Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Thursday, November 15, 2012


1000 Days After Disappearance Of Prageeth Ekneligoda

By Sandya Ekneligoda -November 15, 2012
Sandya Ekneligoda
Colombo TelegraphSandya Ekneligoda, wife of Prageeth Ekneligoda who involuntarily disappeared more than 1000 days ago, writes to President Mahinda Rajapaksa, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, Speaker Chamal Rajapaksa and Opposition Leader and Leader of United National Party (UNP), Ranil Wickremesinghe, on behalf of the families of the disappeared in Sri Lanka, reminding them of the hardship faced by the families of the disappeared and urging action to bring about justice. The letter is also copied to S. Mahendran, Secretary, Committee for Investigating Disappearances, all Members of Parliament, Permanent Missions and the Media
This petition is being handed over to you a thousand (1000) days after the disappearance of Prageeth Eknaligoda.
To be disappeared against one’s will, is among the most heinous crimes that can be committed against a human being. We, as families of the disappeared, face immense suffering and hardship due to the uncertainty and lack of information about the fate or whereabouts of our loved ones. Our suffering is prolonged and even more challenging than cases where there is information that family members’ have been killed or detained. We live in the belief that our loved ones are being held somewhere on this island and count the days, weeks and years for their return. For us, there is no closure.
The predicament we are left with can be seen in the case of Ranjan (name changed), who was abducted in September 2006 from Colombo and surfaced at a rehabilitation camp in Mannar this month (October, 2012). Nobody knows where he had been kept for the past six years. However, his case makes families of the disappeared, more convinced that our loved ones are still alive and are being held at secret State-run detention centres across the country.
Disappearances have been taking place in Sri Lanka for over 40 years and continue to be one of the most destructive elements in the current political system. An estimated 40,000 Sinhalese youth ‘disappeared’ during insurrectionist violence in other parts of the country, during 1980s and early ’90s. According to the official records, as of 1999, there were a total number of 26,877 disappearances in Sri Lanka. The current regime’s ‘counter-terror’ tactics can be best likened to the ‘Death Squads’ of the previous UNP government regime, active during the 1970s right through to the 1990s. State institutions including the police and the national human rights commission have failed to inquire into incidents and provide redress to victims/families. There has been no attempt to identity and prosecute those responsible for or these crimes. So far, there has been no accountability or justice for the victims of disappearances and their families through the years. There is no political will to prevent disappearances from taking place in the future.
Over 56 cases have been reported since October 2011 to March 2012 by the media alone. The government has verified 39 of these cases. Bishop of Mannar, Rev. Rayappu Joseph in a submission to the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) in 2011 placed the number of disappearances during the last phase of the war in 2009 at approximately 146,000.
These families must live in the hope that their cases will be investigated and their loved ones returned. Where the government fails, families rely on a strong local opposition, civil society and international intervention to pressure the government to take necessary action to combat disappearances and ensure justice to families. According to the UN Working Group on Enforced and Involuntary Disappearances, they have submitted 560 cases from Sri Lanka to the government between 2006 and 2011, including 126 requiring an urgent action procedure. Since its inception in 1980, the UN Working Group submitted 12,460 cases to Sri Lanka, out of which 5,671 remain outstanding. These statistics put Sri Lanka as the country with the second largest number of cases taken up by the UN body since its inception, with only Iraq having a worse record. However, there appears to be limited pressure on the government to investigate and ensure accountability in such cases.
An example of this can be seen in two statements made by former Attorney General, Mohan Peiris; once while leading the Sri Lankan delegation at the Committee Against Torture (CAT) in November 2011 when he stated that State intelligence officials had revealed that Prageeth Eknaligoda was residing in another country. Secondly in June 2012, seven months after the first statement, he stated that he has no information whether Eknaligoda was alive or not, and that the government does not know this either and that only God would know his whereabouts. Such an answer to any family of a disappeared person is unacceptable.
We believe that the combined force of the Executive President, Speaker of Parliament, Leader of the Opposition and the UN Secretary-General have the power to make deliberate progress in fighting disappearances and impunity in Sri Lanka. To this end, we appeal for your support to implement following recommendations by the Sri Lankan State:
* To facilitate a visit by the UN Working Group on Disappearances to Sri Lanka;
* To ratify the International Convention for the Protection of all Persons from Enforced Disappearance;
* To implement the recommendations of the LLRC by appointing an independent commission to investigate disappearances in Sri Lanka;
* To ensure accountability for those subject to enforced disappearances by identifying and prosecuting those responsible and to provide information about all persons held in government detention and rehabilitation centres, and grant them access to their families.
* Provide support and livelihood assistance to families of the disappeared, particularly their children.
Thank you.
Sandya Ekneligoda
(Wife of disappeared journalist, Prageeth Ekneligoda)
Related posts;
From Sri Lanka Report, UN Outright Removed Over 5,000 Dead & Summary

