Greens Reflect 'Grief and Courage of Tamils'-Disturbing images tell the story of ethnic
cleansing.
Speech: November 27 - Maaveerar Naal-LeeRhiannon-See here for full address
Human
Rights-28 Nov 2012
Lee Rhiannon addresses a Tamil rights
rally.
|
(SYDNEY)
- Greens Senator
Lee Rhiannon spoke in parliament on November 27 to mark the the Tamil day,
“Maaveerar Naal”, and detail the ongoing struggles of Tamil people to achieve
justice and equality.
Her full speech is published below:
November 27 marks a very important and hauntingly sad day for Tamils
all around the world including in Sri Lanka.
In Tamil the day is known as “Maaveerar Naal”. Veerar means “warrior
or hero”. Maa means “great”. Naal means ”day”.
It is a day on which millions of Tamils will remember the hundreds
and thousands of brothers, sisters, mothers, fathers, children and the elderly
who sacrificed their life in the 26-year long struggle for their freedom.
Last year on this day I joined around 2000 Tamils in Sydney’s west
to pay respect to the courage, strength and sacrifice of the Tamil people. The
overwhelming distress and pain of the Tamil community as they stood in line to
lay down a flower in respect for the fallen was a piercing emotional experience
for me. I am in parliament today so I will not be able to join the community.
But I still stand beside them as their friend on this significant day.
I have come to know the Tamil community in Sydney very intimately
and I know that their grief and feeling of betrayal by the international
community, world leaders and the United Nations is still very raw.
These emotions are perpetuated by the discrimination and brutality
the Tamils continue to face at the hands of the Sri Lankan government, including
the sexual abuse and exploitation of women, imprisonment, land grabs, torture,
assassinations and kidnappings.
Australia’s continuing “friendly” relations with Sri Lanka, in order
to stop Tamils from fleeing their country, is a matter of despair. The
Australian government and Opposition’s discriminatory views and actions towards
Tamil asylum seekers who do manage to make the dangerous journey here is
shameful.
The recent assassination in France of a French Tamil community
leader is an example of the ongoing challenges that the diaspora Tamils
face.
Over the weekend, thousands of Tamils across France and Europe
gathered in Paris to pay their respects to Mr Nadarajah also known as Parithi
who was murdered on November 8.
It is alleged that his killing was orchestrated by Sri Lankan
government officials. When investigating these crimes I trust that the French
authorities will be very thorough and transparent with any information that may
indicate it was a political assassination.
At the service, there were community representatives from Australia,
Canada and New Zealand. French politicians were reportedly present.
The mass attendance and the state like ceremony that was performed
reflects the commitment and resolve of the Tamils. Amidst their show of communal
grief, they have once again sent a powerful message to the international
community that they will not be silenced in their work to achieve a war crimes
investigation and justice for Tamils in Sri Lanka.
A few weeks ago the UN made international headlines when a leaked
internal UN report prepared by Charles Petrie concluded that various UN agencies
had failed to meet their responsibilities in the last months of the civil war in
Sri Lanka.
“Events in Sri Lanka mark a grave failure of the UN,” the report
concludes.
Writing for Canada’s The Globe and Mail on November 19,
Frances Harrison, a former BBC correspondent in Sri Lanka and author of Still
Counting the Dead: Survivors of Sri Lanka’s Hidden War states: “The latest
UN report documents how UN staff members were in possession of reliable
information that showed that the Sri Lankan government was responsible for the
majority of deaths.
“And that two-thirds of the killings were inside safe zones
unilaterally declared by the Sri Lankan government purportedly to protect
civilians. This was information senior UN managers decided not to share with
diplomats when they briefed them.”
The BBC has reported that the Petrie report points out that in
Colombo “many senior UN staff did not perceive the prevention of killing of
civilians as their responsibility - and agency and department heads at UNHQ were
not instructing them otherwise” and there was “a continued reluctance” among UN
personnel in Sri Lanka “to stand up for the rights of people they were mandated
to assist”.
The report also talks about the UN’s reluctance to publish casualty
figures.
During the war, the UN maintained a figure of about 8000 Tamil
deaths. After the war, a former UN spokesperson in Sri Lanka Gordon Weiss, put
this figure as high as 40,000.
The Petrie report says that “credible information” indicates “that
over 70,000 people are unaccounted for”. Dr Sam Pari, spokesperson for the
Australian Tamil Congress, says Tamil church leaders and civil society, using
census statistics, have calculated the death toll to be 146,679.
