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 14, 2013




     last updated Thu 14 Nov 2013

Injured civilians are seen in a make-shift hospital following the stand off on Putumattalan beach.
Photograph albums are among the debris that remains on Putumattalan beach.Civilians pictured at Putumattalan in April 2009 in what was supposed to be a 'safe zone'.You won't find this beach in any glossy tourist brochure on Sri Lanka. It's not the image of paradise the island's government wants to sell you.
Tayakiy was a fighter during the war and lost her husband, who was captured by the army.There are toys, children's changing mats, shoes, blouses and dresses that remain as a reminder of the events in 2009.Hell more like it. Or at least it was four years ago, and it's still littered with the debris of the mass exodus and killing that took place here.

Democracy And Freedom, Medamulana-Style

Colombo Telegraph
By Tisaranee Gunasekara -November 14, 2013 
“…the tradition of giving pretty names to ugly things is as old as warfare.” - Christopher Hitchens (Arguably)
Organised mobs are important weapons in the Rajapaksa armoury.
MahindaAn organised mob was deployed on Tuesday to prevent Channel 4 journalists from travelling to the North[i]. For hours, two trains were stuck at the Anuradhapura station because the rail tracks were occupied by “nearly a thousand supporters of North Central Provincial Council Chief Minister and supporters of his brother Deputy Minister SM Chandrasena”[ii]. Though the regime had imposed a ban on demonstrations ahead of the Commonwealth, the police gave the mob a veritable carte blanche. “The demonstration was also joined by several Buddhist monks affiliated to the government… (And) was organised under the leadership of the NCP Chief Minister’s Public Coordinating Officer T Upasena and Coordinating Secretary of Deputy Minister Chandrasekara, Nilantha Ekanayake, reports add”[iii].
Another organised mob was deployed to ‘protest’ outside the UNP Headquarters where a meeting highlighting human rights-violations by the regime was taking place. Earlier the authorities had prevented members of the ‘Families of the Disappeared’ from travelling to Colombo[iv]. But the mob outside ‘Sirikotha’ was allowed to burn tires, destroy UNP decorations and attack Ranil Wickremesinghe’s vehicle, while the police watched in silence.
                                               Read More   

Respect Indian PM's decision to not attend CHOGM: Cameron

Published: 14th November 2013 04:33 PM
Last Updated: 14th November 2013 04:33 PM
The New Indian ExpressBritish Prime Minister David Cameron today said he was all for attending a multilateral platform like CHOGM as, rather than boycotting it, one could help lead it by raising issues of human rights.            
"I think the advantage of going to a multilateral organisation is that you can help lead it. I think, actually, going to Sri Lanka will help to shine the light on some issues," he said, addressing Indian businessmen here.  
He, however, said he respected Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's decision to not attend the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Colombo.            
"I totally respect the decision (by Singh to not go)... it's a decision that they have to make," he said.    
Cameron said he was going to CHOGM to take up issues there, for which he has also sought a separate meeting with Sri Lankan President Rajapaksha.          
The visiting Prime Minister said India, Canada and Britain had the same approach on Sri Lanka — of seeing more effort at reconciliation and in probes into allegations of crimes. The Prime Ministers of India and Canada have decided not to attend the CHOGM meeting in Sri Lanka over issues of rights.         
"We want to see greater efforts of reconciliation, we want to see better efforts on human rights. We want to see proper inquiries into what happened at the end of that dreadful civil war. It's not a difference in policy," he said.       
Cameron said one could not get anywhere by staying away from an international conference which represents 54 nations and covers a third of the world's population along with a fifth of its economy.   
Intimidation of journalists and human rights defenders, action to stamp out torture and demilitarisation of northern Sri Lanka would also feature amongst the issues which he takes up during CHOGM.           
As to CHOGM, Cameron said it was a big summit and an important moment and the world was looking up to the Commonwealth to rise to the occasion.          The British Prime Minister later met six young Indian MPs Deepinder Hooda, Anurag Thakur, Agatha Sangma, Jaya Panda, Jayant Chaudhary and Manicka Tagore, and exchanged notes with them.      
He also held a meeting with Mahindra and Mahindra chief Anand Mahindra.



