Commonwealth failing on Sri Lanka, says Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird
PHOTO: LEFTERIS PITARAKIS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILES
OTTAWA — Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird says the Commonwealth is failing its greatest test by letting Sri Lanka host this year’s leaders summit — but that Canada has no intention of leaving the organization.
Canada has been alone in threatening to boycott November’s Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Colombo unless Sri Lanka improves its human rights record and moves towards post-civil war reconciliation with the country’s Tamil minority.
In addition to hosting the summit, Sri Lanka is also in line to serve as the institution’s chair for the next two years — which Canada and other critics believe would seriously undermine the group’s moral authority and its ability to persuade other errant regimes to mend their ways.
Days after expressing frustration that Sri Lanka and the upcoming summit were not on the agenda of a Commonwealth foreign ministers’ meeting, Baird appeared before a parliamentary committee and reiterated his criticisms of the Asian nation.
“We’re tremendously concerned about the deteriorating and authoritative trend of the government in Sri Lanka,” he told the Commons’ foreign affairs committee.
Speaking to reporters afterward, Baird said the fact Canada is the only country speaking out reflects poorly on the Commonwealth as a whole.
“I think this is a test,” he said, “and by all accounts at this stage, the institution isn’t responding well to the challenge.”
But aside from threatening to boycott the next Commonwealth leaders summit, Baird did not say what other steps Canada might take.
Asked if the government was contemplating leaving the organization, he replied: “Not at this time.”
NDP foreign affairs critic Paul Dewar said “if anyone should be leaving right now, it’s Sri Lanka.”
Canada is the Commonwealth’s second-largest donor, and the institution would be in dire straits if Canada were to withhold the $25 million it contributes every year.
Dewar said the government should review all options, but the first step is declaring categorically that Canada will not be attending November’s leaders summit.
“We should not participate, period,” he said. “Remember apartheid? We led strongly in that. That’s what we should be doing. Not a little bit here, a little bit there. Just be very strong and say ‘We’re not going to participate.’”
Baird said the government and Canadian diplomats have been pressing other Commonwealth countries on the issue, but he would not comment on why those efforts have been unsuccessful.
“This is a tremendously difficult file,” he told the committee. “And if Canada is the lone (country) to stand up and speak truth to power, we can all be tremendously proud.”
Liberal international co-operation critic Mark Eyking, however, described the Conservative government’s failure to get other countries onside as a diplomatic “failure.”
— With files from Chris Cobb, the Ottawa Citizen
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