UN 'deeply disturbed' by Sri Lankan shooting
Channel
4 News
Channel 4 News16
FEBRUARY 2013
UN High Commissioner for Human

Rights, Navi Pillay tells Channel 4 News that she is "deeply disturbed" by the shooting of a Sri Lankan journalist and calls on the Sri Lankan government to protect him.
In
an exclusive interview with Channel
4 News, Navi Pillay urged the Sri Lankan government to "provide
immediate protection" for Faraz Shaukatally, who is currently in intensive care after
being shot by three unidentified gunmen on Friday night.
Ms
Pillay said: "It's an act of attempted assassination so he needs to be protected
immediately."
Mr
Shauketaly, 52, who holds joint British and Sri Lankan citizenship, is a
reporter for the Sri Lankan newspaper The Sunday Leader.
Ms
Pillay said "I'm deeply disturbed by this particular shooting because it's a
journalist and he's attached to a newspaper that's known to be critical of the
government - particularly on accountability and in justice issues - which are
issues that I cover. And I will be reporting to the Human Rights Council my
concern over extra judicial killings, abductions and this kind of treatment and
suppression of freedom of expression."
Watch on 4OD: Sri Lanka's Killing Fields
The
newspaper's editor Sakunthala Perera said the journalist was shot while he was
on the telephone discussing a story due to appear in this week's edition.
Police
said three men broke into his house and opened fire on him while he was in his
bedroom. The journalist, whose family live in Colywn Bay in Wales, was rushed to
hospital with bullet wounds in his neck.

Time to 'demonstrate' integrity
Though
he has miraculously survived, Mr Shaukatally is undergoing further tests in
intensive care ahead of surgery. In 2009 an editor from the same newspaper was
killed and other members of staff have also been attcked. No arrests have been
made to date.
Today
the Sunday Leader's
website reported that Sri Lanka's Presdient Mahinda Rajapaksa has ordered a
special investigation into the shooting incident.
However,
when asked about suggestions that the government could have been involved in the
shooting, Ms Pillay told Channel
4 News: "That's why there has to be a proper investigation before we
can conclude that. In the meantime it's law enforcement that has to provide him
protection. And it would demonstrate on the part of the government that they
care if one of their citizens is fired upon. Everybody should care (about) who
are the people who are going around shooting other people. This is what law
enforcement is about.
"The
Sri Lankan government swears by the integrity of their army and their police,
well it's time they demonstrated that. These institutions built into the
democracy must now begin to work properly and this is an immediate instance
where they can demonstrate that. "
She
said Sri Lanka must provide a credible investigation involving the civil
society, because "if it is done by the government or the police themselves they
do not enjoy the confidence of the people at this
stage."
Human rights record
Sri
Lanka's rights record has been subject to criticsim over alleged excesses during
the military's final phase in defeating Tamil
Tiger seperatists. Rights groups say the military killed thousands of
minority ethnic Tamil civilians in the final weeks of the conflict.
Ms
Pillay praised Channel 4's investigative report, Sri
Lanka's Killing Fields, on the last few weeks of the Sri Lankan civil war,
broadcast in 2011.
She said: "Let me say how much Channel 4's information is appreciated because you have brought this to the fore. I myself mandated by the Human Rights Council have been filing reports on the human rights situation in Sri Lanka - we will be reviewing that again in March, but I have consistently called for a credible international investigation particularly of the occurrences in the last few days of the conflict."
She added that she was frustrated by the Sri Lankan government's lack of investigation, with offers of UN help, to establish what happened at the end of the country's civil conflict.
She said: "Let me say how much Channel 4's information is appreciated because you have brought this to the fore. I myself mandated by the Human Rights Council have been filing reports on the human rights situation in Sri Lanka - we will be reviewing that again in March, but I have consistently called for a credible international investigation particularly of the occurrences in the last few days of the conflict."
She added that she was frustrated by the Sri Lankan government's lack of investigation, with offers of UN help, to establish what happened at the end of the country's civil conflict.
The
Sri Lankan government has rejected allegations of mass killings and has been
dismissive of Ms Pillay's calls for investigation, alongside her calls for
the demilitarisation of the Vanni region.
Jonathan Miller blog: Sri Lanka - skeletons in the cupboard?
But
Ms Pillay insists: "We want to provide them with expert investigative
assistance, we are ready to provide this kind of assistance and I'm really
disappointed it has not been taken up."
She added: "It's particularly bad because this was government forces firing on civilians indiscriminately - they were shelled and the normal responsibility of governments is to protect people - not to kill them."
Criticism was also levelled at the UN which was in Sri Lanka at the time of the alleged atrocities and whose people were withdrawn.
She said: "I think that is deeply disturbing because it's a repetition of the criticism that was levelled against the United Nations during the Rwandan genocide and there was a report done after that with recommendations.
She added: "It's particularly bad because this was government forces firing on civilians indiscriminately - they were shelled and the normal responsibility of governments is to protect people - not to kill them."
Criticism was also levelled at the UN which was in Sri Lanka at the time of the alleged atrocities and whose people were withdrawn.
She said: "I think that is deeply disturbing because it's a repetition of the criticism that was levelled against the United Nations during the Rwandan genocide and there was a report done after that with recommendations.
"Now,
to the credit of the secretary general he set up the Petrie Commission to look
at the UN's failures in handling the Sri Lankan
conflict and I very much encouraged that, I've read the report and I'm
urging now the United Nations to take steps to come up with action plans to
implement those recommendations so that the United Nations doesn't repeat these
kind of failures."