  • From: The Australian
  • November 15, 2013

  • - See more at: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/post-war-the-rule-of-law-does-not-exist-in-sri-lanka/story-e6frg6ux-1226760132270#sthash.D63Ti4mu.dpuf

    PM skips Commonwealth talks

    Wednesday, November 13, 2013
    HomePrime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar is among several Commonwealth leaders who are not attending this week’s Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Sri Lanka but staff at her office insist she was not boycotting the meeting. Originally, Persad-Bissessar had planned to lead the T&T delegation to the meeting after an official visit to China, during which she would have presided over the official opening of T&T’s embassy in Beijing.

    The trip to China last week was cancelled by mutual agreement of T&T and China because it coincided with the November 4 by-election in St Joseph, said the Prime Minister’s spokesman, Francis Joseph. Joseph said: “There were two trips on for November. The dates proposed for the official visit to China clashed with the by-election in St Joseph and therefore she could not go at that time. “As a result both countries will now look for new dates in 2014.

    “The reason for not going to CHOGM is because of matters she has to deal with in Trinidad. As a result, Minister of Foreign Affairs Winston Dookeran will be attending the meeting and the Permanent Secretary in the Office of the Prime Minister, Reynold Cooper, who is also head of the public service, is already there attending the Commonwealth Business Forum.”

    The Prime Minister’s spokesman did not specify the matters that Persad-Bissessar had to deal with that prevented her attendance at CHOGM but other sources referred to the back-to-back local government elections and by-election. Asked directly whether Persad-Bissessar was boycotting CHOGM to draw attention to Sri Lanka’s human rights record, Joseph said:
    “I have not been told of any boycott by the PM. I am aware that other countries are doing that but that is not the case with Mrs Persad-Bissessar.”

    In an e-mailed response to questions submitted by the T&T Guardian, the Prime Minister’s special adviser Shem Baldeosingh said there could be no inference of a boycott because T&T was being represented by its Foreign Minister. He said the President of Sri Lanka and the Commonwealth Secretary General were informed of the Prime Minister’s inability to travel to Colombo, the capital of Sri Lanka, where CHOGM is being held.

    The Prime Ministers of India and Canada—Manmohan Singh and Stephen Harper—have both decided against attending the Commonwealth summit, which is being held from Friday to Sunday,  to draw attention to the host nation’s human rights record, according to an AP report last Sunday. Singh wrote to Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa expressing his inability to attend the summit, according to the AP report.

    Baldeosingh said the T&T embassy in China is “open for business” and the governments of the two countries were exchanging letters on the selection of an ambassador.

    The British Owe A Lot To The Tamil People


    Colombo Telegraph
    By Brian Senewiratne -November 14, 2013 
    Dr. Brian Senewiratne
    Dr. Brian Senewiratne
    The Chaos In Sri Lanka: The Role Of Britain & The Commonwealth
    It is not widely appreciated that the current chaos in Sri Lanka is partly due to the damage done by colonial Britain, and later by the failure of the Commonwealth, to act when all the Commonwealth ‘core values’ had been systematically and blatantly violated by a succession of Sri Lankan (Sinhalese) governments. The result is a Totalitarian State where human rights have taken a bashing, democracy has been dismantled, Parliament has been reduced to a rubber stamp, the ‘Separation of Powers’ – the basis of any democracy – has ceased to exist, the Judiciary and the rule of law have become a farce and now, the very existence of the Tamil people is under threat. With corruption, nepotism, serious debt-repayment, an escalating cost of living, and the resort to violence by the Government, whatever the problem, the country is heading for a “Failed State”.
    While the elite (the Rajapkasas and their henchmen) journey to a destination somewhere near the top of the world, the dispossessed are spiralling down to chaos. This climate of frustration, fear, anger and national disillusionment is the perfect breeding ground, history tells us, for Totalitarianism and Fascism.
    Increasing concernsRead More
    Lessons to learn from CHOGM

    EDITORIAL-Thursday, 14 Nov 2013

    The challenges before the Heads of Governments of Commonwealth nations who are meeting in Colombo for the biennial summit, the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM), are enormous, and yet could be more matter-of-fact than most pundits and academics would articulate. The forum that has transformed the City of Colombo into one giant carnival, has already suffered two body blows in the decisions made by the heads of two leading democracies, Canada and India, but the heads of other leading democracies, Great Britain, Australia and New Zealand included, could give the event the clout it requires to make the Commonwealth matter in the 21st century.


    The liberal democratic values of human liberty, media freedom, right to information, judicial independence, political accountability and transparency, if properly articulated by the leading protagonists of the cause of democracy, political justice and fair-play, would prove to be invaluable lessons for the Sri Lankan polity in particular and the Asian region in general.


