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, March 21, 2013

Five relatives filed habeas corpus petition concerning missing persons at the final war. Summons to Military Commander


After the final war occurred between the Liberation tigers and government troops in Sri Lanka, those surrendered to the military and after getting lost, five persons concerning this have filed habeas corpus petition at the Vavuniya high court.

 Court ordered the 58th battalion chief officer located in Mullaitheevu and Military Commander to produce in courts on the forthcoming May 20th to give their evidence in regard to this issue.

The spouses and mothers of the missing persons have filed cases at the Vavuniya high court.

This case was taken for hearing on last Wednesday at the Vavuniya high court in the presence of Judge Chandramani Viswalingam.

On behalf of defendant, Senior Attorney K.S.Ratnawel submitted descriptions concerning the missing persons.

He notified, at the final phase of military war in Sri lanka, the people from the Vanni region from one place to another place was chased and finally they were forced to move from the Mullivaaigal area to the military controlled locality.

At that time through amplifiers announcements were made, those with the liberation tiger movement to surrender to the military,  in view of the end of war, this was notified to the liberation tigers who had discarded their weapons.

Government in its announcement assured that those surrendered will be protected and they would be released by general amnesty.

These assurances were catered through officials by the government, was believed by hundreds and surrendered.

An office was opened for such persons got surrendered and uniformed military men registered the surrendered person’s name and other details. 

Due to lack of knowledge in the language, Rev.Father Francies Joseph accompanied with two Catholic Priests, who were conversant in Sinhala and English were the mediators between the military and those surrendered.

Such surrendered persons were transported in buses belonging to the government. In the presence of their spouses, children, mothers and family members on last year 2009 May month 18th, the surrendering incident occurred. After this incident, the relations did not see their surrendered beloveds.

What happened to those surrendered? Where are they or where are they detained
? The relations without knowing any details are facing agony.

A mother  had filed habeas corpus petition had notified that her daughter, son-in-law and their children aged 6 years and  4 years, are missing.

Government caught and imprisoned without differences in age or whether adult or child. Now the state of them is unknown. In this manner the government is leading the people, hence through government mechanism by carrying out investigation,  should reveal legally, what happened to the missing persons, and the government as the responsibility.

If anything happens to them, the government should take the responsibility. Sufficient actin should be taken to this issue and the missing persons should be brought in front of courts, which I request to order the relevant officers was the request made by the Attorney Ratnawel.

Subsequently an order was given by the courts to 58th battalion chief officer from Mullaitheevu and Military Commander to produce in courts on the forthcoming May 20th and to give their evidence relevant to this issue.
Thursday , 21 March 2013

Adopting draft resolution will violate Genocide Convention, says Boyle

[TamilNet, Thursday, 21 March 2013, 00:01 GMT]
TamilNetCommenting on the draft resolution being circulated by the United States at the the Geneva sessions of the UNHRC, Francis Boyle, Professor at the School of Law, University of Illinois and an expert in international law said that UNHRC and its member states, by adopting the draft resolution (3rd draft) will be abetting the on-going systematic structural genocide in violation of the 1948 Genocide Convention. The vote on Sri Lanka resolution is likely to take place as early as Thursday, according to sources in Geneva. 

Prof Francis Boyle, University of Illinois College of Law
Prof Francis Boyle, University of Illinois College of Law
Full text of Prof. Boyle's comment follows:

    "By means of adopting this draft Resolution, the U.N. Human Rights Council and its Member States will thereby further whitewash and “bluewash” and facilitate and aid and abet the ongoing campaign of genocide by the GoSL against the Tamils in violation of the 1948 Genocide Convention and in particular but not limited to their article 1 obligation “to prevent and to punish” genocide as well as their article 3(e) obligation that prohibits and criminalizes “complicity in genocide.”

The US-sponsored draft resolution "calls" the Sri Lankan government to conduct an "independent and credible" investigation into allegations of human rights violations. The draft resolution has not ceded to demands of human rights bodies for an independent international investigation, as being called by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navaneetham Pillay.

* * *
Also last year, in March 2012, Professor Boyle had warned the Tamil diaspora and supporters like him against falling into the trap being created by the US Government. 

"I served as Legal Adviser to the Palestinian Delegation to the Middle East Peace Negotiations starting in the Fall of 1991. Since that time, Israel’s strategy has always been to STALL AND DELAY while they destroy the Palestinians.

"The entire world is going along with that strategy. GoSL is doing the same thing to the Tamils here. And the entire world is going along with it. We are being treated like the Palestinians. We need to come up with an entirely new strategy.

"If we proceed down this path there will never be GoSL accountability for anything. GoSL will drag it all out until the Tamils are dead. Stall for time until the clock runs out like at a basketball game or a football game when the your side is ahead. GoSL is trying to run out the clock on us," Boyle had said in a note sent to TamilNet. 

* * *
Amidst lack of strategy by the Tamil diaspora activists, the students of Jaffna University, by their peaceful protests which were brutally attacked by the SL military in November 2012, effectively exposed how the ‘LLRC’ was being implemented by the Sri Lankan State on the ground.

Now, the students in Tamil Nadu have come forward with a strategy to arrest the situation. Their strategy is peoples struggle to checkmate the realities in the region. By continuing to hold mass demonstrations and hunger strikes, protesting the resolution, they have exposed the ultimate culprits to not only the Tamil public across the world, but also to the Establishment-centric Tamil politicians in the island and political acitivists in the diaspora.

Sri Lanka faces double whammy!


