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

Saturday, September 29, 2018

HIV/Aids: China reports 14% surge in new cases


HIV-infected cells
The vast majority of new cases in China were transmitted through sexual activity.-SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY


29 September 2018

China has announced a 14% jump in the number of its citizens who are living with HIV and Aids.
More than 820,000 people are affected in the country, health officials say. About 40,000 new cases were reported in the second quarter of 2018 alone.
The vast majority of new cases were transmitted through sex, marking a change from the past.
Traditionally, HIV spread rapidly through some parts of China as a result of infected blood transfusions.
But the number of people contracting HIV in this way had been reduced to almost zero, Chinese health officials said at a conference in Yunnan province.
Year-on-year, however, the number of those living with HIV and Aids in China has risen by 100,000 people.
HIV transmission through sex is an acute issue in China's LGBT community.
Homosexuality was decriminalised in China in 1997, but discrimination against LGBT people is said to be rife.
Many of the transmissions of the diseases come from inadequate sexual protections in these relationships.
Since 2003, China's government has promised universal access to HIV medication as part of an effort to tackle the issue.
Presentational grey line

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Friday, September 28, 2018

Sri Lanka must come clean on past use of Cluster

Allegations of Cluster Munitions Use in 2009 War

( September 28, 2018, Johannesburg, Sri Lanka Guardian) “As the new President of the Convention on Cluster Munitions, Sri Lanka must explain why de-miners have repeatedly found cluster remnants in the 2009 war zone, given the ongoing denial,” a Johannesburg based human rights group, the International Truth and Justice Project, said in press release issued today.
“All the evidence points to government forces using cluster munitions in 2009 against densely populated areas that they unilaterally declared safe for hundreds of thousands of Tamil civilians.
“The allegations that Sri Lankan forces used the banned weapons during the war have been so persistent that in 2016 the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights himself called for an independent and impartial investigation to be carried out, which has yet to happen Under the Convention, Sri Lanka is required to show transparency and report annually in a public document on use, stockpiling, clearance and destruction.”

Read the press release here;

Buddhist monks request access to historic Mullaitivu mountain for “research”


Home
28Sep 2018
A group of Sinhalese people including two Buddhist monks who had been handed over to police in Mullaitivu for attempting to install a Buddha statue have told the court they were just carrying out research.
Residents of Kurunthurmalai (mountain) in Kumulamunai reported that the group of twelve, including the monks, had come to the area on September 4, falsely claiming to be archaeology department officials and had brought a Buddha statue and installation equipment with them.
Locals had mobilised to prevent the group from installing the Buddha statue on the mountain and forced Oddusuddan police to escort the group away.
Following the filing of a case, the Mullaitivu court ruled on September 13 that no changes could be made to the mountain, including the installation of any new religious infrastructure.
The group however have submitted a new motion claiming they were intending to carry out archaeological research, also claiming that the mountain used to be the site of a Buddhist temple, and that they should be given access for research purposes.
The group also claimed that Tamil politicians had disrupted their trip and provoked the locals, resulting in the tense situation in the area. 

Sirisena’s Foolish Bravado Implicates Him In War Crimes Controversy


President Maithripala Sirisena’s cavalier statement that the top-brass of the previous government fled the country during the last days of war has unexpectedly implicated him in the war crimes issue.
Sirisena, while speaking to the Sri Lankan community on Thursday, said he gave orders to military forces during the last two weeks of war as former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, former Prime Minister Rathnasiri Wickremanayake, former Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa and former Army Commander Sarath Fonseka left the country due to ‘explosion fears’.
He said all of them left the country during the last two weeks as they sensed a plan by the LTTE to launch terrorist attacks on Colombo using light aircrafts operated from South India.
Sirisena pompously said it was him, as the acting Minister Defence back then, of who knew everything about what happened during the last days of war.
This statement has now implicated Sirisena in the war crimes controversy as serious questions still remain unanswered on atrocities committed by the armed forces during the last days of war during which scores of Tamil militants were killed.
Sri Lankan government, despite repeated assurances to the international community, has still failed to carry out a credible investigation into the allegations of war crimes and International humanitarian law violations.
Sirisena’s foolish bravado, has plunged himself to the centre of a controversy that that contributed to increased international pressure on the Sri Lankan government.
“As Sirisena has now implicated himself in the matter, he should be questioned on the atrocities committed against civilians and prisoners of war. His name should be added to the long list of possible perpetrators including Mahinda Rajapaksa, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, Sarath Fonseka and other brigade commanders who led the Army when they committed such atrocities ” a prominent human rights activist told Colombo Telegraph, commenting on the development.