    However, if on the contrary, the Commonwealth countries and their leaders opt to engage in parochial and unsophisticated politicking in order to create political advantages in their own respective locales, the fundamental objectives of the CHOGM and its advancement would be lost forever. The money, manpower, building of infrastructure, promotion of social intercourse, exchange of political thought and ideologies would be misplaced endeavours, with regrets rather than celebrations becoming the legacy of the 23rd CHOGM.


    More than any other time, the world today is facing extremely difficult options. Confronted with self-defeating choices, its slow but sure advance towards political vagueness is increasing pressures placed on the leaders of some pivotal governments, whose economies are more flexible and steadfast than others. Those countries who are late entrants to the Commonwealth are still at the infant stages of the development process. Their snail-like pace at economic and political development cannot be measured in years, for they may be changing every other month. Such political instability, especially in the region of Africa, is offering enormous challenges to the rest of the 'rich' members of the Commonwealth.


    In the absence of economic stability, the political hold of the leaders of these countries may be facing decisive phases in the coming months. Terrorism as a means to political power has had its value. Although most of the decent world has come to discard terrorism as a vehicle to seats of power, the lure of profits involved in the trade of arms and ammunition, which is the main 'currency' in the marketplace of terrorism, would continue to attract those elements who dwell on the threshold; their greed to attain power 'overnight' and the seemingly easy access to such power are still very relevant and predominant factors.


    That is precisely why the leaders of the Commonwealth nations should choose a more enlightened course of action. Otherwise, the 23rd CHOGM would end up being ridiculed as the 'Colombo Holiday on Government Money,' with shop talk and palaver, requiring the Commonwealth to justify its existence.


    Sri Lanka must take this opportunity, not just to show its organizing prowess and post-war grandeur, but to embrace the spirit and principles of the CHOGM and be willing to assimilate fresh ideas and programmes, and whose final goal should be the wellbeing of its people. The glory of hosting the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting should be second to the real results of the event, which should be an all-encompassing resolution on upholding of human rights, right to information, independence of the Judiciary and all other social values which are held aloft in the Western world, yet seems unreachable by Asian countries.


    In the context of the specific allegations made against Sri Lanka, and the inclusion of the maker of the controversial movie that made those allegations in his team of delegates by the British Prime Minister, are indeed serious deeds one cannot ignore. The proposed visits to the North by some of these leading delegates could be an enriching experience not only for the delegates but more so for the local politicians who have chosen to bury their heads in the sand. Lessons are many, if only one is willing to learn.

    Sri Lanka’s Twitter Troll Diplomat

    Colombo TelegraphBy Eric Ellis -November 14, 2013 
    Eric Ellis
    Eric Ellis
    Mr Bandula Jayasekara is Sri Lanka’s Consul General in Sydney, or, as he likes to style himself, the island nation’s “Ambassador” in Australia.
    Jayasekara is indeed one of his government’s highest-profile officials abroad, as he represents Colombo in a country of importance to Sri Lankans. In the West, only Britain, Canada and France have more Lankans making those nations their refuge than does Australia.
    But the delicate dance of manners and language that is international diplomacy seems to have eluded Jayasekara in ambassador training college back home in Colombo.
    Little of what this ‘diplomat’ says and does could be regarded as diplomatic. Statesmanlike he is not. Recidivist Twitter troll might seem a closer approximation.
    As Sri Lanka’s strongman President Mahinda Rajapaksa, Jayasekara’s boss, has said as he prepares to host the prestigious Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) this week, he regards social media as a “disease”.
    Read more

    Towards Reconciliation

    By Rajiva Wijesinha -November 15, 2013 |
    Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha MP
    Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha MP
    Colombo TelegraphFour years after the conclusion of conflict, Sri Lanka still has a long way to go to achieve Reconciliation. This is unfortunate, given the enormous efforts made by government to improve facilities for the people most affected by war. But it is not surprising that, as indicated by the results of the last election held in the Northern Province, we have failed to win hearts and minds.
    That would not have been difficult had a concerted effort been made. But this requires planning, and unfortunately planning is not something Sri Lanka has been good at. For over three decades now, we have tended to respond to events or rather to crises. The one exception was the care with which, in the period after 2005, we approached the conflict, with all branches of government working together and care taken to ensure the dissemination of clear and convincing information. Following the conclusion of the conflict however all that broke down, and propaganda, often based on parochial electoral considerations, took over, with little attempt at intelligent analysis of ground realities.
    Thus we seemed to believe that reconstruction alone would suffice, and reconstruction that placed a premium on cement rather than people. This is on par with the worst delusions of capitalism as elevated into a political philosophy, the assumption that prosperity will trickle down. But this does not work, and Sri Lanka may in the end have to pay heavily for the failure to conceptualize with sensitivity of those who took on responsibility only for construction and not for consultation, who concentrated only on resettlement and not rather on restoration.