By Dharisha Bastians-  March 21, 2013 
Sri Lanka will feature prominently in an extraordinary meeting of a powerful grouping of Commonwealth nations with the muscle to suspend and expel member states, following a vote on a US backed resolution against Colombo that will be taken at the UN Human Rights Council’s 22nd Session today.
The Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group (CMAG) will hold an extraordinary meeting via teleconference this evening, at the urging of Canada and another CMAG member state, ahead of a scheduled meeting of the Group in April, Daily FT learns.
Canada is pushing for a boycott of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Colombo in November this year and hopes to lobby the rest of CMAG to include Sri Lanka in the agenda of its April meet.  CMAG is currently chaired by Bangladesh, which informed the Ministry of External Affairs and Minister G.L. Peiris that a special meeting would be held on Sri Lanka this week.
The Government in Colombo was informed by the Bangladeshi Government that Canada and at least one other CMAG member state was pushing for the extraordinary meeting.
Daily FT learns that notice of today’s CMAG meeting prompted Minister Peiris to undertake another visit to Dhaka last week. The Government is also attempting to lobby other countries in the CMAG to garner support against being listed as an agenda item when the Group meets again in April.
The timing of the electronic meeting is believed to be aimed at reviewing Sri Lanka’s position following the likely adoption of a second UNHRC resolution against the country today. The resolution to promote reconciliation and accountability in Sri Lanka is co-sponsored by 32 countries and authored by the US. Sri Lanka has decided it will seek a vote on the resolution following the debate on the final draft at the Council today.
CMAG comprises nine Commonwealth member states, that currently includes Bangladesh, Australia Canada, Jamaica, Maldives (suspended), Sierra Leone, Tanzania, Trinidad and Tobago and Vanuatu. CMAG is mandated to assess “serious or persistent violations” of the Commonwealth’s fundamental political values. The Group meets on an annual schedule but can be convened by the Secretary-General
or may meet in extraordinary session when deemed necessary.
Sri Lanka has faced challenges about its suitability to host the prestigious CHOGM 2013 because it is currently under international scrutiny over its human rights record. The Government’s decision to impeach its Chief Justice in a process that violated core Commonwealth principles on judicial independence has intensified calls for a review of the venue by rights groups.


Thursday , 21 March 2013
If the Commonwealth conference is held in Sri Lanka, it should settle the Tamil people’s crisis. If it fails to provide benefit, such conference should not be held in Sri Lanka.


Jaffna Archbishop Thomas Saundaranayagam yesterday urged the Senate and Canadian delegates panel connected to the Commonwealth conference visited yesterday to Jaffna .

Commonwealth conference special panel members Senate Hack D.Seegul, Canadian Ambassador Shellie Viding including five delegates met Jaffna Archbishop in his residence yesterday and had a discussion.

Delegates, clarified in detail about the present situation in Jaffna from Archbishop.

Archbishop said, the delegates questioned me whether I desire the Commonwealth conference to be held in Sri Lanka this time.  I replied, I am insisting the conference should not be held here. The Tamil people’s crisis is not solved for a long period. If Commonwealth conference proves of settling this, we welcome this conference to be held in Sri Lanka. But if it fails to benefit this people, this conference is not necessary here.

Do Tamil people discriminate? Was questioned by the panel and I said, at the present state, discrimination is not shown against the people publicly, but is done indirectly which I in detail explained to the panel. They said, they will take this into consideration.

Sri Lanka Campaign says HRC vote means commonwealth must act

Thursday, 21 March 2013 
The Sri Lanka Campaign for Peace and Justice has today said that the landmark vote of the Human Rights Council means that the Commonwealth must act on Sri Lanka, and have launched a petition to that end.
The resolution criticises Sri Lanka for "not adequately address[ing] serious allegations of violations of international human rights law and international humanitarian law" and "the continuing reports of violations of human rights in Sri Lanka, including enforced disappearances, extrajudicial killings, torture and violations of the rights to freedom of expression, association and peaceful assembly, as well as intimidation of and reprisals against human rights defenders, members of civil society and journalists, threats to judicial independence and the rule of law, and discrimination on the basis of religion or belief." It empowers the High Commissioner of Human Rights to investigate Sri Lanka's progress with the help of UN Experts known as "special procedure mandate holders".
The resolution was sponsored by 50 countries and passed by a vote of 25 to 13. At least six Commonwealth countries sponsored the resolution or voted in favour including St Kitts, India and Sierra Leone, Three voted against: Pakistan, the Maldives (who are currently suspended from CMAG) and Uganda. The full text of the resolution, a full voting list, and visualisations will be available here:bhttp://blog.srilankacampaign.org/2013/03/the-human-rights-council-passes-its.html
Speaking for the Sri Lanka Campaign, Fred Carver the campaign director, said, "In less than a month a key part of the Commonwealth, the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group (CMAG), meets. After the strong message the Human Rights Council has sent, they must take a stand and ensure that Sri Lanka is not rewarded by hosting the Commonwealth's grand summit this November - that will keep the pressure on Sri Lanka and ensure we finally get the independent international investigation Sri Lanka needs to end its cycle of murder, torture, and rape. But if the Commonwealth continues as usual then the Government of Sri Lanka will be able to use this to whitewash their crimes, and derail the process of reconciliation. The cycle of violence will continue.
"In the next month we need our leaders to show leadership, and show the Commonwealth that it must not be business as usual. They can do this by following the Canadian Prime Minister's example and announcing that if the summit happens then they will not go.
"We will be launching a series of petitions to this end in commonwealth nations. We are launching one in the UK today and we hope local organisations will soon be launching similar petitions in Malaysia, India, Australia, and New Zealand. Eventually we hope to have one in every commonwealth nation"
The petition comes against a backdrop of increasing concern about the summit. Desmond Tutu[2], Mary Robinson[2], Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper[2], Geoffrey Robertson QC[2], the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Select Committee[2], the Royal Commonwealth society President Peter Kellner[2], Bloomberg[2], the Washington Post[2], the Guardian[2], prominent Caribbean diplomat Sir Ronald Saunders[2], David Milliband[2], Malcolm Rifkind[2], Ricken Patel (the founder of Avaaz)[2], those campaigning for the murdered tourist Khurram Sheikh[3], Amnesty International[4], Forum Asia[5], the Asian Legal Resource Centre[5], Civicus[5], the Commonwealth Journalists Association[5], the East and Horn of Africa Human Rights Defenders Project[5], the Human Rights Law Centre (Australia)[5], Human Rights Watch[5], the International Crisis Group[5], the International Federation for Human Rights[5], Minority Rights Group International[5], the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative[5] and a number of Sri Lankan NGOs[5] have already said this summit is a bad idea.