Inner City Press
By Matthew Russell Lee, Exclusive
UNITED NATIONS, November 15 -- The scandal of the UN's amateur blacking-out of portions of its report on its actions and inactions in Sri Lanka in 2009 which pointed the finger at envoy Vijay Nambiar, ex-humanitarian chief John Holmes and Secretary General Ban Ki-moon himself is worse that Inner City Press reported yesterday.
  Now Inner City Press has learned of significant portions of the penultimate draft of the report which were omitted (and added) even to the "final" redacted version. Inner City Press has also obtained the removed Executive Summary, and publishes it in full below, as a public service and hope for accountability.
  From the final redacted report-- which after complaints the UN has re-posted online here -- in Paragraph 22 a final line "The RC told a 13 February meeting of the IAWG-SL that as many as 3,000 people may have been killed since 20 January" was removed.
From Paragraph 82 a final line "At the time the COG was reporting 5687 killed and 10,067 injured of which 1964 and 3571 were confirmed" was removed from the "final" version, even as redacted.
As self-servingly, to Paragraph 39 the line "a step that was widely praised" was added in to the final version -- trying to play up, ironically, Ban Ki-moon's UN's transparency.
  Not only did the UN pull out, and then conceal casualty figures -- the coverup and breakdown was systemicafterward, in terms of messaging in the UN and Ban Ki-moon and his Peacekeeping chief accepting one of the responsible Generals, Shavendra Silva, as a UN Senior Advisor on Peacekeeping. 
   Meanwhile, the Executive Summary which was removed said that "the UN's failure to adequately counter the Government’s under-estimation of population numbers in the Wanni, the failure to adequately confront the Government on its obstructions to humanitarian assistance, the unwillingness of the UN in UNHQ and Colombo to address Government responsibility for attacks that were killing civilians, and the tone and content of UN communications with the Government and Member States on these issues, contributed to the unfolding of dramatic events...
   "Events in Sri Lanka mark a grave failure of the UN to adequately respond to early warning and the evolving events during the final stages of the conflict and its aftermath, to the detriment of hundreds of thousands of civilians."
That's putting it mildly. And who will be held accountable? 
Here as a public service from Inner City Press is the complete Executive Summary which the UN removed:
Executive Summary: Assessment of the UN’s Actions in Sri Lanka
Between August 2008 and May 2009, as the war between the Government of Sri Lanka and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) entered its final stages, an estimated 360,000 or more civilians were crowded into an ever smaller part of ‘the Wanni’ area of Northern Sri Lanka where many died as a result of sustained artillery shelling, illness and starvation. Almost 280,000 survivors were forcibly interned in military-run camps outside the area of conflict. The UN responded mainly through its humanitarian assistance and development frameworks; its political and human rights roles were limited. Despite the gravity of events, UN Member States did not formally consider the situation until the war ended. During the final stages, and the aftermath from May 2009 onward, the UN provided assistance to IDPs in internment camps, even as IDP rights and UN principles of intervention were not respected. Most IDPs were eventually allowed to return home. (Annex III provides a detailed account of events and UN actions)
In April 2011, the Secretary-General’s Panel of Experts (POE) on accountability in Sri Lanka issued a report recommending a review of the UN’s own actions. In a letter to the Secretary-General, the POE described UN action as a low point for the organization as a whole, and said that some UN agencies and individuals had failed in their mandates and did not uphold the UN’s founding principles. Pursuant to the POE’s recommendation, the Secretary-General established an “Internal Review Panel on UN action in Sri Lanka” (the Panel), led by Charles Petrie, tasked with providing an assessment of UN action during the final stages of the conflict and its aftermath, identifying institutional and structural strengths and weaknesses, and making recommendations to ensure a more effective UN response in similar situations. The Panel began work in late April 2012 and submitted the present report at the end of September.
For the UN, the last phase of the conflict in Sri Lanka presented a major challenge. The UN struggled to exert influence on the Government which, with the effective acquiescence of a post-9/11 world order, was determined to defeat militarily an organization designated as terrorist. Some have argued that many deaths could have been averted had the Security Council and the Secretariat, backed by the UN country team (UNCT), spoken out loudly early on, notably by publicizing the casualty numbers. Others say that the question is less whether the UN should assume responsibility for the tragedy, but more whether it did everything it could to assist the victims.
The Panel’s conclusion is that events in Sri Lanka mark a grave failure of the UN to adequately respond to early warning and the evolving events during the final stages of the conflict and its aftermath, to the detriment of hundreds of thousands of civilians and in contradiction with the principles and responsibilities adopted by Member States and the Secretariat, agencies and programs.