War Heroes will be protected, says President


Saturday, September 29, 2018

President Maithripala Sirisena met the Sri Lankan community in New York during his visit to New York to attend the 73rd Session of the United Nations General Assembly. The event was held at Sri Lanka’s Permanent Mission in New York. The President having

President Maithripala Sirisena said the government is always fully committed to safeguard honour, dignity and respect of war heroes from top Generals to the last private soldier and they would be provided with every privilege.

The President was addressing Sri Lankans living in the United States at the Sri Lanka Permanent Mission to UN in New York on Wednesday.

The President said LTTE terrorists had planned a flight from Tamil Nadu to destroy targets in Colombo as they were on the verge of being defeated at the war front.

He added that he was the senior most politician in the country in May 2009 directing the security forces as acting Defence Minister, in the absence of all other leaders during the last two weeks of the war.

President Sirisena noted that then President Mahinda Rajapaksa, Prime Minister Ratnasiri Wickremanayake, then Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa and Army Commander Sarath Fonseka were out of the country on reports that terrorists were going to attack Colombo.

He added that intelligence reports said that terrorists were planning to operate an aircraft from Chennai or some other jungle in Tamil Nadu to bomb and destroy targets in Colombo.

“I was the acting defence minister for two weeks at the final phase of the war,” the President said.
He said that even he did not stay in Colombo and was in several locations outside Colombo in case the tigers attacked Colombo.

He said there were some incidents investigated during the war as well as after the conflict, but they were not related to war and that cannot be described as hunting war heroes under any circumstance.

He said it should not be forgotten that one of the expectations during the last Presidential election campaign was that there should be investigations on these stray incidents and the guilty need to be punished.

“If there are some more such incidents outside the war field, they also should be brought before the law and such actions would also be an honour for real war heroes.Our soldiers are internationally recognised because such mistakes have been rectified,” he said.

The President pointed out that freedom and democracy has been established in the Motherland and not a single journalist was attacked or compelled to leave the country during the last three and a half years.

There are also some victories achieved by the government that are not so visible and the winning back the international support is one such victory, he said and added that his visit to address the 73rd Session of the United Nations General assembly ensured the safeguarding of honour and respect for war heroes.

Although the cost of living has increased due to uncertainties in the international arena the government is taking many steps to enhance living standards of the people.

The efforts made by President Sirisena to protect the honourable image of the Motherland and establish democracy and freedom was highly appreciated by the Sri Lankan community in the United States of America.

The President held a friendly chat with them after the meeting.

Sirisena introduces a new and critical requirement for reconciliation



logoSaturday, 29 September 2018

It is generally stated by liberals and the human rights community that for Sri Lanka to achieve ethnic reconciliation, the Government will have to implement Resolution 30 (1) and 34 (1) passed by the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in 2015 and 2017 respectively.

But given the political difficulties faced by the Government in implementing them, President Maithripala Sirisena has added a further requirement, and a critical one at that, to bring about reconciliation. He has pleaded for non-interference by outside powers, including the United Nations, in the reconciliation process.

But the plea, made in his speech at the UN General Assembly (UNGA) on Tuesday, is likely to be rejected by the Tamils, liberals, the human rights lobby in the island and overseas, and also the UN in Geneva and New York.

For the Tamils, it will be a return to a bitter past in which they had tried to solve the ethnic issue within Sri Lanka, with Lankan governments and Sinhalese parties, and failed miserably. As Suresh Premachandran of the Eelam People’s Revolutionary Liberation Front (EPRLF) once said: “Sri Lanka has proved beyond doubt that the Tamil issue cannot be settled without outside intervention.”