Thursday , 21 March 2013
Reports furnish the people lands confiscated by the forces in the north will not be returned back, which is getting affirmed. Towards this all activities are advanced behind the screen by the government.

Instead of lands confiscated by the three forces in the Northern Province, according to the values assessed alternative lands will be provided is according to the directive circulated by the Northern Province Land Commissioner's Department circles.

Accordingly the lands in the custody of forces will not be returned back is affirmed. After the conflicts occurred among the Land Commissioner General in the north and eastern provinces, to settle concerning the lands crisis, under the circular no. 2013/01 instructions are given on the subject “expedite working project”

The Northern Province Land Commissioner's Department is processing to hold sessions to clarify concerning this circular to the State employees. At the sessions it was notified instead of the lands confiscated, activities will be processed to provide alternative lands.

If lands are confiscated for three forces and government departments’ usage, and for development assignments, or permanently colonized in some other person's lands, the land owners will lose ownership from the respective lands.

It would not be possible to take back such lands which were occupied, hence by identifying a suitable land in the said region; action would be taken to provide an alternative land.

The alternative lands would be distributed through the Lands Kachcheri, which will be introduced.  Concerning this,  currently activities are processed was said by the Land Commissioner Department circles.



Midweek Politics: D-Day Dilemma For MR

By Dharisha Bastians -March 20, 2013 |
Dharisha Bastians
Colombo Telegraph“Treachery? You must remember we are Southerners. They have never betrayed their country. Time and again they have sacrificed their life for the country. We have a right to tell this to the world. Tears of innocent grieving mothers compel us to tell their story of pain and sorrow to the world. We will do it today, tomorrow and always. Remember that.”
-  SLFP MP Mahinda Rajapaksa on being accused of treachery for making representations at the UN Commission on Human Rights in Geneva in 1990 about human rights abuses in Sri Lanka (ParliamentaryHansard report 25th January, 1991)
Vasudeva Nanayakkara, current Minister of National Integration and long-time friend and ally of President Mahinda Rajapaksa, tells a fascinating story.
In September 1990, after a violent insurrection had been crushed with brutal force by the United National Party Government at the zenith of its power, a young Opposition politician from Hambantota joined Nanayakkara on a journey to Switzerland. They were travelling to Geneva, where the United Nations Commission on Human Rights (the older avatar of the current UN Human Rights Council) was housed to lobby country delegations there.
According to Nanayakkara’s tale, Mahinda Rajapaksa accompanied him to Geneva, both of them penniless, with tickets and a night’s accommodation purchased for them by a mutual friend. The two Sri Lankan politicians obtained visitor accreditation to enter the UN premises and sat in the lobby for two days, waylaying every delegation that passed through those halls and trying to seize every possible opportunity to tell the world community about the human rights disaster unfolding in Sri Lanka. The two politicians were so relentless that they were finally granted an opportunity to make representations before the Commission.
The younger Mahinda Rajapaksa also handed over lists of the disappeared to the human rights watchdog, Amnesty International, in the hope the rights body would exert pressure on the Sri Lankan Government to stop the cycle of violence and terror in the island. Back home, a few months later, Rajapaksa was labelled a traitor by UNP Ministers, for carrying documentation about Sri Lanka to be given to the ‘Suddahs’ or foreigners. He retorted, as quoted above, that it was the right of grieving mothers to have their stories of pain and loss told to the world.
The other Mahinda
The story of this other Mahinda Rajapaksa is one greatly recalled more than 20 years later, when debates about traitors and patriots crescendo in Sri Lanka while the UN Human Rights Council sessions unfold in Geneva, bringing with it of late each year a host of international challenges for the Government headed by the same Mahinda Rajapaksa in Colombo.
Mahinda Rajapaksa’s decision to champion human rights causes in the ’90s may have been motivated by electoral politics with the greatest number of victims of the post-insurrection crackdown hailing from the deep south, analysts say. Yet, it is not without irony that the same politician who made that impassioned statement in 1991 now runs the Government that recently amended the country’s anti-terror laws to aid any proposed crackdown against those making representations before the UNHRC in Geneva now or in the future. Or that he runs the defence establishment that recently stopped 11 busloads of people from the north – many of them women – from travelling to Colombo to lobby the UN office in the capital to help locate their disappeared family members.
Today, for only the second time ever in Sri Lanka’s history of being a UN member state, a resolution will be adopted against the country at the UNHRC in Geneva. Neither surprising nor unexpected, the second resolution, sponsored once again by the world’s most powerful nation, is a damning indictment on a country that survived nearly 30 years of conflict without attracting such serious international censure. In a surprise – and some analysts say potentially suicidal move – the Sri Lankan Government has decided, against the advice of its closest foreign allies, to reject the US-backed resolution to promote reconciliation and accountability in the island and seek a vote on the draft resolution when it is taken up for debate in Geneva today.
Resolution: Take II
Sri Lanka’s lack of progress on reconciliation and the all-important issue of investigating allegations of violations of international humanitarian law during the final phase of its conflict, as highlighted in a broad report by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay, prompted the second US resolution at the Council this year, and is likely to garner more support for the US move this year in comparison to March 2012.
Several countries that voted with Sri Lanka against the US resolution last year did so with a caveat: an appeal to Colombo to implement the recommendations of the Government’s own Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) report and investigate alleged human rights abuses during the last phase of the war with the LTTE. Pillay’s report and remarks by the US and other delegations at the Human Rights Council this year that Sri Lanka has not adequately addressed the issues concerning the international community are likely to sway at least some of these voting member states of the council to have a change of heart this year.
The Rajapaksa administration has been busy posturing for the local electorate and therefore has consistently maintained that it was not negotiating with the US delegation on the language of the resolution. But as 21 March loomed ever closer, the fact that the Sri Lankan delegation was engaging with the US team is obvious. The sight of a large contingent of Special Task Force personnel outside the Horton Place official residence of US Ambassador to Sri Lanka Michele Sison last Saturday has also led to speculation that Colombo was engaged in eleventh hour negotiations with Washington.
