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, May 2, 2013


Galle Bishop warns of Buddhist Taliban

May 1, 2013
Bishop-Raymond-Web-Front-Final
The Bishop of Galle has warned of threats posed to religious minorities by some groups including the Bodu Bala Sena which he has termed as a “Buddhist Taliban” operating in Sri Lanka.
The Fides Agency reported that Bishop Raymond Wickramasinghe, the Bishop of Galle, had raised the concerns in a message sent to the agency.
Bishop Wickramasinghe fears that – a few years after the end of the civil war – a new violence can tear apart society.
For this reason he has decided to re-launch the promotion of dialogue and religious harmony through the Commission “Justice, Peace and Human Development.”
The Church has the task to “play a prophetic role,” he remarked, although this could be misunderstood, the agency reported.
“It should be noted that large traditional Buddhist organizations, entirely peaceful, disapprove the radical and violent approach, that sow the virus of hatred and religious fundamentalism in the Sri Lankan society,” The Fides Agency reported.
The agency claimed that recently, two churches were attacked and two others forced to close because of the pressure of the fanatics.
Among the incidents reported to Fides, on March 9 in Batticaloa, members of the Bodu Bala Sena set fire to a church at night.
Buddhist monks accused the pastor of the “Fellowship Church” in the town of Polonnaruwa of “proselytizing”, warning him to stop his ministry.
On March 17, a mob led by Buddhist monks broke into a church in Agalawatte, stopping the worship. Similar threats were reported at a meeting of the Pentecostal Church in Kottawa and in Galle.
According to information sent to Fides, in 2012 the Christian communities in Sri Lanka, of different denominations, registered about 50 cases of attacks by Buddhist monks.
In December, one thousand people in the grip of a religious fervor, including many Buddhist monks, attacked and wounded a pastor in Weeraketiya.  (Colombo Gazette)

