Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) of South Africa, for a true
reconciliation without any reference to key promises of justice and
accountability.
Former United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay has
recently observed that ‘’I am disappointed to learn that on the eve of
the interactive dialogue on the Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights’(OHCHR) report on Sri Lanka in the UN
Human Rights Council, the Government of Sri Lanka is resorting to yet
another delaying tactic to escape......implementation of Resolution
30/1.” (See., Ceylon Today, 24 February,2019, Colombo Edition).
There are three different positions held by the Sinhala ruling elites regarding the UNHRC resolution (A/HRC/30/1) –
First, demolish the UNHRC process by demonstrating Sinhala nationalism
with the determination of defending the war crimes and crimes against
humanity in the name of national sovereignty as advocated by Mahinda
Rajapaksa and increasingly held by the president Maithripala Sirisena.
Secondly, tactical negotiations to buy time with delay and deception
mechanism at work inside the UNHRC with the prospect of another two-year
extension with Sri Lanka as co-sponsor once again.
Thirdly, keep experimenting with the art of balancing act between the
Chinese interests and Western pressures through strategic bargains
in Indian Ocean and South Asia region. All three positions converge at a
single point of permanently denying justice to the Tamils.
If the Sri Lankan government seeks and UNHRC agrees for another two-
year extension the council should not be content by insisting upon
clear, stringent, time-bound benchmarks and a monitoring framework. The
Action Taken Report (ATR) should be followed up with an assessment and
responses to ATR. The Geneva process should be followed and respected
along with its logical course of a recommendation by the UNHRC that
United Nations General Assembly set up an International Criminal
Tribunal as a subsidiary organ under Article 22 of the UN Charter such
as the International Criminal Tribunal of Yugoslavia (ICTY) / the
International Criminal Tribunal of Rwanda (ICTR) or request that the UN
Security Council refer the case to the ICC pursuant to its authority
under Article 13 of the Rome Statute.
As a first step in the direction, Human Rights Council should come
forward to establish an Independent, Impartial and International
Mechanism for Sri Lanka. It is only through such a mechanism that
evidence of crimes held by the Government of Sri Lanka, other States,
the OHCHR and civil society actors will be preserved / available for use
by the ICC and other national courts bringing cases under universal
jurisdiction.
The international process cannot be subordinated to the parasitic
worldview of “Sinhala Only” which tolerates neither democratic dissent
from within nor genuine concerns from outside including the United
Nations and the global community of nations. If world governments led by
influential powers witnessed light in the regime change in 2015 of the
Maithripala Sirisena government in Sri Lanka, then the continuing
darkness of injustice in Sri Lanka cannot be eliminated by abandoning
the well-meaning international process due to the resistance and
defiance of Sri Lankan government and its authorities.
H.E. Ms. Michelle Bachelet Jeria, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights
in her recent report released on 8th March, 2019 observed “Since 2015,
virtually no progress has been made in investigating or prosecuting
domestically the large number of allegations of war crimes or crimes
against humanity collected by OHCHR in its investigation, and
particularly those relating to military operations at the end of the
war.” In corroborating with the High Commissioner’s warning that “the
gravity of the cases that a specialized accountability mechanism must
address cannot be underestimated,” reveals the dire situation of human
rights in Sri Lanka that should undoubtedly remain firmly on the agenda
of the Human Rights Council.
Transitional Justice in Sri Lanka suffers from a unique condition of
Sinhala chauvinism and ethnic discrimination of Tamils. The UNHRC
resolutions has not even generated “top-down” approach to justice in Sri
Lanka, leave alone the scope for building the “bottom-up” participatory
democratic approach to delivering justice at the grassroots, because of
the complete denial and discrimination of ethnic Tamils.
Neither “top-down” nor “bottom-up” approaches to justice are considered
feasible under extreme conditions of ethno-centric denial and deceit as
demonstrated by the Sri Lankan government. We need to build a bridge
between the two approaches without exhausting the options from either
end. On the other, Sri Lanka’s approach to justice has been steered by
the biases and predispositions of “Sinhala Only” politics combined with
the bargains between contending powers as part of the geo-strategic
competition in the Indian Ocean region. In this sense, transitional
justice in Sri Lanka reflects the reality of global power politics as
well as the legal, moral and political dilemmas governing in the
international human rights and justice movements in the world today.
The Author is a Professor & Head of the Department of Politics
& Public Administration, Chairperson of the School of Politics &
International Studies, University of Madras, Chennai, India. He has
also published a book on “Sri Lanka: Hiding the Elephant - Documenting
Genocide, War Crimes and Crimes Against Humanity,” University of Madras,
Chennai, 2014.