The last draft
The final draft of the resolution includes a paragraph acknowledging progress made by Sri Lanka in the areas of resettlement, demining and infrastructure building, even though it also notes that much work lies ahead. This acknowledgement was something the Sri Lankan Government badly wanted included in the final text, to reflect some progress since the last resolution was adopted in 2012.
The resolution’s final draft, analysts say, is not merely an attempt to calm Sri Lanka’s fears but also to appease New Delhi, which has always sustained a degree of discomfort with country-specific resolutions and their language, but was perhaps compelled to go through with supporting the US-backed resolution last year due to massive pressure from the country’s southern states. In 2012, it was an open secret that New Delhi intervened with Washington to tone down the language of the resolution against Sri Lanka, following an eleventh hour plea from External Affairs Minister G.L. Peiris to his former Indian counterpart, S.M. Krishna.
This year, with the debate in the Indian Parliament over the Sri Lanka issue peaking early, and even resulting in the pullout of a key Tamil Nadu Party from India’s ruling coalition on Tuesday (19), no such pleas could be entertained, without creating further political chaos in New Delhi and the south. In fact, with rights groups and the Karunanidhi-led DMK furious about the dilution of language in the final text and citing it as further proof that New Delhi and Washington are going ‘soft’ on Colombo, the last thing India wants is to be credited with being responsible for the final language.
Headaches for New Delhi
It was no secret however that New Delhi was deeply concerned about some provisions in the first two drafts of the US resolution in circulation that it viewed as being overly intrusive. With its own problems in Kashmir, India remains cautious about the need to safeguard state sovereignty even when the world is scrutinising a country’s human rights record.
The Indian Government is also consistent about the fact the option of an international mechanism to investigate human rights abuses must only be explored after every domestic mechanism is exhausted, in spite of mounting pressure from its South about ‘war crimes’ and ‘genocide’ in Sri Lanka during the conflict’s final phase. It also remains fundamentally concerned with the devolution of power to the island’s north and east and the Rajapaksa Administration’s reticence on the issue has become a major bone of contention in relations between the two countries.
While India’s delegation to the UN in Geneva may not have necessarily engaged in overt negotiations on the text their concerns meant Washington also had decisions to make in terms of what the concessions would be. Between the three drafts of the resolution, the language varied based on how much broad support at the UNHRC could be garnered for the document, but also essentially, what the quality of that support would be, according to some analysts.
It has been repeatedly emphasised that Washington will not play in New Delhi’s backyard (with the exception of Pakistan) if the South Asian power was in anyway uncomfortable with its level of engagement. The inclusion of a clause welcoming the announcement of Northern Provincial Council poll in September this year in the final resolution for instance, was undoubtedly aimed at cementing a Government of Sri Lanka assurance that greatly concerns New Delhi.
The final manoeuvring on the text may have been Washington’s decision to ensure New Delhi was comfortable enough with the language to vote whole-heartedly in support of the resolution. India’s backing on the resolution lends credence to the process to make Sri Lanka move on reconciliation and accountability issues, since New Delhi completely supported the Rajapaksa Government in its decision to militarily defeat the LTTE in 2009.
Unprecedented interest
Overall, Geneva 2013 has not been easy for India, with the level of passion in this year’s debates on the Sri Lanka issue in its Parliament being unprecedented. The debate that ended in 2012 with a question on whether New Delhi should vote for, against or abstain on the US-backed resolution, commenced in February this year in a much stronger place, in terms of urging the Centre to act.
The DMK wants India to move amendments to the US resolution that include the words war crimes and genocide in the text, former Indian External Affairs Minister and BJP strongman, Yashwant Sinha called on India to submit its own resolution against Sri Lanka at the UNHRC. Meanwhile Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and other rights groups have laid the focus squarely on New Delhi as the only Government that can force Sri Lanka to act on war time excesses. The controversial latest installment of the Channel 4 documentaries on excesses during the last phase of the war in the north in 2009 was also aired first in New Delhi before an audience of Indian politicians.
The debate in India over the Sri Lanka issue is unique, specialists on Indian politics say, because it is unheard of for regional politicians to be so consumed with the problems pertaining to India’s neighbours. Political parties outside the sensitive Tamil Nadu and other parts of the South have expressed serious concern about the Sri Lankan situation and have in fact chastised Indian Government MPs for addressing their answers about their Sri Lanka policy to Tamil Nadu MPs alone.
There is a sense, these analysts say, across the Indian political landscape that some great injustice has occurred in Sri Lanka. The effect of the Channel 4 videos and the media attention the last phase of the war in the island’s north has garnered, especially since the adoption of the 2012 resolution in Geneva, has made ordinary Indians much more aware about the situation across the Palk Straits. It is probably this awareness that is being reflected in Parliamentary debates.
Against better judgment?
What New Delhi did consistently advise the Government in Colombo about was to refrain from contesting the US resolution this year, since the numbers may indicate a worse defeat for Sri Lanka in 2013. It was reasoned that a consensus resolution would be less of an embarrassment for Colombo, which would then be stakeholders in a resolution as opposed to having it thrust upon them.Attempts were being made till the eleventh hour to convince senior regime officials that an uncontested resolution would be the preferred option. But a Government that has learned to be belligerent in all its diplomatic dealings with the West, has decided it will lock horns with the US delegation on the resolution, by challenging the draft and demanding it be put to a vote at the Council.
Earlier this week, External Affairs Minister G.L. Peiris wrote to the foreign ministers of UNHRC member states, calling for their support during the vote on the US-backed resolution.
Sri Lanka has rejected the resolution and sees it as an attempt to ‘single out’ and ‘humiliate’ one country, Minister Peiris’ letter states. It will be recalled that Colombo rejected last year’s US-sponsored resolution as well. But a little over a month after the resolution was adopted, Minister Peiris travelled to Washington DC for talks with former US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, where he promised his Government would implement a national action plan on reconciliation, a document that was unveiled in August last year and criticised by a large section of the international community for inadequately addressing post-conflict issues as prescribed in the LLRC report.