Decision-making across the UN was dominated by a culture of trade-offs – from the ground to UN headquarters (UNHQ). Options for action were seen less as responsibilities and more in terms of dilemmas. Choosing not to speak up about Government and LTTE broken commitments and violations of international law was seen as the only way to increase UN humanitarian access. Choosing to focus Security Council briefings on the humanitarian situation rather than the causes of the crisis and the obligations of the parties to the conflict was seen as essential to facilitate Secretariat engagement with Member States. There was a sustained and institutionalized reluctance among UNCT actors to stand up for the rights of the people they were mandated to assist. In Colombo, many senior UN staff simply did not perceive the prevention of killing of civilians as their responsibility; and agency and department heads at UNHQ were not instructing their staff in Sri Lanka otherwise. The UN’s failure to adequately counter the Government’s under-estimation of population numbers in the Wanni, the failure to adequately confront the Government on its obstructions to humanitarian assistance, the unwillingness of the UN in UNHQ and Colombo to address Government responsibility for attacks that were killing civilians, and the tone and content of UN communications with the Government and Member States on these issues, contributed to the unfolding of dramatic events.
UNHQ engagement with Member States regarding Sri Lanka was ineffective and heavily influenced by what UNHQ perceived Member States wanted to hear, rather than by what States needed to know if they were to respond. Reflection on Sri Lanka by UNHQ and States at the UN was conducted on the basis of a mosaic of considerations among which the grave situation of civilians in Sri Lanka competed with extraneous factors such as inconclusive discussions on the concept of the ‘responsibility to protect’ and Security Council ambivalence on its role in such situations. In the absence of clear Security Council support, the UN’s actions lacked adequate purpose and direction amid the many competing factors.
Most crucially, the UN did not use all the political and advocacy tools at its disposal. In particular, it did not keep Member States or the public fully informed. Nor did it warn the Sri Lankan Government or the LTTE of the consequences of their actions, including their responsibility for possible war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Systemic failure in Sri Lanka can be distilled into the following: (i) a UN system that lacked an adequate and shared sense of responsibility for human rights violations; (ii) an incoherent internal UN crisis-management structure which failed to conceive and execute a coherent strategy in response to early warnings and subsequent human rights and international humanitarian law (IHL) violations against civilians, and which did not exercise sufficient oversight for UN action in the field; (iii) senior staff on the ground who lacked the necessary armed conflict, political and IHL experience to deal with the challenge presented by Sri Lanka, and who were given insufficient support; (iv) the ineffective dispersal of coordination of UN action and monitoring of human rights and IHL violations across several different UNHQ entities in Geneva and New York with overlapping mandates; (v) inadequate political support from Member States and inadequate efforts by the Secretariat to build such support; and (vi) a framework for Member State engagement with human rights and IHL protection crises that is outdated and often unworkable.
Overview of Recommendations
The Panel’s Terms of Reference imply that it should gather lessons from an historical event that has passed. However, the magnitude of the violence in the Wanni, following decades of strife and injustice, continue to be felt by Sri Lanka’s communities. Sri Lanka’s peaceful and stable progress will require a process of accountability and reconciliation and a political solution to the long-standing grievances of all communities, as well as a response to ongoing and new concerns, and prevention and protection in the future. Working closely with the Government of Sri Lanka, the UN needs to take on this further challenge.
This report’s recommendations for the UN system are designed to be politically feasible and resource neutral, while encouraging profound changes in the institution’s approach to similar situations in the future. The broad lines of the recommendations include the need to:
Restate the vision of the UN: The Secretary-General should restate a vision of the UN’s most fundamental responsibilities to include the defence of human rights. The vision should help frame strategy and policy responses by senior levels of the organization to situations of massive human rights violations.
Embed a UN human rights perspective into UN strategies: The UNHQ needs stronger capacity to include human rights, IHL and international criminal law perspectives in overall analysis and strategy for any situation. It should also have stronger capacity to build political support from Member States for addressing grave concerns.
Strengthen the management of the UN’s crisis response: To ensure coherent UNHQ oversight for UN strategy and action, the Secretary-General should strengthen management of the whole-of-UN response to situations of massive human rights violations.
Promote accountability and responsibility: All staff should be fully informed of, and have easy access to, procedures under which allegations of serious misconduct by staff can be reported and promptly investigated.
Improve UN engagement with Member States and building of political support: For every such crisis, the Secretary-General must have an array of options that will permit him to fully inform Member States and suggest appropriate actions.
Better address violations of privileges and immunities: When a Member State engages in sustained actions against UN personnel and institutions, including violations of UN privileges and immunities, the Secretary-General should review options for response by the Secretariat and invite Member States to consider what action they could also take.
Coming at the beginning of his second term, the Secretary-General’s decision to commission an internal review is an extremely courageous step. The Panel believes that the report’s findings and recommendations provide an urgent and compelling platform for action. The UN’s failure to adequately respond to the events in Sri Lanka should not happen again. When confronted by similar situations, the UN should be able to meet a much higher standard in fulfilling its protection and humanitarian responsibilities. In support of this effort, the Panel strongly urges that its report be made public.

