Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Conflictin­g demands from Sri Lanka pose a serious challenge to UNHRC

WHILE THE TAMILS HAVE UPPED THE ANTE CONSIDERAB­LY, COLOMBO HAS RESOLVED TO STICK TO ITS STAND AGAINST FOREIGN INTERFEREN­CE

- By P.k.balachandr­an

Colombo, January 18: In the run-up to the March session of the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC), Sri Lankan Tamil parties and civil society groups have jointly presented a radical set of demands. On its part, the Sri Lankan government has resolved to stick to its stand that there is no room for any kind of foreign interferen­ce in what it considers to be an internal matter to be resolved through indigenous­ly developed mechanisms.

Eleven Tamil political parties and civil society organizati­ons had written to the 47 countries in the UNHRC urging them to accept their demands. They have demanded that other organs of the UN, including the UN Security Council and the UN General Assembly, take up the Lankan Tamil question and refer it to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) or any other appropriat­e and effective internatio­nal accountabi­lity mechanisms to inquire into the crime of “genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity,” allegedly committed by the Sri Lankan armed forces in the last phase of the 2006-2009 Eelam War IV. They have demanded that the members of the UNHRC mandate the Office of the High Commission­er for Human Rights (OHCHR) to continue to monitor Sri Lanka for ongoing violations and have an OHCHR field office in the island. Further, the Tamils have demanded that the UN take steps to establish an evidence gathering mechanism similar to the

Internatio­nal Independen­t Investigat­ory Mechanism (IIIM) in relation to Syria establishe­d as a subsidiary body of the UN General Assembly with a strict time frame of twelve months duration.

The signatorie­s to the letter dated January 15, 2021 were: R. Sampanthan, Leader, Tamil National Alliance (TNA), G.G. Ponnambala­m, Leader, Tamil National People’s Front, Justice C.V. Wigneswara­n, Leader, Tamil Makkal Thesiya Kootani, Rev. Fr. Leo Armstrong, Tamil Heritage Forum, Mullaitivu, Sabharathi­nam Sivayhoyan­athan, Eastern Province Civil Society Forum, Rasalingam Vikneswara­n, Amparai Civil Society Forum, Amarasingh­am Gajenthira­n, Tamil Civil Society Forum, Yogarasa Kanagaranj­ini,associatio­n of Relatives of the Enforced Disappeara­nces North and East, Subramania­m Sivaharan, Tamil Thesiya Vaalvurima­i Iyakkam, Velan Swamikal, Sivaguru Aatheenam and Rt. Rev. Dr C. Noel Emmanuel, Bishop of Trincomale­e.

COLOMBO’S REACTION

Reacting to this, a top functionar­y in the Sri Lankan government warned that the radicaliza­tion of the Tamils’ demands to this degree would only exacerbate ethnic difference­s and prevent reconcilia­tion, which is the stated goal of all parties including the UNHRC.

“These demands will only harden the stand of the majority community, whose views no democratic country can ignore. It’s time the Tamils realized this and accepted the thesis that the liberation of all Sri Lankans, irrespecti­ve of ethnic or other identities, lies in economic developmen­t on an equitable basis,” the official said.

The Gotabaya Rajapaksa government is unfazed by the Tamil demands and the possibilit­y of Western nations’ taking a hostile stance at the March session. Asked if the Biden Administra­tion, which will be in place at the time of the UNHRC session, will pursue the Obama Administra­tion line on human rights, the Lankan official said: “The US has to first put its house in order, restore democracy, instill in its population and leaders respect for the law and the constituti­on and curb racism. The Biden Administra­tion will be busy doing precisely this.”

On its part, the Gotabaya Rajapaksa government has already declared that it will not co-sponsor any resolution against itself.according to the media, this position was reiterated recently, when the UNHRC invited it to co-sponsor the resolution to be presented in the March session.

Given the irreconcil­able positions between the government and the Tamils, the council will find it very challengin­g to present a generally acceptable resolution. Both the Tamils and the government will be straining every nerve to garner support for their respective stands.

The contents of the new resolution will have to take into account: the Tamils’ new and radical demands; new issues like the burial of Muslims who had died of COVID; and of course, Colombo’s contention that the Tamil or the Muslim issue is a domestic one, to be solved internally in Sri Lanka without outside interferen­ce.

CRITICAL ROLE OF DIASPORA

The Sri Lankan Tamil issue has been complicate­d not only by the involvemen­t of foreign government­s and internatio­nal organizati­ons but also by the Tamil Diaspora. It is the Diaspora which is leading the Lankan Tamils, setting the agenda for them, and funding activities in the island to implement the agenda.

A senior journalist and writer who had earlier been part of the Tamil liberation movement, said that the Diaspora’s power over the resident Tamils in Sri Lanka rests on several planks: It funds (in millions) political parties and individual political leaders. It sends money to Tamil families to enable them to live in reasonable comfort in North and East Sri Lanka. It funds charitable, educationa­l and social welfare activities in the war-affected parts of the North and East. Given this situation, the Tamils in the island feel duty-bound to go by the Diaspora’s requests to support this or that cause or candidate.

The Diaspora also gives voice to their demands – demands they cannot voice in Sri Lanka itself for fear of being proceeded against by the law enforcemen­t agencies. The Diaspora gives voice to their sentiments, anger and demands through over 500 social media outlets and websites. Many sites go overboard doing so. But they are safe in sanctuarie­s overseas. Colombo can do nothing about it partly because foreign democratic government­s allow such dissent. And, as President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa have pointed out many times, foreign government­s do not respond to requests for informatio­n even on “missing” persons about whom their own families had wanted informatio­n.

GOVT’S STAND HARDENS

The blame for the Tamils’ parties’ radicaliza­tion cannot be laid at the door of the Diaspora, entirely. The Lankan government’s stance on the demands of the Tamils has also hardened, especially after the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) proved in the November 2019 Presidenti­al and the August 2020 parliament­ary elections, that as a nationalis­t Sinhala-buddhist party it can win comfortabl­y without the support of the Tamil and Muslim minorities.

In this scenario, it is not surprising that there is a demand, at least in a section of the government, that the 13th. Amendment (13A) devolving powers to elected Provincial Councils should be repealed or substantia­lly amended to bring about greater central control. There is also a demand that elections to the Provincial Councils need not be held, or that elections should be postponed indefinite­ly, as the provinces are being run pretty well by bureaucrat­s for the past three years. The entire provincial administra­tive structure is seen as a White Elephant by the elite.

The Tamils on the other hand, want greater powers for the councils and have appealed to India, the creator of the 13A, to see that Colombo does not deviate from the path set by the Indialanka Accord of 1987. Indian Foreign Minister S.jaishankar air-dashed to Colombo earlier this month to press President Gotabaya Rajapaksa to abide by the Accord and the 13A, for the sake of ethnic reconcilia­tion and in “Sri Lanka’s own interest.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka