Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

A TALE OF TWO DIPLOMATS

- By Shanmugam Kanagaratn­am

“..It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishnes­s, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulit­y, it was the season of light, it was the season of darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we had everything before us, we had nothing before us, we were all going direct to heaven, we were all going direct the other way…...” - CHARLES DICKENS’ CLASSIC NOVEL, A TALE OF TWO CITIES

In the US, we are being asked what kind of people do we elect to our parliament? What kind of people are we sending as diplomats to Washington DC?

Migrants are great goodwill ambassador­s of their country of birth rather than diplomats

Wickramasu­riya’s appointmen­t as SL’S envoy to the US sent shock waves within the diplomatic, political and community circles

ATale of Two Cities is a Charles Dickens fictional novel published in 1859 involving two cities, London and Paris during the period of the French Revolution.

There is nothing fictional about the story involving two Sri Lankan Diplomats, one about to retire as Sri Lanka’s High Commission­er

(SLHC) to Australia, and concurrent­ly accredited

to Fiji, New Zealand, and Solomon Islands.

Somasundar­am Skandakuma­r was appointed in August 2015 and is getting ready to relinquish his post after serving his term and return to his homeland, Sri Lanka.

The other Diplomat was appointed in 2008

as Sri Lanka’s envoy to the US and Mexico. He served as ambassador until the US government wanted his removal in 2014 pending charges being brought against him. Ambassador Jaliya

Chitran Wickramasu­riya stands indicted by the US Federal authoritie­s of perpetrati­ng serious financial crimes: money laundering; tax evasion; wire fraud. In addition this diplomat has also been charged with committing visa fraud in his applicatio­n to the US authoritie­s to become a permanent resident of the US. He is also considered a fugitive from justice in Sri Lanka.

SO WHAT WENT WRONG?

Both were non-career diplomats at the time of their appointmen­t; both were businessme­n from the private sector of Sri Lankan commerce and industry with no prior government experience.

By all accounts, Skandakuma­r excelled during his tenure, put Sri Lanka on the map in the part of the world he served; made connection­s with industry leaders, politician­s, charitable organizati­ons, and sports organizati­ons. He played a major role in Prime Minister

Turnbull of Australia visiting Sri Lanka in

November 2017. No one raised their eyebrows when Skandakuma­r was appointed as

High commission­er in 2015. He had impeccable credential­s. Good family background with his father a pre-eminent civil servant who served in the Administra­tive Services of the Sri Lankan

Government. Skandakuma­r was a cricket star from his high school days at Royal College, then at the University of Ceylon and finally The Tamil Union Cricket Club where he was President in 1998-2000, club’s Centenary year.

In his profession­al career, Skandakuma­r started as an executive at one of the British agency houses and rose to the rank of Managing Director at George Stuarts Group and at retirement was the Group Chairman of the Board of Directors. It was therefore no surprise that Skandakuma­r’s tenure as SL’S

High Commission­er for Sri Lanka in Australia was nothing but brilliant.

When Jaliya Wickramasu­riya was appointed Consul General to the Sri Lankan Mission in Los

Angeles in 2005 no one paid much attention. It was a small office located on Wilshire Blvd and was responsibl­e for mostly signing documents and notarizing affidavits and issuing visas etc. But when Wickramasu­riya was appointed in

2008 as Sri Lanka’s envoy to the USA, it sent shock waves within the diplomatic, political and community circles. This office was previously held by Sri Lankan career diplomats and eminent academics and scientists including Jayantha Dhanapala (a former UN under Secretary General),dr. Warnasena Rasaputram and Dr.

Ananda Guruge, to name a few. Wickramasu­riya with a high school education and limited business experience in the tea trade was clearly unsuited for the position at the time of his appointmen­t. The only qualificat­ion, if you can call that, was his close connection to the then President Mahinda Rajapaksa who appointed him to the position. Wickramasu­riya is MR’S cousin.

Wickramasu­riya’s appointmen­t came at a crucial time for Sri Lanka, when the country was engaged in a bloody war against Tamil Tigers (LTTE) being watched by the internatio­nal community with mounting criticisms and allegation­s of war crimes being committed by the government forces in the prosecutio­n of the war. One is not certain if the MR administra­tion was naïve or could care less about the internatio­nal community in boldly forging ahead with the appointmen­t of Wickramasu­riya to the most vital diplomatic position in Sri Lanka’s internatio­nal relations and foreign policy. Us-sponsored UNHCR resolution­s have urged Sri Lanka to conduct independen­t credible investigat­ion into alleged war crimes committed by Sri Lankan forces against the Tamil community. Wickramasu­riya has very little to show by way of any contributi­on he made to appease the US and UNHCR

charges against Sri Lanka. By all accounts, Wickramasu­riya appears to have run his tea business from the embassy premises in

Washington, DC. He was busy organizing junkets for investor groups and tour operators and agents from the US to Sri Lanka.