Tamils demand foreign probe after Sri Lanka war report

Latest NewsAgence France-Presse | Updated: November 15, 2012 

Tamils demand foreign probe after Sri Lanka war report Colombo: Sri Lanka's main Tamil party on Thursday demanded an international probe after the UN admitted it failed to protect thousands of civilians killed by troops in the final phase of the country's conflict in 2009.

The moderate Tamil National Alliance said the report published by UN secretary general's office confirmed its long-standing allegations of widespread killing and incarceration of civilians.

"Now that the UN has come with this report we want action," party spokesman M. A. Sumanthiran said.
"There should be an international inquiry. The government as the main accused party cannot be involved in the investigation."

Sri Lanka has resisted previous calls for an independent probe and instead appointed a domestic commission to recommend measures to prevent Sri Lanka from slipping back into ethnic war.

"We would like to see reparations, restitution and justice for the people who suffered," Sumanthiran said.
"No one can say that these allegations should not be investigated."

The UN report commissioned by Ban Ki-moon to look into UN's own role in Sri Lanka reinforced claims by international rights groups that up to 40,000 civilians could have been killed by government forces.

"Other sources have referred to credible information indicating that over 70,000 people are unaccounted for," the report noted while placing the death toll at about 40,000.

Sril Lanka Campaign for Peace and JusticeThe UN internal "Petrie" report into Sri Lanka


These blog postings do not necessarily represent the views of all members of the Advisory Council.

14/11/2012

Following yesterday's fantastic BBC coverage the UN today released their internal report into failures in Sri Lanka.

As well as releasing it to the press they originally made a document available online but then appeared to take down the link, which stopped working after about twenty minutes. However in that time it had been reposted by Groundviews andLanka Standard.

Various pieces have been blacked out. However they have not been electronically removed and so any person can read what they say simply by copying the text and pasting it onto a document with a white background.

The blacked out sentence on Page 11 reads:
several USG participants and the RC did not stand by the casualty numbers, saying that the data were ‘not verified’. Participants in the meeting questioned an OHCHR proposal to release a public statement referencing the numbers and possible crimes.
The blacked out paragraph on Page 15 reads:
Several participants noted the limited support from Member States at the Human Rights Council and suggested the UN advocate instead for a domestic mechanism, although it was recognized that past domestic mechanisms in Sri Lanka had not led to genuine accountability. One participant said that “[i]t was important to maintain pressure on the Government with respect to recovery, reconciliation and returns and not to undermine this focus through unwavering calls for accountability ...” 
 The blacked out sections on pages 66 and 67 read:
The Policy Committee met two days later, on 12 March, to discuss Sri Lanka. Participants noted variously that “this crisis was being somewhat overlooked by the international community”, the policy “of coordinating a series of high level visits seemed to have produced some positive results”, and that the possible involvement of the Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide (SAPG) would not indicate a suspicion of genocide but may add to overcrowding of UN actors involved. Participants acknowledged the apparent need for a Special Envoy but noted this “did not seem politically feasible”. It was suggested that “the Secretary General’s [public] statements may have appeared a bit soft compared with recent statements on other conflict areas [and it] was suggested [he] cite the estimated number of casualty figures ….”. OHCHR said it would be issuing a “strong” statement which would include indicative casualty figures and raise the issue of possible crimes under international law by both sides.
                                                       