The President’s plea has also come at a time when the Northern Provincial Council (NPC), an elected body, has unanimously asked the UN to refer cases of alleged war crimes against members of the Lankan armed forces to the International Criminal Court (ICC); to impose targeted sanctions against Lankan army personnel; and to conduct a referendum among North-Eastern Tamils on the kind of political structure they wish to live under.

Tamil radicalism has gained traction lately due to Northern Province Chief Minister C.V. Wigneswaran’s utterances and former Minister Vijayakala Maheswaran’s publicly voiced yearning for the return of the LTTE. This trend is likely to get a further boost due to the President’s UN speech. The coming elections to the NPC, the Presidency and parliament, will only strengthen radicalism.

Tamil nationalism offers fertile soil for the growth of Sinhalese majoritarian nationalism, which is a bigger challenge to the Government than Tamil nationalism. Sinhalese nationalism has to be appeased for political survival.

Hemmed in on all sides, the President sought a way out. To him, the way out was to seek the removal of a major irritant in the reconciliation process, namely, foreign participation or intervention. In the 1980s, Indian intervention had worsened the situation in the island. Norwegian and Japanese efforts in the 2000s had only sharpened the ethnic divide. UN intervention since 2009 had not borne fruit. It had only widened the ethnic gulf.

President Sirisena, like other Sinhalese nationalists, feels that foreign intervention has only added new dimensions to the conflict and undermined indigenous efforts to bring about reconciliation.

This is what made him make a fervent plea at UNGA on Tuesday. Sirisena asked member-nations to respect national sovereignty when it intervenes in other countries to settle disputes, enforce human rights or bring about reconciliation.

“With respect, I request to let us solve our problems. Independence of a country is very important,” Sirisena said.

“As a sovereign state, we need no foreign influence or threats. As such, I reiterate my request to all, as a strong nation, that allow us to sort out our problems as a sovereign nation, that moves forward while protecting our rights.”

“I respectfully request the support of everybody as we will solve the problems that need to be solved as Sri Lankans. We also need your cooperation in my Government’s mission to erase doubt, fear and mistrust among communities living in my beloved motherland, while nurturing lasting peace among all communities,” he added.

Seeking international recognition and appreciation for the role of the much maligned Sri Lankan armed forces in defeating terrorism and separatism, Sirisena said: “It was one of the world’s strongest terrorism groups that the Armed Forces of Sri Lanka eradicated. It is thanks to that achievement that Sri Lanka remains an unbroken, non-divided country with permanent peace.”

“Our armed forces have contributed immensely to building lasting peace in Sri Lanka by defeating a strong terrorism organisation. I mention this achievement with respect and thank Sri Lanka’s armed forces for their dedication to bring lasting peace and protect the unitary state of Sri Lanka.”

Radical departure

What the Lankan President said at UNGA is a radical departure from the policy his Government announced when it came to power in 2015. Till the President’s statement in New York on Tuesday, the Government had pledged to implement UNHRC resolutions 30 (1) and 34 (1) of 2015 and 2017, though on the ground, the pledges were not translated into actions on account of political difficulties.

For fear of losing popular support, it has been unwilling to drag its armed forces personnel before special judicial mechanisms in which there will be foreign judges, prosecutors and forensic experts.

The Government, the Sinhalese opposition parties, and the Sinhalese majority at large, could not for a moment entertain the thought that their soldiers might have committed crimes in the process of eliminating the LTTE.

Excesses were deemed to be natural in the fog of war and acceptable in a fight against an exceptionally brutal militant group which was brazenly using human shields, human bombs and child soldiers, and with no compunction about planting deadly bombs in public places like railway stations, buses and banks aimed at killing innocent civilians.

The Government was finding it difficult to keep its pledge to find out the fate of the thousands of Tamils who had disappeared. It had only recently set up an Office of Missing Persons.