The resolution against Sri Lanka, or A/HRC/22/L.1/Rev.1, is one of two country-specific resolutions tabled at the UNHRC at the Council’s 22nd Session.
The other pertains to Myanmar and is also co-sponsored by the US. Pakistan, on behalf of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, has also submitted a draft resolution on the human rights situation in Palestine and other occupied Arab territories that calls Israel out on its rights abuses.
The Council traditionally leaves resolution debate and adoption for the last two days of its sessions, to allow member states and sponsoring countries to deliberate and negotiate on language in the preceding weeks.
Sri Lanka’s latest Geneva battle ends today, once a vote is called for and taken and the resolution, in all likelihood, is adopted.
Not quite a defeat, HRC 22 has offered the regime a little more time to show credible progress on winning the peace and making amends for the loss of human life during conflict.
The Commonwealth battles
But as the curtain falls on one major international battle for Colombo, it opens on another far more critical one as far as the Sri Lankan Government is concerned.
As hosts of the 2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Sri Lanka has faced serious challenges regarding its suitability to host the major summit given its human rights record. These challenges intensified following the Government’s impeachment of the country’s 43rd Chief Justice in violation of two court rulings and the Commonwealth’s own Latimer House Principles that lays out the removal process for judges in Commonwealth states, in order to maintain the independence of the judiciary, which is a core value of the international grouping.
Later today, the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group (CMAG), a core grouping of nine Commonwealth Member States mandated to assess “serious or persistent violations of the Harare Declaration, which contains Commonwealth’s fundamental political values” will teleconference ahead of its scheduled April meet. CMAG meets on schedule but can be convened by the Secretary-General when required to deal with a perceived violation of the Commonwealth principles and values or may meet in extraordinary session when required. Bangladesh is the Group’s current chair and its other member states include Australia, Canada, Jamaica, Maldives (suspended), Sierra Leone, Tanzania, Trinidad and Tobago and Vanuatu.
CMAG teleconference
Last week, the Government of Bangladesh notified Minister Peiris and the Ministry of External Affairs in Colombo that the CMAG would hold a special teleconference on 21 March on the insistence of Canada and at least one other member state in the grouping. The electronic conference was initially scheduled for Tuesday (19) but postponed subsequently. It was being speculated that the change of date was aimed at timing the meeting for after the resolution against Sri Lanka at the UNHRC is adopted.
It was this development, which Colombo was noticed about early, that prompted Minister Peiris to undertake yet another mission to Dhaka to lobby the Government there to ensure Sri Lanka stays off the CMAG agenda in April. The Government is also attempting to lobby other countries in the CMAG to garner support against being listed as an agenda item.
Uniquely, it is the CMAG that has the power to suspend or expel member states from the grouping, if a state persistently violates the core values of the grouping. If Sri Lanka is included in CMAG’s April agenda, it would possibly be the first time a CHOGM host’s commitment to the Commonwealth’s core values of democracy and constitutional rule will be under scrutiny by the small yet powerful body.
If today’s meeting goes through as planned, it will likely set the tone for whether Sri Lanka will feature on the CMAG’s April agenda. Given the time crunch, it remains unclear whether inclusion in the agenda would actually force a change of venue, even though it will almost certainly determine the level of representation by Government attending CHOGM in Colombo. If Sri Lanka is included in the agenda, the development may also change the tone and scope of CHOGM 2013, but analysts say a change of venue is not finding favour with many Commonwealth member states at this late stage.
From an international perspective, Sri Lanka’s battles in 2013 are only just beginning. The Government desperately wants to play host at CHOGM and is focusing all its energies on ensuring the summit goes ahead in Colombo as scheduled. Yet, if all other matters of critical concern to the international community go largely ignored while the regime prances on the Commonwealth stage, 2013 battles will be nothing compared to what will be impending in Geneva and elsewhere in 2014.
Risking the Islamic bloc
On a separate front, with the antics of the Bodu Bala Sena and other hardline groups and their anti-Muslim campaigns operating in the country largely outside the ambit of State law enforcement, the Government is seriously risking the ire of the Islamic bloc of nations that has always offered unstinted support to Colombo in all its international dealings.
Sri Lanka’s pro-Palestine positions have found great favour with Islamic nations. But yesterday, following months of rising anti-Muslim sentiment, isolated attacks on Muslim enterprises, places of worship and more recently even people, the Jeddah-based Organization of Islamic Cooperation, a parent body of 57 member countries, expressed concern yesterday about escalating ethnic tensions in Sri Lanka, which has affected the island’s Muslim community and its businesses sector.
Interestingly Sri Lanka has been lobbying hard for observer state status in the OIC and was nearly successful until Islamabad effected a moratorium on observers in order to block India’s entry to the organisation. Like the Non-Aligned Movement, the OIC too has always been overtly Sri Lanka friendly. Yet, in an inglorious self-goal because of the regime’s inherent sympathy with hardline groups like the Bodu Bala Sena, the Government has placed those solid relations at risk by feeding into a perception that Muslims are being subject to persecution in Sri Lanka.
Despite being the home of Theravada Buddhism, Sri Lanka cannot lay claim to such strong ties with a Buddhist bloc of nations in the world. Its two staunchest Buddhist allies are perhaps Myanmar and Thailand, while Sri Lanka has no diplomatic presence in staunchly Buddhist countries like Cambodia and Laos. To risk ties with Islamic states and allow groups like the Bodu Bala Sena and Sinhala Ravaya to feed the baser instincts of the majority ethnic group in order to safeguard the regime’s own support base is patently self-destructive. It also further reinforces the notion that the present administration is consumed with consolidating power locally at any cost.
When Mahinda Rajapaksa was busy taking Sri Lanka’s problems international in 1990, who could have possibly guessed that 23 years later, his Government and governance style would take Sri Lanka from being universally liked and respected as a small but mostly civilised state to being so perilously close to international isolation and rejection?