Several participants questioned whether it was the right time for such a statement, asked to see  the draft before release and suggested it be reviewed by OLA. There was a discussion on “balancing” the High Commissioner’s mandate with other UN action in situations requiring the UN to play several different roles. The meeting led to the adoption by the Secretary-General, through the Policy Committee, of several decisions, including: continued engagement on “the immediate humanitarian, human rights and political aspects of the situation”; “system-wide advocacy” to press the LTTE to allow safe passage for civilians and UN staff; pressing the Government on protection and assistance to IDPs; inter-ethnic accommodation and reconciliation; political advice to Sri Lanka; child protection; transitional justice; demining; reconstruction; disarmament, demobilization and rehabilitation; political solutions to the underlying causes of the conflict; and renewed efforts to establish an OHCHR field office.  
The blacked out line later on on page 67 reads:
At today’s Policy Committee meeting,
The blacked out line on page 68 reads:
The references to possible war crimes will be controversial … I am not sure going into this dimension is helpful, as opposed to more indirect references to the need for accountability, in this conflict as elsewhere.” 
 The blacked out section on page 88 reads:
Members agreed to: urge the Government to ensure protection and assistance for IDPs in accordance with international law; continue dialogue toward a durable political solution and reconciliation; seek a principled and coordinated international approach to relief, rehabilitation, resettlement, political dialogue and reconciliation; and pursue a “principle-based engagement by UNHQ and RC/HC/UNCT, with the Government, International Financial Institutions, and other partners on early recovery …”. It was agreed that the UNCT would engage with international partners and develop principles of engagement, and a monitoring mechanism to ensure adherence to these principles.
The blacked out line on page 89 reads:
Members of the Policy Committee also noted “politically, there was little to show for the UN's engagement with all stakeholders” and that the President was “not receptive to the Secretary-General's suggestion to appoint an envoy.”
The blacked out line across page 92 and 93 reads:
“The Government has not agreed to proposals for the establishment of a body involving donors and the UN which would facilitate humanitarian and recovery coordination.”
The blacked out sections on pages 95 and 96 read:

albeit with considerable disagreement on what action should be taken. In the 23 June Policy Committee meeting in New York
then
One participant said that “[i]t was important to maintain pressure on the Government with respect to recovery, reconciliation and returns and not to undermine this focus through unwavering calls for accountability ...”  OHCHR was tasked with preparation of a UN strategy and position on justice and accountability issues, including the possibility of an international investigation. 
then
Discussing whether or not the Secretary General should establish an international Commission of Experts, many participants were reticent to do so without the support of the Government and at a time when Member States were also not supportive. At the same time, participants also acknowledged that a Government-led mechanism was unlikely to seriously address past violations. The Secretary-General said that “the Government should be given the political space to develop a domestic mechanism” and that only if this did not occur within a limited time frame would the UN look at alternatives.
Meanwhile Frances Harrison has looked at what the report says in terms of what the UN were saying and what they knew:

'UN system Owes Meaningful Efforts to Achieve Justice'

Internal Review of UN Action in Sri Lanka Reveals It Failed to Protect Civilians there ~ A Digest of Key News Reports & Tweets released on Nov 13-14, 2012
  1. Includes Interview with Sri Lankan MP Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha

UN will use internal review of activities in Sri Lanka to do better, vows senior official

Chef de Cabinet Susana Malcorra (right) and Charles Petrie, head of the Internal Review Panel on UN Action in Sri Lanka, brief the press. UN Photo/Rick Bajornas
15 November 2012 – The United Nations is committed to using an internal review that found that the world body failed to meet its responsibilities during the final months of the civil war in Sri Lanka in 2009 in order to improve how it works and to better serve those in need, a senior official pledged today.
The report by the so-called Internal Review Panel concluded that “events in Sri Lanka mark a grave failure of the UN to adequately respond to early warnings and to the evolving situation during the final stages of the conflict and its aftermath, to the detriment of hundreds of thousands of civilians and in contradiction with the principles and responsibilities of the UN.”
Government forces declared victory over the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in 2009 after a conflict that had raged on and off for nearly three decades and killed thousands of people.
The Panel, set up by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, highlighted in particular the roles played by the Secretariat, the agencies and programmes of the UN Country Team, and the members of the Security Council and Human Rights Council in the final months of that conflict.
Upon making the report public yesterday, Mr. Ban voiced his resolve for the UN to learn from its findings in order to better serve humanity, especially people caught in conflict.
Addressing a news conference at UN Headquarters in New York, the Secretary-General’s Chef de Cabinet, Susana Malcorra, reiterated that determination, adding that this is a moment for “strong introspection” for the world body.
“We are absolutely guided by his decision to look into the recommendations and make sure that we thoroughly review them and implement them to strengthen the system at large,” she stated.
“The report highlights areas of improvement for the system to work and deliver better,” she added, noting that the Organization is in the process of putting together a group of senior advisors to review the report’s recommendations and figure out how to move forward.
The eight-month study by the Internal Review Panel, headed by Charles Petrie – who joined Ms. Malcorra at the news briefing – came in the wake of recommendations made by another body, the Secretary-General’s Panel of Experts, which he set up in 2010 to advise him on measures to advance accountability after the war’s conclusion.
The Panel of Experts’ report raised a number of issues, including those regarding the UN response to the situation facing civilians in the north of Sri Lanka in the last months of the war. It recommended “a comprehensive review of action by the United Nations system during the war in Sri Lanka and the aftermath, regarding the implementation of its humanitarian and protection mandates” – which, in turn, led to the internal UN review.
“It is a very difficult report to read,” Mr. Petrie told reporters, referring to the review’s findings, while adding that the fact that the UN itself was championing the report bode well for the world body.
The report called the Secretary-General’s decision to commission an internal review a “courageous” step, and said that the findings and recommendations provide an “urgent and compelling platform for action.”
“The UN’s failure to adequately respond to events like those that occurred in Sri Lanka should not happen again. When confronted by similar situations, the UN must be able to meet a much higher standard in fulfilling its protection and humanitarian responsibilities,” said the report.
Ms. Malcorra added that the report is “clear proof” of Mr. Ban’s commitment to the principles of accountability and transparency, and that while it is “painful” to realize one’s shortcomings, the UN owes it to itself, and more importantly to those it serves, to find ways to improve and work better in the future.