Against this figure of 146,679 Tamil deaths, the UN estimation of
8000 is an insult. Even a possible 70,000 figure is hard to trust. So three
years on, we still have no agreed figure of how many men, women, children and
elderly were killed in the first five months of 2009.
What this internal review has revealed is nothing new. All
throughout the final months of the war, Tamils all over the world pleaded with
international leaders to take notice of the massacre taking place in Sri
Lanka.
Thousands of Tamils continuously took to the streets in India,
Australia, Canada, US, Malaysia, New Zealand, Switzerland, Germany and France.
In the UK, an unprecedented 300,000 Tamils closed off Parliament Square crying
out for a ceasefire.
Numerous young Tamils were on hunger strikes, and in India young men
burnt themselves alive unable to bear the news of what was happening to their
brothers and sisters.
Former UN spokesperson Gordon Weiss said in a blog post on November
15:
“Sri Lanka pulled off one of the nastiest episodes of mass killing
since the Rwandan genocide – and got away with it.”
He went on to say that: “despite a clear advantage over the
near-vanquished rebels, the army bombed packed hospitals, used starvation
tactics, executed civilian captives, raped and killed female guerillas and
corralled women and children into “safe zones” before shelling them. When that
was done, it interrogated and then killed the Tamil Tiger political and military
leadership, along with their families.”
I find it hard to believe that Western governments didn’t know what
was going on. It has been confirmed that the UN certainly did know. While there
were diplomatic efforts by some European leaders, their efforts were
minimal.
I congratulate the aid workers, Tamil doctors, priests, Tamilnet
journalists and diaspora Tamils who stayed in the conflict zone and did
everything they could to make the world listen. Many died.
Today, I will remember them on Maaveerar Naal.
In responding to the leaked UN internal review, UN
[secretary-general] Ban Ki-Moon said in a statement: “I am determined that the
United Nations draws the appropriate lessons and does its utmost to earn the
confidence of the world's people, especially those caught in conflict who look
to the organisation for help.”
I welcome Mr Moon’s statement. It is important to hear that the UN
is “determined” to draw the “appropriate lessons”. Mr Moon has said he will
organise a senior-level team to give him careful consideration to the
recommendations and advise on a way forward.
It is a step in the right direction but we have to acknowledge it is
a very small step and for the Tamil community it is too late. My concern with Mr
Moon’s statement is what he omitted. Will anyone in the UN be held
responsible?
In his blog, Gordon Weiss speaks about an incident during the war —
when Australian UN humanitarian worker James Elder warned that children were
being killed and a Sri Lankan government official accused him of supporting
terrorists.
The government expelled Elder. That government official, Palitha
Kohona, is now Sri Lanka’s representative at the UN. His deputy is a former
general accused of mass killing during the war. Is Palitha Kohona going to be
held accountable?
And what about Vijay Nambiar, who was Mr. Moon’s then chef de
cabinet? Writing for The Huffington Post on November 16, Frances Harrison
says Mr Nambiar implored the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay,
to dilute her statement when she wanted to speak about potential war crimes by
the Sri Lankan government. Will Mr Moon do anything about him?
And what about a war crimes investigation? Will Mr Moon make
attempts to appoint an international war crimes investigation to set the record
straight? And will member states give him the backing that he needs?
The Australian government has maintained a complicit silence
regarding the Rajapakse regime and the allegations of war crimes against it, and
it continues to give a former Navy official during the war — Thisara
Samarasinghe — diplomatic immunity in Canberra.
I note here a sentence from page 28 of the Report of the
Secretary-General’s Panel of Experts on Accountability in Sri Lanka.
“From as early as 6 February 2009, the SLA [Sri Lankan Army]
continuously shelled within the area that became the second NFZ [No Fire Zone],
from all directions, including land, air and sea.”
The failure of the Australian government and other western
governments to take decisive actions, such as adding their support to Canadian
Prime Minister Stephen Harper's call to boycott CHOGM if held in Sri Lanka in
2013, adds to the pain and anguish that so many Tamils and their supporters
feel, particularly on a day as important as today.
I congratulate all those who are working to ensure that there will
be a war crimes investigation.
As November 27 dawns around the world I acknowledge the grief and
courage of Tamils who gather together to remember and reflect on the enormity of
the lives lost.
I repeat the call that crimes against humanity and war crimes
committed in Sri Lanka must be investigated.
Speech: November 27 - Maaveerar Naal-LeeRhiannon-See here for full address
Human Rights
28 Nov 2012
Adjournment speech, Tuesday 27 November 2012