    Sri Lanka: Commonwealth must not turn a blind eye to civil society crackdown


    Even on the eve of this week's Commonwealth summit in Colombo, the Sri Lankan authorities are cracking down on civil society.
    Even on the eve of this week's Commonwealth summit in Colombo, the Sri Lankan authorities are cracking down on civil society.
    © LAKRUWAN WANNIARACHCHI/AFP/Getty Images

    Commonwealth leaders must use their summit in Colombo this week to pressure the Sri Lankan authorities to end their alarming crackdown 

    Sri Lankan military this morning blocked scores of family members of disappeared people from attending a human rights vigil in Colombo, the latest move to stifle freedom of expression and assembly ahead of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) on 15-17 November.

    “It may be astonishing to some that even on the eve of CHOGM, the Sri Lankan government feels free to abuse rights at the heart of the Commonwealth charter. But such government repression of civil society was expected. Commonwealth leaders must not just turn a blind eye,” said Steve Crawshaw, Director of the Office of the Secretary General who is in Colombo representing Amnesty International around CHOGM.

    “Sri Lanka is trying to use CHOGM to whitewash its despicable human rights record and hide ongoing abuses under the carpet. The government must not be allowed yet again to get away with this.”

    Today the army stopped scores of family members of disappeared people, who were travelling by bus from Sri Lanka’s Tamil-majority northern province to attend the Samagi human rights festival in Colombo. Samagi is an “alternative CHOGM” organized by human rights groups.

    “This is a blatant attempt by the authorities to stifle people’s right to peaceful protest. It fits a familiar pattern in Sri Lanka, where the government has in recent years done everything in its power to silence dissent,” said Crawshaw.

    “It is notable that the Commonwealth has been shamefully silent throughout this, and has yet to condemn the human rights violations that are still so clearly business as usual for Sri Lanka.”

    The Sri Lankan authorities have taken measures to prevent public protests in Colombo during CHOGM. Meanwhile, the government has intensified a crackdown on critics and dissenting voices in the build-up to the summit, with opposition activists, journalists and human rights defenders among those have been harassed or threatened.

    International human rights experts have also been barred from entering the country. The International Bar Association Human Rights Institute (IBAHRI) had to cancel a planned meeting this week after its representatives and the UN Special Rapporteur on the Independence of Judges and Lawyers, were denied entry to the country.

    “These developments have confirmed what Amnesty International has long argued. Given Sri Lanka’s atrocious human rights record and its refusal to address ongoing violations, the country should not have been allowed to host CHOGM in the first place,” said Crawshaw.

    “The Commonwealth and those attending the summit must use the coming days to highlight and condemn ongoing human rights violations in Sri Lanka. Under no circumstances should Sri Lanka be handed the chair of the organization for the next two years.”

    Background

    During a recent visit to the country, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi PIllay expressed dismay that the surveillance and harassment of Sri Lankan civil society "appear[ed] to be getting worse". Local human rights groups have documented a range of other measures taken by the government against civil society ahead of CHOGM. These include the closing of all universities across the country, restrictions on journalists’ freedom of movement; banning a range of planned civil society meetings; and threatening deportation of visiting parliamentarians, including from Australia and New Zeeland, for engaging with domestic civil society.

    PPT to investigate role by UK, USA, India in Sri Lanka's genocide of Eezham Tamils

    TamilNet[TamilNet, Thursday, 14 November 2013, 12:49 GMT]
    The Sri Lankan state as well as Britain, India and the USA will be accused of orchestrating a genocide on the Tamil people by the International Human Rights Association Bremen (IMRV) and the Irish Forum for Peace in Sri Lanka (IFPSL). The charge will be heard by a Tribunal held under the aegis of the Rome based 'Permanent Peoples Tribunal' (PPT). The 'People's Tribunal' relies on a high profile panel of judges that has been selected by the PPT to invoke a robust moral opinion. The PPT in Rome has sent the letters to the 4 States concerned informing them of the investigation to be held in Germany in December 2013, informed sources told TamilNet. 