News Tracker: past stories on this issue

I, Me And Myself Syndrome – The Dilemma Of Sri Lankan Governance

By  Member, Sri Lankan Spring -November 14, 2012
The Reversal:
Colombo TelegraphPeople’s sovereignty is supreme is the familiar phrase that is bandied about in the world. In some countries this holds true, but in Sri Lanka this is reversed, so much so that it is felt that there is no turning back. People through the constitution have vested their power with the Judiciary, the Executive and Legislature for right action to bring about justice and well being. In Sri Lanka today this has taken a full turn.
The Dilemma of Sri Lankan Governance
Let me be very plain and simple.  What has happened to Sri Lanka? The country is a failed state, despite its grandiose façade of Singapore style city development – enjoyed by the elite few. In contrast there are yet villages, even those not so rural and fairly close to cities that have no basic road access nor transport. Let us have some of the organic muck back in the cities,  interspersed with the vestiges of good governance that we had. But the threads of governance are slipping away slowly and surely from the fingers of the people, the polity, the citizenry. The concept of people’s supremacy, have we forgotten this? Who is serving whom? The people have been designated to serve as lackeys of politicians. The concept of the servant of the people too has gone to sleep in the way bureaucrats on the one hand, lick the hands of the politicians and kick the citizens who have to be served. Are they being paid with tax payer’s money? One fails to remember these facts.
Who has brought this upon ourselves? Let us have an open analysis about this sad state of affairs. The root cause being the I, ME AND MYSELF syndrome.
THE SYNDROME:                                                    Read More
After UN Link to Sri Lanka Report Goes Dead, Back Online Here


By Matthew Russell Lee
Inner City PressUNITED NATIONS, November 14 -- Two and a half hours after the report on the UN's action and inaction in Sri Lanka was handed to Secretary General Ban Ki-moon by Charles Petrie, Ban's spokesman Martin Nesirky began Wednesday's noon briefing saying it was now online.
  Inner City Press accessed it and asked why it had sections blacked out, and no mention of Ban's envoy Vijay Nambiar and his role in the so-called White Flag Killings of surrenders Tamil Tiger leaders.
  Nesirky didn't answer on the redactions, nor on Nambiar, saying there would be another briefing tomorrow. Inner City Press wrote a story, linking to the Petrie report.
  But shortly after that, numerous readers contacted Inner City Press saying that the UN link had "gone dead." Inner City Press checked and it was true: the link no longer worked.
So here now is the report as the UN put it online Wednesday at noon, with redactions for example in Paragraphs 83 and 84 of the Narrative in Annex III. Click here to view. We will have more on this, but for now re-post the report as a public service. Watch this site.
Earlier:
UN Report on Sri Lanka Has Portions Blacked Out, No Nambiar, More Spin?
By Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS, November 14 -- The UN said it would make the Petrie report into its actions and inactions in Sri Lanka public. 
  But when it put the report online at noon on Wednesday, portions had been blacked-out or redacted. Click here to view, for example Paragraphs 83 and 84 in the Narrative in Annex III. 
 Inner City Press did a fast word search and found that while "John Holmes" -- who defends his and the UN's actions on Tuesday -- appeared in the report, UN envoy Vijay Nambiar did not.
  Inner City Press asked Secretary General Ban Ki-moon's spokesman Martin Nesirky who made the decision to black out portions of the report and whether Nambiar, who played a role in the White Flag Killings of surrendering Tamil Tiger leaders, would be part of Ban's new senior advisory team.
Nesirky did not explain the redactions, repeating twice that some yet-unnamed senior UN officials will brief the press tomorrow. He did not answer on Mr. Nambiar.
Inner City Press reported and exclusively pursued that Ban accepted as a Senior Adviser on Peacekeeping Operations one of the Generals most associated with the killings in Sri Lanka in 2009, Shavendra Silva. If he accepted Silva, how not Nambiar?
After being excluded from a UN memorial service Wednesday morning after the Petrie photo op, Inner City Press spotted Nambiar leaving that closed session. So he was at the UN.
In what remained of Wednesday's noon briefing, Inner City Press asked Nesirky if Ban has any comment on the impeachment of Sri Lanka's chief justice by the Rajapaksa government. He does not, apparently.
Analysis: it is not at all clear that this long delayed Petrie report represents any more serious approach by Ban's UN on the ongoing issues in Sri Lanka. Some call it a belated attempt at cover up, or covering something. But we will see, continuing to cover it. Watch this site.