The police have been unable to pursue cases against armed forces personnel in abduction and elimination cases because the President had expressed opposition to detaining them for long without being charged as this could affect the forces’ morale.

Persistent fear of the resurgence of Tamil militancy has stalled reform of the anti-terror law. The whitewashing of the brutality of the LTTE by the UN has made the transitional justice mechanisms suggested by the UNHRC seem iniquitous and potentially dangerous.

The under-performance of the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe regime in the last three-and-a-half years has buttressed Rajapaksa’s case that a weak Government has been giving in to the demands of the Western powers which allegedly want Sri Lanka to be divided on ethnic lines and weakened militarily.

Sirisena’s pleas at the UNGA should be seen in this context. In his view, an end to, or mitigation of, foreign involvement will remove a major irritant and divider in Sri Lanka and allow Sri Lankans to devise their own means to facilitate reconciliation through mutual discussions and adjustments.

Past failures of such efforts cannot be an excuse for not taking this route as conditions have changed. Sirisena believes that domestic issues are best solved within the country if a lasting solution is to be arrived at.

The President has however clarified that he is not totally against UN or outside involvement. His plea is that the involvement should only be to facilitate the implementation of schemes and agreements worked out by Sri Lankans themselves. For example, Sirisena would like foreign donors to help rehabilitate families whose kith and kin had gone missing. 

GTF condemns President sirisena’s move to drop war crime charges against its troops 

 2018-09-28
The Global Tamil Forum (GTF) is dismayed at the Sri Lankan Government’s initiatives to abandon its repeated commitments to address accountability issues related to war crimes. President Sirisena’s recent public statement that he will make a special request to the UN General Assembly and the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) to drop war crimes charges against his troops to ‘settle’ the issue of accountability is outrageous and must be censured. It is also feared that President Sirisena’s calculated plan is to link the release of the long-held Tamil political prisoners to a general amnesty for all including those from the military responsible for serious brutality and war crimes. GTF condemns such approach to accountability in the strongest possible terms and turn to the international community to thwart any such misplaced and short-sighted attempt at its infancy.   

The national conflict in Sri Lanka is replete with instances of Sri Lankan governments making commitments to address minority communities’ concerns, and then abandoning them at the slightest of opposition from the hard-line elements of the majority community. The difference this time being the commitments were made to the international community to administer justice, but its untrustworthiness is receiving world-wide publicity. Concerns about trust were raised when Sri Lanka co-sponsored the 2015 UNHRC resolution, but this was famously countered by the then Foreign Minister saying, “Don’t judge us by the broken promises, experiences and U-turns of the past.’ Alas, the country appears to have not moved away from its past, irrespective of all the promises made by the new coalition government that came to power the same year.   

Despite Sri Lanka’s attempt to conduct the last stages of the war without witnesses, including by ordering the withdrawal of the UN and other international aid agencies in war zones, evidence of brutality came to light in the form of videos and photographs and victim statements after the conclusion of the war.The systematic violence – sexual abuse and cold-blooded execution of war surrendees, indiscriminate shelling of hospitals and safe zones, and denial of desperately needed humanitarian assistance – pricked the conscience of the world, and made to realise its failure to prevent tens of thousands of deaths, mostly Tamil citizens, in the hands of the country’s security forces. Sri Lanka’s continual denial, intransigence, as well as its refusal to honour the agreement with the then UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon to address war time accountability issues, triggered a series of international 
and UN initiatives.   

"Former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid, consistently argued  for the establishment of such a specialized court supported by  international practitioners. Firmly convinced that progress has  virtually stalled, in 2017 he called on the member states to explore  other avenues, including the application of universal jurisdiction, to  press for accountability"

The UN Secretary General appointed a Panel of Experts (2011) to address accountability issues related to alleged war time abuses, and an Internal Review Panel (2012) to prevent the repetition of the Sri Lanka-type failure. Former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navanethem Pillai, was instrumental in setting up the OHCHR Investigation on Sri Lanka (OISL), in 2014, under the guidance of eminent international jurists. The conclusions of these investigations were unambiguous – “…. there is credible evidence that war crimes and crimes against humanity were committed by all parties to the armed conflict that need to be tried by an internationalised special court.”   