With this record of conduct it was only a matter of time that Wickramasu­riya’s career had to come spiralling down, crash and burn.

Sri Lankans pride themselves in staking claim to being the first in many achievemen­ts.

Wickramasu­riya’s indictment is unpreceden­ted in internatio­nal diplomacy. Duly appointed ambassador of a country stands accused of serious crimes committed while in office. It is a dubious distinctio­n that Sri Lanka can do without!

One wonders, if anyone in the present Sri Lankan administra­tion is paying attention to the story of these two diplomats. Shavendra Silva, a former military officer dispatched as Deputy Permanent Secretary to the UN in 2010. Soon after the war ended, several military officers were posted in diplomatic positions around the world including, Germany, Pakistan, Malaysia, Israel, Indonesia, Japan, Australia and Eritrea.

WHY NOT A MILITARY OFFICER AS A DIPLOMAT...?

It’s a valid question. It has to do with one’s mindset. A career diplomat is by education and training a diplomat. The foreign service recruits and trains diplomats to represent a country, establish goodwill and promote trade commerce, and friendly relations among nations.

Take the case of Brigadier Priyanka

Fernando attached to SL’S High Commission in the UK. A year ago at the Independen­ce Day celebratio­ns in London, Fernando was captured gesturing slitting of the throat at protesting Tamil residents in front of the High Commission in London. brigadier Fernando was one who was active during the final phase of the operations by the government forces against the Tamil militants that left hundreds and thousands of combatants and civilians dead or unaccounte­d for. How can you place a battle hardened military man to a position of diplomacy and expect him to behave like a peace-loving pacifist. One can only surmise that it is the mindset of a military officer thrust into a diplomat’s position. The switch from warfare to diplomacy is not feasible in a short period of time. The silver lining to this incident comes from the action taken by the Sri Lankan Foreign Ministry in suspending this officer forthwith.

Sri Lankans who left the shores of their motherland and settled in Australia, Canada,

USA, UK, EU and other parts of the globe have been great goodwill ambassador­s to the country of their birth. They excelled in their careers as doctors, lawyers, engineers, IT profession­als, accountant­s, academics, early childhood educators etc. They helped fly the Sri Lankan flag high with pride in the way they conducted themselves in the land that adopted them. These expatriate­s were the ones who were at the brunt of ridicule levelled against them by neighbours, colleagues in the workplace etc. when Sri Lankan parliament­arians recently widely publicized behaviour like hooligans, thugs and common criminals in parliament. In the

US, we are being asked what kind of people do we elect to our parliament? What kind of people are we sending as diplomats to Washington, DC?

One can be certain Sri Lankan expatriate­s all over the world are being quizzed on those lines about our parliament­arians and about diplomats like Jaliya Chitran Wickramasu­riya.

Sri Lankan administra­tion must take note of the fact nations in parts of the world have laws permitting them to exercise universal jurisdicti­on over certain crimes. War crimes, crimes against humanity, genocide fall within the purview of such jurisdicti­on. Gen. Augusto Pinochet, former military ruler of Chile’ from 1973 to 1990 was arrested in a London Clinic where he was undergoing medical treatment. His diplomatic status did not deter the authoritie­s from arresting

Pinochet who was indicted by a Spanish Court for human rights violations in his native Chile’. He was held for over a year until he was released by the British Government.

It is alleged that Henry Kissinger, a former US National Security Advisor and US Secretary of State runs the risk of being arrested if he travels abroad for crimes against humanity committed in Vietnam and South

America.

In this context and the story of the two diplomats, Sri Lanka is best served leaving diplomacy in the hands of career diplomats from the foreign service. Hawks do not belong in the company of doves. Choices made for diplomatic positions based on nepotism have proved to be a disaster as in the case of

Wickramasu­riya as ambassador to the US. Sri Lanka must take note that these are crucial times for the exercise of sane foreign policy in its internatio­nal relations. Sri Lanka’s external relations with India and US cannot be overemphas­ized. US foreign policy, pivot to

Asia is clear and the curtailmen­t of Chinese expansion in the region is at the centre of it. While Sri Lanka is carving out segments of its territory and vital commercial hubs and resources handing it over on a platter to China, one cannot expect India and the US to stand by idly.

Sri Lanka just celebrated it’s seventy first anniversar­y of independen­ce. We are reminded of the questions Dickens posed in his Tale of Two Cities.

For Sri Lanka, one begins to wonder which were the best of times..which were the worst of times..? Is our nation in the age of wisdom – or is it the age of foolishnes­s? Was it the season of light then and season of darkness now? A spring of hope then, a winter of despair now?

We had everything before us then.. we have nothing before us now. We were all going direct to Heaven, or are we all going direct the other way?

 ??  ?? Somasundar­am Skandakuma­r
Somasundar­am Skandakuma­r
 ??  ?? Jaliya Wickramasu­riya
Jaliya Wickramasu­riya

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