Statement made by Mr. Gary Anandasangaree at the UN Human Rights Council on March 20th 2013 on behalf of Lawyers Rights Watch Canada

Item 2: General Debate (Specific Country Reports)
Organization: Lawyer’s Rights Watch Canada
Presenter: Gary Anandasangaree

LogoThank you Mr. President, Madam High Commissioner, Your Excellencies:
Lawyer’s Rights Watch Canada welcomes your report on Sri Lanka. We note that this is the first comprehensive report undertaken on Sri Lanka by your office.
We welcome your reference to the Panel of Experts Report and would call upon you to encourage this Council to adopt it as a formal document. We reject the statements of Minister Samarasinghe and others that this was a “private consultation” undertaken by the Secretary General. We wish to remind this Council that the Secretary General is the head of the United Nations and as such cannot commission private work – in effect, all of his undertaking ought to be in the public realm, inline with the principles of transparency and accountability.
Your report outlines the litany past and present violations of human Rights in Sri Lanka, however, we wish to stress the urgent need to address the imminent loss of democratic space, and franchise for the Tamil people in the North and East of the island.
The North and East of Sri Lanka are traditional Tamil territory with a unique language and culture. Sri Lanka has undertaken a campaign against the Tamil people to systematically mute their voice, and agency over a 65 year period. This campaign has progressively curtailed the democratic franchise of Tamils in the East. The same ruthless program is now undertaken in the North. Increased militarization, land grab, and the establishment of new Sinhalese settlements in traditional Tamil areas are exasperating the Sinhalization and Budhization of the North, This is no longer an armed conflict – but a demographic one – one that is based on artificially changing the population that would assimilate Tamils as one monolithic group within the island. This campaign should also be viewed in the context of, and in the absence of a proper, a peace proposal.
Finally, we are encouraged by your resolve to ensure that accountability takes place in Sri Lanka, and to that end we echo your call for “a credible international investigation into alleged violations of international human rights and humanitarian law.” We thank you for discharging your duties with diligence, care, and integrity.
Thank you Mr. President.

Sri Lanka: Overwhelming evidence shows that the government has encouraged an increasing sense of lawlessness in which abduction, arbitrary arrest and intimidation is commonplace - Report

SRI LANKA BRIEFWEDNESDAY, MARCH 20, 2013

The UN’s human rights body has angered Sri Lanka by voting on a new resolution that calls on the island’s government to fully investigate civilian killings in its recent conflict and expresses growing concern over continuing atrocities.
 
But while officials in Colombo insist they are striving to account for the civil war violence and are actively working towards a lasting peace, evidence gathered from across the country indicates a ruthless campaign of oppression is being pursued with impunity.
 
As the UN Human Rights Council prepares to vote in Geneva, a new assessment published by the Geneva-based Sri Lanka Brief claims that Sri Lanka’s leaders havebetrayed citizens by wilfully ignoring international pledges of reconciliation and demilitarisation.
 
Instead, there is overwhelming evidence that the government has encouraged an increasing sense of lawlessness in which abduction, arbitrary arrest and intimidation is commonplace. There are also regular reports of minorities, particularly ethnic Tamils, being persecuted.
 
Sri Lanka’s government in 2011 pledged to abide by the recommendations made by its own Lessons Learned and Reconciliation Commission – a body set up to look into the events and aftermath of the three-decade civil war between government troops and Tamil rebels which ended in 2009.
 
The commission was criticised by international rights groups for its failure to examine the final months of the conflict when tens of thousands of civilians are believed to have died in atrocities committed by both sides. Nevertheless it urged steps be taken to end deep seated hatred and hostility.
 
Two years later, the problems are not going away. Sri Lanka Brief says its latest report shows that the government has “failed miserably” in implementing its own recommendations aimed at imposing accountability on its security forces and restoring full democracy.
 