A core group of countries consisting of US, UK, Macedonia and Montenegro provided leadership at the UNHRC to help Sri Lanka deal with its painful past. The UNHRC resolutions of 2013 and 2014 urging the government to take steps to promote accountability and reconciliation were passed without Sri Lanka’s consent. However, with the formation of the new government in 2015 – mandated for Good Governance – Sri Lanka adopted a different approach by co-sponsoring UNHRC resolutions (2015 and 2017) and extending cooperation, albeit slowly. These resolutions (30/1 and 34/1) on ‘promoting reconciliation, accountability and human rights’ were in fact compromised outcomes, with the adoption of establishing a Sri Lanka based judicial mechanism – including participation of foreign judges, prosecutors and investigators. 

Former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid, consistently argued for the establishment of such a specialized court supported by international practitioners. Firmly convinced that progress has virtually stalled, in 2017 he called on the member states to explore other avenues, including the application of universal jurisdiction, to press for accountability.   

Despite the veneer of civility, the commitment and conviction of the Sri Lankan government to implement the UNHRC resolutions have been lacking. Every notable step, such as operationalising the Office of the Missing Persons (OMP), was taken after years of delay but invariably days before the commencement of a UNHRC session, aiming mainly at managing international expectations for the moment.With regards to the crucial aspect of asserting criminal culpability, three years after sponsoring the 2015 resolution, no court has been set-up, not a single indictment served, and no one brought to justice. Even in the emblematic cases – the killings of 5 students in Trincomalee; the massacre of 17 aid workers of the French charity ‘Action Against Hunger’ in Muttur (both in 2006); and the execution-style murder of the high-profile journalist Lasantha Wickrematunge (2009) – the progress is almost zero and in essence for ‘show’. Those responsible for these dastardly crimes remain free; some with credible accusations of involvement continue to occupy high government positions and some with ambitions for higher offices. It is in this context that President Sirisena is making attempts to drop war crimes charges against Sri Lankan armed forces, apparently as a concession for the ‘progress’ his government has made!   

In dealing with international crimes the world has made leaps of progress during the last seven decades – International Military Tribunal, International Criminal Court, ad hoc International Criminal Tribunals and Hybrid Special Courts. For serious international crimes, such as crimes against humanity and genocide, states can no longer use sovereignty as a defence and individuals can’t hide behind state responsibility. It is precisely crimes of this nature that were committed in Sri Lanka and the country appears to have wasted an opportunity to address the problem on its own or with international support 
and participation.   

"Those responsible for these dastardly crimes remain free; some with  credible accusations of involvement continue to occupy high government  positions and some with ambitions for higher offices. It is in this  context that President Sirisena is making attempts to drop war crimes  charges against Sri Lankan armed forces, apparently as a concession for  the ‘progress’ his government has made! "

Even the thought of President Sirisena receiving UN consent to abandon Sri Lanka’s international commitments is unthinkable and can lead to irreparable damage to peace and justice in the country, with unforeseen outcomes for the world at large. No doubt it will lead to the alienation of the Tamil community and its political leaders, effectively extinguishing the prospect of reconciliation. International efforts will intensify to apply universal jurisdiction and economically isolate Sri Lanka. Its rehabilitation into respectability that began after 2015 will start to recede, with long-term damage to peace and prosperity. More importantly, this will convey a clear message to other budding dictators and military regimes with despicable human rights record that they can live out international focus and resolutions without serious consequences. In other words, despite the progress in universalising human rights and rule of law, enough holes exist for bad behaviour and inhumanity – a dangerous precedent indeed.   
Outright rejection of President Sirisena’s ill-conceived initiative will indeed be a victory for decency, justice and humanity of the world, in particular for the citizens of Sri Lanka.

Patriotism: The Trump & Sirisena Delight 


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September 28, 2018, 8:56 pm

Will the US State Department have a special flag of recognition for Sri Lanka?