By Alan Strathern -May 2, 2013 
Dr Alan Strathern
Colombo TelegraphOf all the moral precepts instilled in Buddhist monks the promise not to kill comes first, and the principle of non-violence is arguably more central to Buddhism than any other major religion. So why have monks been using hate speech against Muslims and joining mobs that have left dozens dead?
This is happening in two countries separated by well over 1,000 miles of Indian Ocean – Burma and Sri Lanka. It is puzzling because neither country is facing an Islamist militant threat. Muslims in both places are a generally peaceable and small minority.
In Sri Lanka, the issue of halal slaughter has been a flashpoint. Led by monks, members of the Bodu Bala Sena – the Buddhist Brigade – hold rallies, call for direct action and the boycotting of Muslim businesses, and rail against the size of Muslim families.
While no Muslims have been killed in Sri Lanka, the Burmese situation is far more serious. Here the antagonism is spearheaded by the 969 group, led by a monk, Ashin Wirathu, who was jailed in 2003 for inciting religious hatred. Released in 2012, he has referred to himself bizarrely as “the Burmese Bin Laden”.
March saw an outbreak of mob violence directed against Muslims in the town of Meiktila, in central Burma, which left at least 40 dead.
Tellingly, the violence began in a gold shop. The movements in both countries exploit a sense of economic grievance – a religious minority is used as the scapegoat for the frustrated aspirations of the majority.
On Tuesday, Buddhist mobs attacked mosques and burned more than 70 homes in Oakkan, north of Rangoon, after a Muslim girl on a bicycle collided with a monk. One person died and nine were injured.
But aren’t Buddhist monks meant to be the good guys of religion?
Aggressive thoughts are inimical to all Buddhist teachings. Buddhism even comes equipped with a practical way to eliminate them. Through meditation the distinction between your feelings and those of others should begin to dissolve, while your compassion for all living things grows.
Of course, there is a strong strain of pacifism in Christian teachings too: “Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you,” were the words of Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount.
But however any religion starts out, sooner or later it enters into a Faustian pact with state power. Buddhist monks looked to kings, the ultimate wielders of violence, for the support, patronage and order that only they could provide. Kings looked to monks to provide the popular legitimacy that only such a high moral vision can confer.
The result can seem ironic. If you have a strong sense of the overriding moral superiority of your worldview, then the need to protect and advance it can seem the most important duty of all.
Christian crusaders, Islamist militants, or the leaders of “freedom-loving nations”, all justify what they see as necessary violence in the name of a higher good. Buddhist rulers and monks have been no exception.
So, historically, Buddhism has been no more a religion of peace than Christianity.
One of the most famous kings in Sri Lankan history is Dutugamanu, whose unification of the island in the 2nd Century BC is related in an important chronicle, the Mahavamsa.
It says that he placed a Buddhist relic in his spear and took 500 monks with him along to war against a non-Buddhist king.
He destroyed his opponents. After the bloodshed, some enlightened ones consoled him: “The slain were like animals; you will make the Buddha’s faith shine.”
Burmese rulers, known as “kings of righteousness”, justified wars in the name of what they called true Buddhist doctrine.
In Japan, many samurai were devotees of Zen Buddhism and various arguments sustained them – killing a man about to commit a dreadful crime was an act of compassion, for example. Such reasoning surfaced again when Japan mobilised for World War II.
Buddhism took a leading role in the nationalist movements that emerged as Burma and Sri Lanka sought to throw off the yoke of the British Empire. Occasionally this spilled out into violence. In 1930s Rangoon, amid resorts to direct action, monks knifed four Europeans.
More importantly, many came to feel Buddhism was integral to their national identity – and the position of minorities in these newly independent nations was an uncomfortable one.
In 1983, Sri Lanka’s ethnic tensions broke out into civil war. Following anti-Tamil pogroms, separatist Tamil groups in the north and east of the island sought to break away from the Sinhalese majority government.
During the war, the worst violence against Sri Lankan Muslims came at the hands of the Tamil rebels. But after the fighting came to a bloody end with the defeat of the rebels in 2009, it seems that majority communal passions have found a new target in the Muslim minority.
In Burma, monks wielded their moral authority to challenge the military junta and argue for democracy in the Saffron Revolution of 2007. Peaceful protest was the main weapon of choice this time, and monks paid with their lives.
Now some monks are using their moral authority to serve a quite different end. They may be a minority, but the 500,000-strong monkhood, which includes many deposited in monasteries as children to escape poverty or as orphans, certainly has its fair share of angry young men.
The exact nature of the relationship between the Buddhist extremists and the ruling parties in both countries is unclear.
Sri Lanka’s powerful Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa was guest of honour at the opening of a Buddhist Brigade training school, and referred to the monks as those who “protect our country, religion and race”.
But the anti-Muslim message seems to have struck a chord with parts of the population.
Even though they form a majority in both countries, many Buddhists share a sense that their nations must be unified and that their religion is under threat.
The global climate is crucial. People believe radical Islam to be at the centre of the many of the most violent conflicts around the world. They feel they are at the receiving end of conversion drives by the much more evangelical monotheistic faiths. And they feel that if other religions are going to get tough, they had better follow suit.
* Dr. Alan Strathern works on early modern global history (1500-1800) with a special interest in those parts of the world that came into contact with Portuguese imperialism and the theme of religious encounters. His published work initially focused on sixteenth-century Sri Lanka but has increasingly taken a comparative, inter-disciplinary and global approach. He teaches both European and world history. He is a Fellow and Tutor at Brasenose College, and a Lecturer at St. John’s College. After studying Ancient and Modern History at Oxford, Alan Strathern studied for a Masters in History and Anthropology at University College London, and then returned to Oxford for DPhil work in History (1998-2002). He subsequently took up research and teaching positions at Cambridge before returning to Oxford in 2011. He is currently on research leave 2011-13, after having been awarded a Philip Leverhulme Prize for History in 2010. His work on Sri Lanka led to a book Kingship and Conversion in Sixteenth Century Sri Lanka: Portuguese Imperialism in a Buddhist Land (CUP, 2007), and a number of articles on such themes as origin myths, source criticism, and the development of ethnic consciousness. In the past five or six years, he has been working on more explicitly comparative and global questions. One project will result in a book, Sacred Kingship and Religious Change in the Early Modern World, which will look at why the rulers of some societies converted to monotheism and others did not. He is happy to consider DPhil supervisions across a wide range of areas in the early modern world. This article appeared first in BBC.