The study highlights ongoing killings, torture, arrests and detentions. It says there have been frequent attacks on press freedom and the right to peaceful assembly as well as land grabs, military violations and a failure to respect the grief of those affected by conflict.
 
Recent months have also seen increasingly violent efforts to impose aspects of the Buddhist culture of the majority ethnic Sinhalese upon the mainly Hindu Tamils and other minorities.
 
Disturbingly, the study also reports that Sri Lanka’s military appears to be building and profiting from a macabre tourism industry around the northern “killing fields,” the scene of the recent war’s terrible climax. In doing so, it is apparently seeking to glorify the deaths of the defeated Tamils.
 
“The attitude of victor versus the vanquished is quite evident in every sphere of life,” the report says.
 
“People are not permitted to speak ore assemble freely, some have no access to their homes as the military and their families are occupying their lands, and they still have no security with the military still being able to pick people up from the street or their homes on the suspicion of being linked to a terror outfit that the president himself claimed to have annihilated in May 2009.”
 
Listing several incidents of press intimidation, the report detailed how one government minister, Rishard Badurdeen, assaulted a 72-year-old journalist last May. Two months earlier, another minister, “Douglas” Devananda, called for attacks on a newspaper in Jaffna – the region once claimed by the Tamil rebels
 
A second list focuses on attacks on peaceful protests. These include one in July 2012 in which masked men disrupted a demonstration in Jaffna about the recent killing of a Tamil prisoner. In October, an unknown gang doused people attending a political rally in Jaffna with burning oil. Following one demonstration organised by Roman Catholic clergy in the northern town of Mannar, Rayappu Joseph, a local bishop who had sought information about the fate of thousands of people missing since the war, was subject to harassment and intimidation from security forces.
 
Other alarming trends involve the treatment of women. Last November more than 100 young Tamil women were coerced into joining the military after they were recruited for clerical work. The women were then confined to a military base where visits from family were heavily restricted.
 
There have been other incidences of militarisation. Teachers have been drafted into the armed forces and schools ordered to become affiliated to the military. Troops remain widely deployed throughout the island’s north and many public civilian events subjected to military scrutiny.
 
Sri Lanka’s army and navy have also been accused of seizing land and displacing families. This, alongside by accusations that scores of Tamils have been wrongful imprisoned and possibly tortured, is feared to be part of a wider programme of Sinhalese colonisation.
 
Furthermore there are reports of the destruction of cemeteries and war memorials honouring Tamil fighters. Sri Lanka Brief says this denies the families of those killed a place to grieve and pay homage to their loved ones.
 
Vulnerable families of Tamil fighters killed in the war have also been subjected to abuse, the report says. It highlights the case of one 13-year-old girl, Jesudasan Lakshini, who was raped and allegedly killed by a cadre of the pro-government Eelam People’s Democratic Party.
 
Witnesses say Lakshini was abducted as she went shopping for fish at a market in the Delft area of Jaffna. Her semi-naked body was later found in a small lane, having suffered multiple blows to the head. The man accused of killing her was arrested but is yet to stand trial.
 
The report said Lakshini’s case highlights the lawlessness in northern Sri Lanka and the dangers it poses to women, who in many cases are too scared to report assaults to the police for fear of further harassment.
 
In the run up to the UN Human Rights Council vote, Sri Lanka’s government has sought to play down such issues, saying the work of its Reconciliation Commission proves its commitment to restoring harmony in the wake of the conflict.
 
“Sri Lanka needs adequate time and space to resolve such wide-ranging and deep-rooted issues,” Mahinda Samarasinghe, Colombo’s special envoy on human rights told the UN council. “Undue pressure exerted by external parties on this one aspect is not helpful in the resolution of these issues.”
 
Despite his claim, the litany of abuses and violations still being perpetrated across Sri Lanka suggests otherwise. As the report concludes, the government has been unwilling to
implement the more constructive elements of the Reconciliation Commissions findings.
 
“The disappearances, sex abuse, arrests, intimidation, assaults land occupation and so on in Sri Lanka are all clear evidence of a lack of progress all indicate a lack of progress and an unwillingness to cooperate with international investigations,” said XXXXXXXXXXXXX. “Unless this changes then there is little hope that the country can draw a line under its bloodstained past.”
 
Read the full report here 

CTC Press Release on Resolution 22/L1; Promoting Reconciliation and Accountability in Sri Lanka.