Cheers Sri Lanka - keep flying the Stars and Stripes. President Trump may even raise your issues at the next Security Council session.

Just now we are the loudest supporters of the Donald Trump

policies on international affairs. We have gone beyond US allies in the West, and away from NATO, with our President Sirisena echoing Trump at the

UN General Assembly to call for our own patriotism against globalism.

This was the key Trump line: "America is governed by Americans. We reject

the ideology of globalism, and we embrace the doctrine of patriotism".

Is it much different to Sirisena’s call for the world to keep out of Sri Lankan affairs when he said: "as an independent country we do not want any foreign power to exert influence on us… the right of the Sri Lankan people to find solutions to their problems should be respected?

That is Patriotism having its big day. The hugely powerful US and Donald

Trump has small Sri Lanka to sing the praises of patriotism. Sri Lanka is governed by Sri Lankans. We reject international influence or interference – globalism. The right of the Sri Lankan people to find solutions – Patriotism – should be respected.

It is not only Sirisena who has a song of praise for Donald Trump. There is Ranil Wickremesinghe, too. He sees the continuing and deep fall of the Sri Lankan Rupee being due to the success of Trump economics in the US. He is certainly following his uncle JR Jayewardene’s own theme of American and capitalist economics, when he was glad to open the door for Robber Barons in Sri Lanka.

That is the patriotism of the crooked. Bring in your money, exploit our natural resources, and carry away your profits. Is there any big change today? We are opening our doors wide, waiting for investment. Handing over our national assets and natural resources to international crooks – and cheering about the continuing fall of the rupee. That is today’s Trump Doctrine of Patriotism!

President Sirisena’s patriotic call directed against - but not in so many words –the UNHRC Resolution on post-conflict Sri Lanka, has a major catch in it. Could he have forgotten that Sri Lanka joined the US (before Trump’s election) to co-sponsor the resolution. Can we ask the international community or foreign powers to move away from it, when we are still the co-sponsors? Not very likely.

Maybe Sirisena (and even Ranil Wicks) could be thinking of Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Human Rights Council as an escape route for Sri Lanka. But that is the bunkum of local, patriotic politics. We are stuck at the UNHRC with other countries that voted for the Resolution, which we co-sponsored with the US.

The UNHRC apart, isn’t it time that we looked at our own problems, without having side glances at foreign countries or powers? The rupee keeps crashing down against the Dollar, and all other major currencies. Are we ready to ask our people, especially those with power and privilege to curb their expenditure?

While we ask the world not to look at our problems, what are we doing about them? How long more must the IGP perform with meditation and dancing, while Law & Order are going down just like the rupee?

How long are we to keep watching the perks and privileges of the elected representatives of the people, at the Diyawanna Parliament and other councils, carry on mockingly wasteful expenditure of public funds? Is it patriotic to spend so much on luxury cars for Members of Parliament

(Ministers included)?

What is the patriotism that drives MPs to sell their duty free vehicle permits to make untaxable fortunes?

How much more of patriotic waste should the people tolerate as we approach more postponed provincial council elections. Can we now be sure that presidential and parliamentary elections will also not be postponed –whatever the Sports Minister has to say about, in his unsporting approach to democracy?

Whatever President Sirisena said at the UN General Assembly, with that photo-op with Donald Trump and wife Melania, can the world look the other way and remain silent when democracy is under threat over here? Is the continued delay of electoral democracy in Sri Lanka, a matter only for our people and nation? Are we to set aside the Human Rights aspect of democracy, in keeping with the cardinal thinking of an apostolic religious preacher?

We are caught in a huge web of political patriotism today. Both the Government and the Opposition are wedded to the patriotism of the crooked.

They are both followers of Donald Trump – to keep the world always beyond our shores. Keep us in this islandic isolation, away from Human Rights and the true growth of Democracy.

Let the courts drag the probes into corruption, killings and abductions of journalists; and the legal and political system never gets any nearer to the crooked and corrupt. That is the stuff of patriotic delight, which Donald Trump must also delight in.