U.N. Report Details Failures in Sri Lanka

New York Times
The United Nations published a report on Wednesday detailing its own failure to protect civilians during the final stages of Sri Lanka’s civil war in 2009. The complete text of the report is embedded below (click at the lower right of the document viewer to enlarge).
As The Lede reported on Tuesday, when a leaked draft of the report was provided to The Times, the internal review panel was highly critical of the way that decisions at all levels of the United Nations “were affected by an institutional culture of trade-offs.” The report’s authors wrote, “The tendency to see options for action in terms of dilemmas frequently obscured the reality of U.N. responsibilities.”
Several sections of the final report that were redacted were initially posted online by the United Nations in a form that allowed anyone to read them by simply copying and pasting the blacked-out text into another document. Activists from the Sri Lanka Campaign for Peace and Justice posted the redacted paragraphs on their Web site.


Tamil Guardian 15 November 2012
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon receives a copy of a report on the actions of the United Nations in Sri Lanka on Wednesday morning. Picture courtesy of Inner City Press.

A report detailing the “grave failure of the United Nations” in Sri Lanka has been officially handed over to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon, on Wednesday morning and released publicly later in the evening.

The full report can be downloaded here.

In a statement, the UN Secretary General said,
“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,” 
He went on to say that the report had been released publically as,
“transparency and accountability are critical to the legitimacy and credibility of the United Nations”.
However sections of the report had attempted to have been blacked out. The blacked out portions of the report could still be accessed and have been reproduced further below. See here.Extracts from the report 
(On February 7th 2009)
Some UN staff in Colombo expressed to the UNCT leadership their dismay thatthe UN was placing primary emphasis on LTTE responsibility when the facts suggested otherwise, and urged a more public stance.
(On March 9th 2009)
However, the briefing did not explicitly address Government responsibility for the situation or for shelling. The COG had prepared a casualty sheet which showed that a large majority of the civilian casualties recorded by the UN had reportedly been caused by Government fire, but the UN did not present this data. And when describing the lack of food and medicines, the briefing did not explain that the most immediate causes for the severe shortfall had been Government obstruction to the delivery of assistance, including its artillery shelling.
(On March 13th 2009, regarding a statement to be released)
…and the RC all wrote to the OHCHR leadership urging that the statement be changed to exclude specific reference to the number of casualties and possible crimes and violations of international law by the Government
Throughout the final stages, the UN issued many public statements and reports accusing the LTTE of committing human rights and international humanitarian law violations, and mentioning thousands of civilians killed. But, with the above exception, the UN almost completely omitted to explicitly mention Government responsibility for violations of international law. 
However, despite UN advocacy and its relative withholding of criticism,access to IDPs in camps outside the Wanni remained strictly limited by the Government and the UN never obtained the kind of humanitarian pause that would have allowed civilians to be moved to safety.
(On camps)
The UNCT had used its 9 March briefing and subsequent documents to inform the diplomatic corps of UN efforts to be present at screening locations, butdid not mention the reports of people disappearing from other screening locations to which the UN had no access… The UN chose to support the camps.
(Further extracts)
The reaction of the UN system as a whole to the Government’s withdrawal of security assurances represented a serious failure.
But the UN did not confront the Government directly with the fact that obstructing assistance was counter to its responsibilities under international law.
The UN repeatedly condemned the LTTE for serious international human rights and humanitarian law violations but largely avoided mention of the Government’s responsibility.
Senior UN officials said this was because information could not be verified. In fact, information had been verified to a good standard; indeed UN statements on LTTE violations, including the killing of civilians and holding civilians hostage, were based on information verified in the same manner. 
Numerous UN communications said that civilians were being killed in artillery shelling, but they failed to mention that reports most often indicated the shelling in question was from Government forces. The UN condemned the use of heavy weapons in general, and some officials appeared to believe thatbecause such weapons were almost exclusively used by the Government that this was a sufficient means of raising Government responsibility.
The Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide, who also has an international human rights and humanitarian law mandate, raised concern with the Government and the Secretary-General over the situation but favoured quiet diplomacy and told the Government he would “not speak out.”
Much of the information used in the film (Channel 4’s ’Sri Lanka’s Killing Fields’) was obtained from, or had already been accessible to, the UN for some time previously.
Nevertheless, the Panel’s report concludes that events in Sri Lanka mark a grave failure of the UN to adequately respond to early warnings and to the evolving situation during the final stages of the conflict and its aftermath, to the detriment of hundreds of thousands of civilians and in contradiction with the principles and responsibilities of the UN.
It is nevertheless clear that there can be no lasting peace and stability without dealing with the most serious past violations and without a political response to the aspirations of Sri Lanka’s communities. The UN cannot fulfil its post-conflict and development responsibilities in Sri Lanka without addressing these fundamental concerns; and the UN should continue to support implementation of the recommendations of the Panel of Experts on Accountability.