Myanmar Muslims face uncertain future after new sectarian attacks kill 1, burn scores of homes


(Khin Maung Win/ Associated Press ) - A Muslim man removes debris near a damaged mosque following fresh anti-Muslim violence broke out in Okkan, 64 kilometers (40 miles) north of Yangon, Myanmar, Wednesday, May 1, 2013. Hundreds of rampaging Buddhists armed with bricks on Tuesday, stormed a clutch of Muslim villages in the country’s latest outbreak of anti-Muslim violence.
  • (Khin Maung Win/ Associated Press ) - Muslims people remove debris from a damaged mosque following fresh anti-Muslim violence broke out in Okkan, 64 kilometers (40 miles) north of Yangon, Myanmar, Wednesday, May 1, 2013. Hundreds of rampaging Buddhists armed with bricks on Tuesday, stormed a clutch of Muslim villages in the country’s latest outbreak of anti-Muslim violence.
  • (Khin Maung Win/ Associated Press ) - A woman sits and cuddles a child near damaged buildings following fresh anti-Muslim violence broke out in Okkan, 64 kilometers (40 miles) north of Yangon, Myanmar, Wednesday, May 1, 2013. Hundreds of rampaging Buddhists armed with bricks on Tuesday, stormed a clutch of Muslim villages in the country’s latest outbreak of anti-Muslim violence.
  • (Khin Maung Win/ Associated Press ) - A Muslim man removes debris near a damaged mosque following fresh anti-Muslim violence broke out in Okkan, 64 kilometers (40 miles) north of Yangon, Myanmar, Wednesday, May 1, 2013. Hundreds of rampaging Buddhists armed with bricks on Tuesday, stormed a clutch of Muslim villages in the country’s latest outbreak of anti-Muslim violence.
  • (Zin Chit Aung/ Associated Press ) - In this April 30, 2013 photo, a Muslim man stands next to debris of his shop in Okkan, about 70 miles (110 kilometers) north of Yangon, Myanmar. Buddhist mobs hurling bricks overran a pair of mosques and set hundreds of homes ablaze in central Myanmar on Tuesday, injuring at least 10 people in the latest anti-Muslim violence to shake the Southeast Asian nation.
  • (Khin Maung Win/ Associated Press ) - A boy stands near debris of damaged buildings following fresh anti-Muslim violence broke out in Okkan, 64 kilometers (40 miles) north of Yangon, Myanmar, Wednesday, May 1, 2013. Hundreds of rampaging Buddhists armed with bricks on Tuesday, stormed a clutch of Muslim villages in the country’s latest outbreak of anti-Muslim violence.
  • (Khin Maung Win/ Associated Press ) - Debris scatter inside a damaged mosque following fresh anti-Muslim violence broke out in Okkan, 64 kilometers (40 miles) north of Yangon, Myanmar, Wednesday, May 1, 2013. Hundreds of rampaging Buddhists armed with bricks on Tuesday, stormed a clutch of Muslim villages in the country’s latest outbreak of anti-Muslim violence.

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Vanni MPs denounce to the incidents of huts scorched in Mulliyavalai.


“Those engaged in scorching the Tamil people’s homes in Mulliyavalai locality should be immediately arrested and legal action should be taken against them” said Tamil National Alliance Vanni district parliament member Sivasakthi Ananthan.

Four temporary huts belonging to Tamil people located in Mulliyavalai, 2nd division was scorched and destroyed by unidentified persons, and the report which revealed by her indicated this. She said, this disastrous act was done on the instigation of a Minister.

Against the illegal forest obliteration advanced in Mullaitheevu district, a case was filed in the high court, and still such unscrupulous activities are advanced which is the worst violation of human rights

She said, anti-activities against people are advanced by a Minister and the government, and they attempt to establish that they do not have any links with this.

The said Minister and government are exploiting the Tamil people  affected Tamil  by war, by playing games between the races and religion, should take sufficient action to find a permanent settlement to the Tamil peoples occupancy and land crisis.

Meanwhile government should take constructive action to protect the lives and properties of people resettled in Mullaiyawalai was appealed by Tamil National Alliance Vanni district parliament member S.Vinonogarathalingam . He said, he personally visited the incidents at Mulliyavalai located in the grama sevaka unit and observed the huts scorched and the debris in the early morning hours.

In the midst of people he said, today the living rights of  the people are completely devastated due to the final war, and  people are now denied even to live in thatch huts.  This is a warning given to other people living in this region.  This is the beginning for an attempt carried behind the screen to threaten the people to expel from the locality.

Those who were portraying has saviors of Tamil community four years back are in the backdrop, their acts are much hurtful to the Tamils.