It is time to remember Samuel Johnson’s words that – "Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel". But, Johnson was not born here. Is it patriotic to respect the words of a western foreigner? Keep thinking.

Editorial: Veering backwards


Home28Sep 2018

At the end of the UN Human Rights Council’s (UNHRC) 39th session, there can be no more illusions as to whether Sri Lanka will deliver for the Tamils. Although the government queued up its customary showpiece to coincide with this session - this time a revamped counter terrorism bill - all evidence points to the reality that accountability, justice and a return to normalcy in the Tamil homeland, including demilitarisation, are not forthcoming. Instead in the South, both governing parties, burned by recent electoral blows, have scrambled to regain their Sinhala nationalist credentials and current signs in the North-East point to a contracting democratic space, with a worrying resurgence of military and police harassment of civil society and journalists.

The coalition government’s actions since 2015 demonstrate that it has failed to truly accept that accountability was “essential to uphold the rule of law and to build confidence in the people of all communities”, as stated in the co-sponsored UNHRC resolution 30/1, and it has no intention of fulfilling its international obligations under the resolution. While Sri Lanka is expected to measure its performance against the resolution in March 2019, the Sri Lankan president continues to reject accountability, especially for violations by the state's armed forces. He made no mention of the mass atrocities against the Tamil people committed in 2009 while speaking at the UN General Assembly this week and instead praised the ‘war heroes’ who stand accountable for them. Sirisena's flippancy about charges as heinous as the atrocities of 2009, exemplifies Sri Lankan leaders' entrenched disregard of Tamil lives. His rejection of 'foreign influences' and his claims that he would tell the UN to drop the pursuit of accountability for war crimes allegations highlights how any 'progress' made by one half of his coalition government serves only to whitewash the other. Beyond the president's rhetoric, his attempts to block courts and authorities from investigating senior military officials implicated by Sri Lanka's own Criminal Investigation Department (CID) in the abduction and disappearance of Tamil youths in 2008 epitomises precisely why accountability for Tamils will never be delivered by the Sri Lankan state.

The long-awaited Office of Missing Persons (OMP), which was used to justify the disregard of Tamil families of the disappeared who protested for over a year, has failed to inspire trust among the very families it was set up to serve. Questions remain about its independence, the inclusion of military figures and its inability to prosecute. As emphasised by local human rights defenders, a reparations office, the legislation for which has also been praised as progress, cannot be used to derail calls for an international process of accountability. In the context of the Sri Lankan state, the mere establishment of these two offices does not equate to material progress on accountability commitments.

The Tamil community has long asserted that no Sri Lankan government, regardless of ruling party, could be entrusted with delivering justice and accountability, never mind a political solution. With Sri Lanka’s mainstream parties having openly reverted to their Sinhala nationalist default, many Tamils including those who have protested day after day, have reached the end of their tether at being told to wait and hope for progress. TNA leaders who granted their unconditional support to this government must recognise that they too, and by extension the international partners that support them, have squandered the opportunity of 2015. Focusing their efforts on a new constitution at the expense of accountability has cost the TNA its leveraging power as an opposition.

In the three years since the UNHRC resolution 30/1, Tamils remain unchanged in their demands around reconciliation: accountability; justice; demilitarisation and land-release; and a meaningful political solution. The international community’s premature leap into overt engagement has failed to produce sufficient action, and more dangerously, it signals that Sri Lanka’s culture of impunity can continue unbridled, with no material consequences internationally. Sri Lanka is now once again trying to regress the narrative to the immediate aftermath of 2009, when the UN congratulated the state for the way it handled the end of the war. Without firm international action, a 'progress' that has been so far glacial at best, is under threat of veering backwards.