    A press statement issued jointly by IFPSL and IMRV on Thursday follows:

    Press Release 14.11.2013

    Commonwealth's embrace of Sri Lanka highlights the need for the ‚‘People's Tribunal‚’ investigation of genocide against the Tamil people

    Despite public calls from Canada not to hold the Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting in Sri Lanka and protests within India forcing Manmohan Singh to join the boycott, Britain has succeeded in assembling 50 out of the 53 commonwealth countries in Colombo to 'engage' the Sri Lankan state - precisely at the time when the terrible crimes that were committed against the Tamil people are beginning to be internationally acknowledged.

    Next month, in Germany, the Sri Lankan state as well as Britain, India and the USA will be accused of orchestrating a genocide on the Tamil people by the International Human Rights Association Bremen (IMRV) and the Irish Forum for Peace in Sri Lanka (IFPSL).

    These charges that are being put forward by the IMRV and the IFPSL will be heard by a Tribunal held under the aegis of the Rome based 'Permanent Peoples Tribunal' (PPT). The PPT continues in the spirit of the Jean-Paul Sartre/Bertrand Russell's Tribunal on Vietnam. The 'People's Tribunal' relies on a high profile panel of judges that has been selected by the PPT to invoke a robust moral opinion. The PPT has invited representatives of the four accused countries to Germany to answer charges put forward by their accusers the IMRV and the IFPSL. The Tribunal will take place in Bremen - during 7th - 10th December 2013.

    This hearing continues a previous ‚ÄòPeople‚Äôs Tribunal on Sri Lanka‚Äô that was held in Dublin in January 2010 ‚Äì just seven months after the military operations were concluded by the Sri Lankan armed forces. In that instant, the Panel of Judges assembled by the PPT had found the Sri Lankan state guilty of 'war crimes' and 'crimes against humanity'. 

    It also held that pressure from the UK/USA governments contributed to the breakdown of 2002 peace process between the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam and the Government of Sri Lanka, precipitating the war. Though the charges put forward by the IFPSL and the IMRV at that time did not contain the accusation of genocide, the Dublin panel, due to the character of the evidence put before them, recommended that further investigation may be necessary regarding the question of genocide.

    Speaking for IFPSL - one of the organisations preparing the charges for the follow up Tribunal to be held in Bremen - Dr. Jude Lal Fernando stated: “The fact that substantial, quantitative and qualitative new evidence has become available is one of the reasons that compels us to call upon the PPT once again to assemble a panel to examine the charge of genocide against the Tamil people”. Mr. Nicolai Jung from the IMRV stated that the follow up Tribunal is called upon to not only investigate whether a genocide of the Tamils has and is taking place in Sri Lanka but also to examine the extent to which countries like Britain, USA and India are involved in this crime. He went on to say that this will help to throw light as to why Britain is showing such determination to try to use its commonwealth to underwrite the Sri Lankan state.

    Press statement issued by the Irish Forum for Peace in Sri Lanka and the International Human Rights Association Bremen.

    Contact for IFPSL: Dr. Jude Lal Fernando (irishpeaceforum@gmail.com) 

    Contact for IMRV: Nicolai Jung (imrvbremen@gmail.com)

    For background about the Dublin Tribunal and for upcoming updates see: www.ptsrilanka.org

    William Hague urges probe into alleged Sri Lanka war crimes

    Telegraph.co.ukForeign Secretary William Hague calls for an international investigation of the alleged war crimes if the Sri Lankan government fails to undertake a credible investigation of its own

    Speaking in Colombo ahead of the Commonwealth Head of Government Meeting (CHOGM), Foreign Secretary William Hague said he will urge the government to pass strong witness protection legislation to facilitate such a probe.
    "To date, too little has been done, to hold people to account for crimes of sexual violence. The allegations include reports from the UN panel of experts that rape was used by government forces during the final stages of the conflict and before," Mr Hague said.
    "Claims from Human Rights Watch that sexual torture has been used to extract confessions. And continued concerns of the vulnerability of the women and girls to sexual harassment and abuse, particularly the ninety thousand war widows living in areas with a large military presence," he added.
    The 26-year-long war with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE ) killed, according a UN estimation, between 80,000 and 100,000 people from 1982 to 2009 when the Sri Lankan government declared victory against the insurgents.
    A UN report in August suggested Sri Lanka's Sinhalese-dominated armed forces may have killed up to 40,000 minority Tamils, while the rebels killed civilians, used them as human shields and forcibly recruited child soldiers.
    "The British government along with other members of the international community has consistently called for an independent, thorough and credible investigation into allegations of violations and abuses of International humanitarian and human rights law by both sides in the military conflict and in the absence of an independent investigation pressure will mount for an international investigation," Mr Hague said.
    Source: APTN