For Immediate Release
March 21, 2013
LogoThe United Nations Human Rights Council Resolution on Sri Lanka : A Missed Opportunity
Geneva, Switzerland
The United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva today passed Resolution 22/L.1, on “Promoting Reconciliation and Accountability in Sri Lanka”, with 26 of 47 states voting in favour of the resolution. The resolution was proposed by the United States of America and co-sponsored by 40 states.
The adoption of another resolution this year signifies the Council’s engagement and commitment to follow through on its previous resolution.
“If Sri Lanka did not get the message last March, it should now be abundantly clear that they can no longer respond to demands with words void of action or actions void of substance. It also sends a clear message to the concerned state that despite its hollow promises and commitments over the years, the international community will no longer sit idly by, but will rather continue to pursue human rights violations of the Sri Lankan state, which include war crimes and crimes against humanity”, stated Vani Selvarajah, Spokesperson for the Canadian Tamil Congress. “We would have preferred stronger language on the text of the resolution, including a call for an International Investigation into alleged violations of international human rights law and international humanitarian law as called on by the High Commissioner, instead of just noting this call. We believe the new resolution is an important but insufficient step towards accountability, notwithstanding our disappointments on a number of other key issues” continued Selvarajah.
“We are very disappointed that the resolution again calls on Sri Lanka to conduct an independent and credible investigation into allegations of violations of international human rights law and international humanitarian law”, Ms Selvarajah continued. Given the notorious history of failed domestic commissions in Sri Lanka - outlined in the High Commissioner’s report to this Council, and as noted in this resolution -the unconstitutional impeachment of the Chief Justice this year, the fractured state of the rule of law, and the deteriorating current human rights situation in Sri Lanka, against the backdrop of Sinhalization of Tamil areas, any demands on the Sri Lankan state to investigate itself is unacceptable. Sri Lanka has consistently demonstrated its inability and unwillingness to initiate a proper and objective mechanism that would be in line with international norms. The Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission and the Army Court of Inquiry serve as a reminder of its failure in this regard. It gives Sri Lanka additional time and space to further delay and will not bring us any further to accountability and reconciliation in Sri Lanka. International investigations of violations of human rights and humanitarian law require timely responses to ensure the integrity of the investigation, and for the protection of evidence and witnesses.
“In this regard, the Council missed an opportunity to clearly articulate Sri Lanka’s abysmal failure to undertake an objective domestic investigation, and opt to establish an International Commission of Inquiry”, concluded Selvarajah.
The Resolution passed by the Council at the Special Session on Sri Lanka in 2009 marked a failure of the UNHRC, as it did not take meaningful steps towards holding Sri Lanka accountable despite evidence of gross and systematic human rights violations. This course has finally seen the UNHRC undertake a path towards accountability in Sri Lanka. This path, however, is not commensurate with the urgency in which the Tamil people continue to linger almost 4 years since the end of the war. Tamils continue to suffer at the hands of the Sri Lankan state.
There is an urgent need to address the imminent loss of democratic space, and franchise for the Tamil people in the North and East of the island. Sri Lanka has undertaken a campaign against the Tamil people to systematically invade the democratic space of the Tamil people over a 65-year period. This campaign has progressively curtailed the democratic franchise of Tamils in the East and now this same program is being implemented in the North, at an unprecedented speed and resolve. This is clearly a contravention of Sri Lanka’s Civil and Political obligation as a ratified of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Increased militarization, land grabs, and the establishment of new Sinhalese settlements in traditional Tamil areas are exasperating the Sinhalization and Budhization of the North. There is a concerted program of assimilation that would render Tamils an insignificant minority, without a clear territory in which they can exercise their inherent right to self-determination.
CTC is thankful for the enormous efforts undertaken by the United States of America, the Co-Sponsors, and those states that supported the vote. We are particularly grateful to the Government of Canada, especially, Minister John Baird and Prime Minister Stephen Harper for their continued resolve for justice. We continue to admire the enormous dedication of the numerous NGO’s. We also remain inspired and moved by the actions of Tamil Nadu students, and we thank them for their determination.
The Canadian Tamil Congress’ members started working at the UNHRC in 2009, and despite many obstacles have continued their engagement. The UNHRC has inherent limitations, and cannot be seen as the forum to resolve the issues of the Tamil people, but will serve as one pressure point in a continuum in a multi pronged approach towards peace and justice for Tamils. We will therefore continue to articulate the failures of the Sri Lankan state, and the continued subjugation of Tamils to the international community, both within the UNHRC and in other important international forum.
We will continue to engage the Council with overarching resolve to ensure justice and accountability takes place in Sri Lanka and that Tamil people’s inherent human rights in the North and East are realized.
For Media Inquiries, please contact:
Geneva: Mr. Gary Anandasangaree – 416-564-9991, +41 77 91 758 48, Legal Counsel, Canadian Tamil Congress
Toronto: Mr. David Poopalapillai – 905-781-7034, National Spokesperson, Canadian Tamil Congress
Ms. Vani Selvarajah – 647-983-6643, Board of Director, Canadian Tamil Congress


India votes against Sri Lanka; not good enough, says Karunanidhi
India votes against Sri Lanka; not good enough, says Karunanidhi
Sri Lankans protest outside the US embassy in Colombo against the UN resolution
Latest NewsMarch 21, 2013 
Geneva: India was among 25 countries that voted against Sri Lanka today at the UN Human Rights Council session in Geneva. However, contrary to the government's announcement yesterday, India did not move any amendments to the resolution sponsored by the US.

"I am not satisfied with India's response and the US resolution. My demands were not considered," said DMK chief M Karunanidhi. His party quit the government earlier this week for failing to take a strong stand against Sri Lanka over its alleged war crimes against ethnic Tamils.

The resolution adopted by a 25-13 vote at the UN's top human rights body today urges Sri Lanka's government  "to initiate credible and independent actions" to ensure justice and accountability for alleged human rights violations and atrocities during the nearly 30-year civil war which ended in 2009, after government troops crushed the separatist Tamil Tigers. (Read the UN resolution on Sri Lanka)
The UN did not ask for an international inquiry. Nor did India  seek that, largely because the government and opposition believe that would amount to interfering in another country's internal affairs.

India's envoy at the UN in Geneva, Dilip Sinha, said, "We reiterate our call for an independent and credible investigation into allegations of human rights violations and loss of civilian lives. We urge Sri Lanka to take forward measures to ensure accountability. We expect these measures to be to the satisfaction of the international community." (Read full statement here)

Sources in Geneva say that last night, America shot down India's plans for amendments to the UN resolution, arguing that it was too late to make changes and that any revisions would challenge the broad consensus reached among countries that were ready to vote against Sri Lanka.

"We stand by (the) domestic process that we have put into place that is credible and is transparent.  What is important is to show results finally... we are quite confident that we'll be able to if evidence (is) needed is unearthed... we will be able to show clear progress, " said Mahinda Samarasinghe, the Special Envoy of the Sri Lankan President on Human Rights to NDTV.