Government should bring in front of law those who are aiding and abating in these unruly activities and those engaged in violence. Instead they should not provide support and security said Vanni district parliament member.
Tuesday , 30 April 2013

Land Grabs In North And East Contradict LLRC Recommendations

Colombo TelegraphThe Lessons Learned and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) observed in its final report that the “displacement of persons as well as loss of land and homes were major conflict related outcomes, and affected all communities throughout the period.”
The LLRC concluded that “measures and policies ensuring legitimate land rights, especially among the returning IDPs, would contribute significantly to restoring normalcy and promoting reconciliation”.
However, first-hand information gathered through site-visits and interviews with affected communities by the National Fisheries Solidarity Movement (NAFSO) indicates that the Government of Sri Lanka is not honouring even its own National Plan of Action to Implement the Recommendations of the LLRC (July 2012).
Valikamam North (Jaffna)
Owing to the High Security Zone established by the military in Valikamam North division (especially around Tellippalai) of the Jaffna peninsula in 1990, some 9,905 Tamil families consisting of 33,353 individuals continue to be displaced according to the government’s own statistics. The HSZ encompasses 24 grama niladhari divisions, out of which 16 are completely out-of-bounds to their former residents. The HSZ also includes 18 kilometres of coastline between Naguleswaram and Myliddy. These Tamil families, who were traditionally dependent on farming and fishing for their livelihood, face severe hardship. The Myliddy fisheries harbour is occupied by the navy and not accessible to civilians. The Catholic churches in Kankesanthurai, Myliddy and Urani are inaccessible for worship and pastoral care.
Sampur (Trincomalee)
Sampur was initially declared as a High Security Zone, and later re-gazetted as a Special Economic Zone for the construction of a coal-power plant and industries owned by Indians. More than 500 houses were destroyed and their Muslim and Tamil owners are prevented from access to their former agricultural lands and fishing areas. The areas proposed for their resettlement are of poor quality for farming and other livelihood activities. Iralkulam is marshy land, which floods and remains inundated for prolonged periods during the rainy season. There is not even 100 acres that is suitable for paddy cultivation. Access to water remains a significant issue in Iththikulam. There are 1262 families (or 4036 individuals) still in four IDP camps: namely Kilivetti, Pattiththidal, Manatchenai and Kattaiparichchan. More than 2,500 acres of productive paddy land are lost to cultivation and more than 2,000 families have lost their livelihoods.
Thiru Murugandi (Killinochchi)
Three hundred and eighty-two of the original 463 Tamil families in Thiru Murugandi grama niladhari division have still not been resettled, since their most recent displacement in 2008. Five hundred acres of land is occupied by an army camp. These lands belong to 120 households among the displaced.
Mullikulam (Mannar)
Three hundred and seven Tamil families from the Mullikulam grama niladhari division within Musali Divisional Secretariat have been displaced due to the establishment of a naval base in that area. Owing to this informal High Security Zone, nearly 1000 acres of land and 5 irrigation tanks are now inaccessible to farmers. Families of Sinhala naval personnel have been settled in that land. Two hundred and six households have temporarily settled in the forested area of Marichchikattu; while 54 families are living in Kayakuli village. These households lack decent shelter, sanitation, potable water and livelihoods in both areas. The people of Mullikulam have been displaced at least four times since 1990.
In view of the above, the Peoples’ Alliance for Right to Land (PARL) Sri Lanka recommends:
  • Immediate shelter, livelihood and infrastructure assistance to ‘old’ and ‘new’ IDPs in the Northern and Eastern provinces, especially women-headed households;
  • The Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement and international standards on long-term housing and property restitution be adhered to by local, provincial and central government authorities;
  • All the final recommendations of the Lessons Learned and Reconciliation Commission should be implemented, including on demilitarisation, impartial land dispute resolution mechanisms, and the devolution of power to the provinces.
*This article appeared on  Law & Society Trust – ESCR Newsletter Issue 5




Tuesday , 30 April 2013
The competitive examination held for year 2012 (open) to recruit eligible candidates for the Sri lanka Education Administration Service, 13 persons were selected for the second stage. However not a single Tamil was selected.

11 persons selected were Sinhalese and two were Muslims. Out of the 13 persons selected, two persons sat the examination in Tamil Language and 11 persons did the examination in Sinhala language.

Out of this one is selected for public service and one for planning division. Out of those selected for course sector, four persons for science subject, two for maths and 2 for technology, one each for oriental music, agriculture and commerce subjects. 

The open competitive examination held for year 2010 for recruitments to the Sri Lanka Education Administration Service Grade III, and previously it was decided to select 104 persons; however 43 persons were only selected and are undergoing training.

Out of this, 38 persons are Sinhalese, 5 are Tamils but there is none Muslims.