    Foreign Secretary meets Tamil National Alliance in Colombo


    Foreign Secretary with the Tamil National Alliance leaders

    Foreign Secretary with the Tamil National Alliance leaders
    GOV.UK14 November 2013
    Today the Foreign Secretary William Hague met members of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) during the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Colombo, Sri Lanka. He stressed his support for a peaceful and stable Sri Lanka and noted that the protection of minority and human rights for all was paramount in achieving long lasting peace.

    Elections took place in the North of Sri Lanka on 21 September and the TNA won a large majority to form a northern provincial council. These were the first elections to be held in this region and are an important step towards reconciliation and finding a lasting political settlement after three decades of violent conflict.
    The Foreign Secretary said:
    An important part of my purpose of coming to Sri Lanka was to meet members of the Tamil community as well as those working across Sri Lanka to promote human rights, reconciliation and accountability for past crimes. I am pleased that the Prime Minister is visiting the north of Sri Lanka to see for himself the work that needs to be done to address the legacy of the conflict.
    I am calling on the Sri Lankan government to conduct a transparent and independent investigation into alleged war crimes, improve Sri Lanka’s human rights record and for both the government and the TNA to work constructively together towards a political settlement that delivers meaningful devolution for the North of the country.
    Speech- 29 May 2012

    The Rt Hon William Hague MPForeign Secretary launches new Government initiative to prevent sexual violence in conflict

    Strip Sri Lanka of Commonwealth chairmanship, Ed Miliband urges

    Call comes as David Cameron heads to Colombo for summit overshadowed by host country's alleged human rights abuses
    Cameron visits IndiaThursday 14 November 2013

    David Cameron arrives in Delhi. He will later travel to Sri Lanka to attend the Commonwealth heads of government meeting. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA
    The Guardian homeLabour has called for Sri Lanka's president to be stripped of his chairmanship of the Commonwealth as David Cameron heads to Colombo for a summit overshadowed by the host country's allegedhuman rights abuses.

    David Cameron promises Sri Lanka ‘tough message’ on alleged war crimes


    Prime Minister David Cameron: “There are legitimate accusations of war crimes”
    BBC14 November 2013

    David Cameron has promised to send a "tough message" to Sri Lanka's government over alleged war crimes after it warned him not to question ministers at the Commonwealth summit.

    Australian Senate calls on PM Abbott to raise Sri Lanka’s human rights abuses at CHOGM

    australia flagThe Australian Senate has rejected Tony Abbott’s stance on human rights abuses in Sri Lankan, and called on the Prime Minister to raise an independent investigation into allegations of violations of international human rights law and international humanitarian law with the President of Sri Lanka at the 2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Colombo.

    Greens Senator Lee Rhiannon said “Tony Abbott’s public comments that human rights abuses in Sri Lanka comes second to his inhumane domestic policies about so called ‘boat people’ are disgraceful.

    “While in Sri Lanka last weekend, I found the ongoing abuses of human and legal rights are so serious that Tony Abbott should have followed the lead of the Canadian, Indian and Mauritius Prime Ministers and boycotted CHOGM.

    “The Australian Senate has now passed a Greens motion calling on the Prime Minister to act while he is at CHOGM and raise the issue of an independent investigation into allegations of violations of international human rights law and international humanitarian law with the President of Sri Lanka.

    “Tony Abbott needs to listen to the Australian Parliament, and commit to at least fulfilling this basic request.
    The motion is as below:

    Notice of Motion – Senator RHIANNON and Senator MILNE
    13 November 2013

    I give notice that on 14 November 2013 I shall move that:

    The Senate notes:

    The UN General Assembly Human Rights Council Resolution encouraging the Sri Lankan Government to conduct an independent investigation into allegations of violations of international human rights law and international humanitarian law, as applicable.

    The Senate calls on Prime Minister Abbott to:

    To raise the matter of an independent investigation into allegations of violations of international human rights law and international humanitarian law with the President of Sri Lanka at the 2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Colombo.


    “British Prime Minister David Cameron has publicly stated he will be meeting with the Sri Lankan President and calling for a full, independent investigation into alleged war crimes. Tony Abbott has no excuse to ignore this call from the Senate,” said Senator Rhiannon.