An attempt to censor


However sections of the report had attempted to have been blacked out.

The blacked out portions of the report could still be accessed. Sections that had attempted to have been blacked have been reproduced below.

See all the blacked out sections in full here.


On page 15, the blacked out section says,
“Several participants noted the limited support from Member States at the Human Rights Council and suggested the UN advocate instead for a domestic mechanism, although it was recognized that past domestic mechanisms in Sri Lanka had not led to genuine accountability. One participant said that “[i]t was important to maintain pressure on the Government with respect to recovery, reconciliation and returns and not to undermine this focus through unwavering calls for accountability …” 
On page 68, the blacked out section quoting the then Under Secretary General for Humanitarian Affairs John Holmes says,
“”The references to possible war crimes will be controversial … I am not sure going into this dimension is helpful, as opposed to more indirect references to the need for accountability, in this conflict as elsewhere.””
The blacked out section on page 96 states,
“Discussing whether or not the Secretary General should establish an international Commission of Experts, many participants were reticent to do so without the support of the Government and at a time when Member States were also not supportive. At the same time, participants also acknowledged that a Government-led mechanism was unlikely to seriously address past violations. The Secretary-General said that “the Government should be given the political space to develop a domestic mechanism” and that only if this did not occur within a limited time frame would the UN look at alternatives.”
The executive summary of the report was removed, with the BBC reporting that it had “set out the panel’s conclusion in stark terms”. They went on to say the executive summary highlighted that,
“the UN struggled to exert influence on the government which, with the effective acquiescence of a post 9/11 world order, was determined to defeat militarily an organisation designated as terrorist”.
The executive summary allegedly went on to state that
“many senior U.N. staff simply did not perceive the prevention of killing of civilians as their responsibility and agency and department heads at UNHQ were not instructing them otherwise”.

Reaction
Speaking to the BBC UN worker Benjamin Dixit said in an interview,
I believe we should have gone further north, not evacuate south, and basically abandon the civilian population with no protection or witness. As a humanitarian worker, questions were running through my mind ‘what is this all about? Isn’t this what we signed up to do?’

We’re here to protect and witness these things. And then having to drive out of there, past these people wearing a helmet, wearing a flak jacket and all the protection that we had because we’re international… was… I’ve never been so ashamed of the colour of my skin…
Mathanansurendran Suthaharan, a Tamil journalist who fled from the war zone, said,
I kept sending messages, photos of civilian casualties, reports of hospitals bombings, to my contacts in Tamil media. And I requested they spread the word and tell the world to intervene and stop the war.
They (the UN) did help the people in the camps by supplying food and other essential items, but that’s not very helpful because we were kept there as prisoners of the government. It’s almost like someone visiting a prison and supplying sweets to the prisoners.

It wouldn’t save our lives and they didn’t guarantee any protection for us.”
See extracts of both interviews in a BBC report below.

See more reaction from BBC Newsnight, including an interview with Sri Lanka Campaign Chair and former senior UN official Edward Mortimer here.

Also see more BBC coverage, including a heated interview with Sri Lankan MP Rajiva Wijesinha and former UN official Gordon Weiss in BBC Newshour radio interviews here andhere


Australian Tamil Congress spokesperson Dr Sam Pari said,
“Such reports will only hold any weight if the UN acts to ensure that it redeems itself from its colossal failure in protecting the Tamil people.”
Human Rights Watch’s UN director, Philippe Bolopion said,
“The UN’s attempt to appease the Sri Lankan government while it was committing mass atrocities against its own population proved to be a deadly mistake,”

“The UN’s failure to learn from Rwanda shows that a mere report won’t solve these deep-seated problems unless there is the necessary political will and commitment to implement the report’s recommendations.”
See our post: HRW criticises UN’s ‘deadly mistake’ (14 November 2012)

Scottish journalist Isabel Hilton said,
“If the words “never again” are to be more than an inscription on the gravestones of new victims, the UN must pursue this shameful episode to its roots.”
See our post: ‘UN has not learned from failures in Rwanda’ (15 November 2012)Also see more of Sri Lanka’s reaction in our earlier post:

No, no, no! (14 November 2012)