The second stage selection of 13 persons will get appointment from May 15th.
Their name and other details are published in the Sri Lanka Public Service Commission's website was said.
Secrete group of Gotabaya left the Karatheevu camp
[ Wednesday, 01 May 2013, 04:45.55 AM GMT +05:30 ]
Four STF personals including driver with ex-LTTE carders of Karuna sector left the Karatheevu STF camp located in Batticaloa to carry out illegal secrete mission of Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa on Monday at about 11.45, Sinhala website reports.
They have left to Pimbarathwela , Anuradhapura.
They have taken the uniforms with them.
7 former LTTE members maintain close relationship with Karuna secretly serving at Karatheevu STF camp.
They are not registered STF personals and join for illegal murders.
This STF works under the IGP. However IGP and other high ranking officials were unaware about this secrete operation.
Former commander of the STF and present Coordinator of the Ministry of Defence K.M.C.Sarath Chandra issue orders to this group.

This was supposed to be a war conducted in secret. The Government excluded the international press, forced the UN to leave the war zone and ruthlessly silenced the Sri Lankan media – literally dozens of media workers were killed, exiled or disappeared. While the world looked away in the first few months of 2009 around 40,000 to 70,000 civilians were massacred – mostly by Sri Lankan government shelling, though the Tamil Tigers also stand accused of serious war crimes.


The United Nations Human Rights Council 2013
The United Nations Human Rights Council 2013
Dear friends,
The No Fire Zone documentary has been part of the incredible, urgent movement to bring accountability and justice to Sri Lanka after the bloody events of the final months of the civil war. Since January of this year we've already had an amazing journey with the film - we've been to India to meet politicians, shown snippets in the UK House of Commons, made headlines around the world and premiered the film at the UN in Geneva.
People are shocked when they see the film and many tell us they have now changed their minds about the Sri Lankan government or that they’d simply never heard of the war crimes that happened in 2009 killing so many civilians.


No Fire Zone Producer, Zoe Sale in Delhi
No Fire Zone Producer, Zoe Sale in Delhi
We have been asked to do screenings from Auckland to Argentina for politicians and student groups and we want to get to them all to make sure every country has the chance to see this film. We've achieved a lot with our set of brilliant partners -www.nofirezone.org/partners - but we need to do much much more and you can be part of the next stage. 
We want an international independent investigation.
We need to show No Fire Zone to as many audiences as possible around the world. The government of Sri Lanka is trying to stop us at every turn even saying our footage is faked.  (It isn't - it has all been carefully authenticated.  Key evidential footage was analysed by independent forensic experts and has also been verified as genuine by the UN).   The government has attacked our partners and used expensive lobbying firms to counter our claims.
But we are determined to get the truth out. This is a tour about truth and justice for all the Sri Lankan people; this film can make a difference.
Things are already changing but we have much to do before the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting which is due to be held in Sri Lanka in November 2013.
The Commonwealth Law Association just passed a resolution asking the Commonwealth Ministerial Group to suspend Sri Lanka from the Commonwealth due to its breaches of Commonwealth Values and growing numbers of voices in the international community are speaking out on Sri Lanka. Geoffrey Roberton QC has said the Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting should be moved from Sri Lanka and the Canadian Premier has stated he will not attend if things do not improve in the country.
This year already more countries than ever before voted on a resolution at the UN Human Rights Council calling on Sri Lanka to strengthen its human rights situation and investigate resposiibility for war crimes;
However the Sri Lankan government continues to deny the truth - portraying this divided and bloody country as the perfect hoiiday resort.
In the North – where the killing fields remain, the army are running hotels, the navy are running whale watching trips. Tourists have no idea what happened there just four years ago.


House of Commons GTF Forum with Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg and Yasmin Sooka
House of Commons GTF Forum with Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg and Yasmin Sooka
Background
No Fire Zone documents the day to day horror of this war in a way almost never done before: Footage recorded by both the victims and perpetrators on mobile phones and small cameras – viscerally powerful actuality from the battlefield, from inside the crudely dug civilian bunkers and over-crowded makeshift hospitals.
Footage which is nothing less than direct evidence of war crimes, summary execution, torture and sexual violence.
No Fire Zone also brings the story up to date. The Sri Lankan government still denies this all happened - even claiming that what they did was an “humanitarian rescue”. The repression and ethnic restructuring of the Tamil homelands in the north of Sri Lanka continues – journalists and government critics are still disappearing. The government will tolerate no opposition and have even turned on their own judiciary, impeaching the Chief Justice of the country when she found they had acted unconstitutionally.
We offer this film, not just as the definitive film of record, but also in the hope it will jolt the international community and audience to call for action.
But none of this will happen if we can't get this film seen.  Please help us distribute this film around the world.