Illustration by Keera Ratnam

Do Not Compromise On Your Right To Know: RTI Commissioner Kishali Pinto-Jayawardena 

logoSri Lanka’s experiences with Right to Information took centre stage in Kuala Lumpur with the island nation’s progress with the RTI Act being discussed as a model for Malaysia during the days leading up to International RTI Day (28th September 2018). 
Following a historic general election of Malaysia in May 2018 that changed the political landscape of the country, the new Government had promised a freer society, the cessation of use of sedition and criminal defamation laws to suppress opposition politicians and activists and the guaranteeing of the right to information.     
Marking these developments in a press release from Jakarta this week, UNESCO announced its hosting, for the first time in Malaysia, the IPDC Talks (International Programme for the Development of Communications) in collaboration with the Asia-Pacific Institute for Broadcasting Development (AIBD) and the Radio Televisyen Malaysia (RTM) with six experts, including three international and three Malaysians, providing their perspectives on global and local point of views from national institutions and academia. 
The speakers included H.E. Steven Sim Chee Keong, Deputy Minister for Youth and Sports, Kishali Pinto-Jayawardena, Commissioner of Sri Lanka’s Right to Information Commission, Dr. Azmi Sharom, Faculty of Law, University of Malaya, Amos Toh, Legal Advisor to the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the right to freedom of opinion and expression and Barbora Bukovska, Senior Director for Law and Policy, Article19.org. 
Dr. Ming-Kuok Lim, the Advisor for Communication and Information for UNESCO Office in Jakarta and the Deputy Secretary-General of the Ministry of Communications and Multimedia, Mr. Tan Chuan Ou opened the IPDC Talks in the morning.
The IPDC Talks is an initiative of UNESCO International Programme for the Development of Communication (IPDC) which is the only multilateral forum in the UN system designed to mobilize the international community to discuss and promote media development as well as serving as a laboratory of ideas on communication issues. 
The Colombo Telegraph reproduces excerpts of the address by Sri Lanka’s RTI Commissioner Kishali Pinto-Jayawardena (courtesy UNESCO, Jakarta office):                                  
Many governments around the world jib nervously at the thought of introducing Right to Information laws due to fears that these laws may only work against them. 
That fear is right, to a certain extent. But away from sensational media headlines focusing on information targeting the political line of command and attention grabbing conferences, enacting a good RTI law often works to the advantage of a Government. This is a fact that is often underestimated. A quiet and sometimes unnoticed transformation takes place as step by gradual step, ordinary citizens start probing and prodding a leviathan bureaucracy that in Asia, has been able to survive changes of political regimes without actually reforming itself in any manner whatsoever    
Citizens who are otherwise helpless facing this leviathan gradually realize that an information law may actually help them, perhaps for the first time in a historic background where laws are often worked against them. In fact, as we see in Sri Lanka, public officers themselves have used the law to expose injustice and even corruption. Speaking from the standpoint of Sri Lanka’s Information Commission, we see this acknowledgement of the good done by the country’s RTI Act regularly, from people who appear before us. 
That said, it must also be emphasized that two main principles informed the drafting committee which formulated the RTI Bill that was enacted into law in the month of August 2016. 
First was the principle of equity applied to state and non-state bodies in securing transparency. So the Act includes not only state entities and constitutional entities downwards from the office of the President but also corporates that function with government backing, private entities contracting with the government and non-governmental organisations substantially funded by government, foreign governments or international organisations to the extent of their ‘rendering a service to the public’. 
The Act also covers security and intelligence bodies unlike other regional RTI laws. There was a stern and uncompromising refusal to sacrifice best practice norms for expediency. So for example, in the face of considerable pressure that Sri Lanka’s law should have national security agencies or the department of the chief prosecutor exempted from its reach, our insistence was that no agency can be deemed to be above the law. 
This was a remarkable development. For decades, Sri Lanka’s civil and ethnic conflict had resulted in information being officially denied by the law. Non-disclosure of information was the norm while disclosure was the exemption. Departing from this thinking, the basic principle was that, where exceptions apply, these must be by subject matter not by the privileging of certain institutions. All of these are subjected to the public interest override. 
The second principle was that the conviction that RTI should not be seen as the enemy of the public service. The Act protects the information officer (as well as other officers) from any consequences of carrying out his duties under the Act (Sections 30 and 40)        and also makes it an offence if any other officer refuses without reasonable cause to render assistance to the information officer when that assistance is sought.