Risks and challengesLearn about accountability on Kickstarter

The team behind this film has already made two TV docs about this war - which won countless awards around the world. The team was even nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize. We are working with some of the most established partners and respected NGOs to ensure the film is seen by the right people making the most important decisions as well as by the general public. Our distribution plans are very ambitious and are going to be very hard work. But with your help we can do it.

David Cameron urged to to boycott Sri Lanka summit over 'human rights abuses'

Canada 'appalled' that Colombo had been selected to host the Commonwealth meeting
Demonstrators in Chennai, India, protest against continuing war crimes against Tamils in Sri Lanka, last month
The IndependentTUESDAY 30 APRIL 2013
David Cameron is facing mounting calls to boycott an important Commonwealth meeting in Colombo amid continuing allegations that the Sri Lankan government is failing to end human rights abuses.
Mr Cameron is scheduled to attend the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Sri Lanka in November. At the start of the three-day meeting, the presidency of the group is to he handed to Sri Lanka’s president, Mahinda Rajapaksa.
The Queen, or else another member of the royal family, is also due to take part in the biennial event.
But there are growing demands that Mr Cameron and the British delegation should not take part amid continuing concern about abuses in Sri Lanka. Last week, Canada’s foreign minister said the country was “appalled” that Sri Lanka had been selected to host the event.
The latest criticism of the Sri Lanka authorities comes from Amnesty International. In a report published on Tuesday, the group accuses the government of Mr Rajapaksa of sanctioning attacks on journalists, the judiciary, activists and opposition politicians. It says a climate of fear permeates the country.
“Violent repression of dissent and the consolidation of political power go hand in hand in Sri Lanka,” said Amnesty’s Polly Truscott. “The  CHOGM meeting must not be allowed to go ahead in Colombo unless the government has demonstrated beforehand that it has stopped systematic violations of human rights.”
The government of Mr Rajapaksa has been repeatedly accused of overseeing abuses since the spring of 2009, when the Sri Lankan armed forces crushed the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), which had fought a bloody civil war for three decades.
A UN-appointed panel has said there are credible allegations that war crimes were committed by both sides amid reports that tens of thousands of civilians may have been killed in the final stages of the conflict. Since then, the government has been accused of targeting dissidents, the media  and activists. It has also been accused of failing to address political demands of the country’s Tamil minority
Against such a backdrop, activists say Mr Cameron’s attendance at the meeting would send out the wrong signal. 
“If Cameron goes he will be placing the seal of approval on the summit and other Commonwealth members who were on the fence will be pressured to attend,” said Fred Carver of the Sri Lanka campaign.
“If Cameron goes he will go going against the advice of Desmond Tutu, Geoffrey Robertson, the Commonwealth Lawyers Association, Malcolm Rifikind, the Foreign Affairs Select Committee and virtually every Commonwealth charity and NGO.”
The Sri Lankan authorities have yet to formally respond to Amnesty’s report. But Rajiva Wijesinha, a member of parliament and the president’s envoy on reconciliation, said the report appeared designed to be “political” rather than to suggest solutions.
He said since 2009 the government had spent millions of pounds on building infrastructure in the north of Sri Lanka, including roads, schools and hospitals. He said while more work was required, it would be wrong “not to register that Sri Lanka has done an awful lot that no other country in the same situation has done”.
There have been suggestions Britain’s decision could be announced in a matter of weeks. Elsewhere, British officials have suggested the formal September deadline for replying to the invitation is probably flexible while a determination is made on whether Sri Lanka is making progress on addressing various issues.
One of the things being scrutinised are the elections for the northern provincial council, which Mr Rajapaksa has said will take place in September. The election of the council is seen by Tamil groups as a crucial test of whether the government is prepared to devolve some power.
A foreign office statement issued on Tuesday, said: “No final decision on the level of UK attendance at CHOGM has yet been made. Whatever the formal agenda, and whoever attends, the spotlight will be on Sri Lanka, and it will either highlight progress or focus attention and pressure on the lack of it.”
A spokeswoman for Buckingham Palace said “no announcement has been made” on whether the Queen or any member of the royal family will attend.