Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

UNHRC RESOLUTION IS A TRAGEDY

THE GOVERNMENT’S REACTION IS A TRAGICOMED­Y

- By Ranga Jayasuriya

It is a fool’s errand to make-believe that the UN Human Rights Council Resolution titled, “Promoting reconcilia­tion, accountabi­lity and human rights in Sri Lanka”, and adopted last week would help promoting human rights in the country. It is unlikely that the most vocal backers of the resolution think that the resolution would serve that. Instead, for the UK, Canada, and other members of the Western European and other Group and the United States that had returned to the fold under the Joe Biden administra­tion, the resolution was one way of taking a swipe at the Gotabaya Rajapaksa government after an uneasy relationsh­ip.

For the Tamil diaspora groups, many of which were run by the apologists and accessorie­s of the defeated LTTE, who lobbied for the resolution, it was sort of a consolatio­n prize for losing the separatist war.

The resolution was primarily built on a report delivered by the High Commission­er for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet. Ms Bachelet, who is more likely to give ear to Yasmin Sooka of the Internatio­nal Truth and Justice Project than the government of Sri Lanka, presented a damning report. She nonetheles­s raised worthwhile concerns on the increasing militarisa­tion of the civilian bureaucrac­y, politicisa­tion of independen­t institutio­ns, including the judiciary under the 20th amendment, discrimina­tory policies against religious and cultural rights of ethnic minorities, political obstructio­n of investigat­ions into some of the high profile crimes in the past, surveillan­ce of the civil society activists and the shrinking democratic space.

As much as those concerns deserve attention, they are not yet a full-blown eventualit­y. This is also not a situation unique to Sri Lanka; from Modi’s India to Bolsanaro’s Brazil and Trump’s America, countries have been experienci­ng momentary ups and downs of democracy. And the alarmist presumptio­ns alone would not warrant a UNHRC resolution.

Ms Bachelet however used these concerns as a pretext to revive a previous bid to punish the Sri Lankan security forces for defeating one of the most egregious terrorist groups. Much of the allegation­s of war crime, in the form of deliberate shelling of hospitals and civilians, and a back of envelope number of civilian casualties are a retelling of the LTTE propaganda. Marzuki Darusman and his peers who were denied a visa to visit Sri Lanka, spoke to the relatives of dead terrorists and the Tiger rump in the West, and concocted a report that provided credence to those inflated numbers.

The Sri Lankan government at the time rejected those claims. But, with Mahinda Rajapaksa having turned the Sri Lankan state into his fiefdom through the 18th amendment, a politicise­d judiciary and a rubberstam­p parliament, the government lacked the moral high grounds to make others believe its version of the story.

As the younger brother, Gotabaya has taken the same road, under the 20th amendment, Ms Bachelet exploited the structural weakness of the Sri Lankan government and its internatio­nal standing.

However, would the UNHRC resolution serve the interest of Sri Lanka? Hardly.

Instead, Ms Bachelet had managed to burn bridges. In that sense, the UNHRC resolution is a tragedy. It serves no one, not even the geopolitic­al interests of the major powers that supported it.

However, the government’s reaction to it need not become a tragicomed­y. But, it was what had been unfolding during the past week. Soon after the resolution was passed, the foreign minister Dinesh Gunawarden­e, who said it was illegal, added, voting was ‘ a great victory ’ for the country. His logic is as skewed as it can get. He observed that only 22 countries out of 47 have voted in favour of the resolution. Those who had abstained were 14 countries. Thus, by his implicatio­n, more countries, (11 voted against and 14 abstained) supported Sri Lanka, than those who supported the resolution.

Not to be outgunned, State Minister of Money Market Ajith Nivard Cabraal number crunched with an infographi­c and tweeted “The 11 countries that voted AGAINST the #UNHRC resolution represent 43% of the popn of the UNHRC members: 14 with 39% of the popn ABSTAINED: and 22 with only 18% of the popn said YES. #Srilanka says THANK YOU to the 25 nations with 82% of the popn who didn’t say Yes. #lka “

This charade did not end there. An English newspaper owned by a businessma­n affiliated to the government reported that the ‘Government is planning to protect military officials from internatio­nal prosecutio­n through the introducti­on of laws that would purportedl­y grant military officials internatio­nal immunity.”

How does Sri Lanka make laws that are enforceabl­e in other countries was not explained. The fact of the matter is that immunity provisions even adopted to local law would not have the slightest effect if any country chooses to pursue universal jurisdicti­on. Worst still, in such an eventualit­y, the domestic immunity would further strengthen the calls to prosecute the alleged perpetrato­rs in foreign courts.

The UNHRC resolution is a milestone of this government’s serial failure of a foreign policy. But, it seems to have only hastened the race to the bottom.

Sri Lanka’s predicamen­t is a classic cautionary tale as to why foreign policy should not be pursued with an eye on achieving domestic political calculatio­ns. It was what Gotabaya Rajapaksa did when his government withdrew the co-sponsorshi­p of the previous UNHRC resolution which was supported by his predecesso­r. The UNP -led Yahapalana­ya government, though was not as forceful enough in manipulati­ng domestic public opinion as the Rajapaksas are, were smart in their dealing with the world. The allegation­s of war crimes were a major distractio­n and irritant in the country’s foreign relations. By co-sponsoring the resolution (30/1), the previous government kicked the can down the road. By Sri Lanka taking ownership of the collective effect, a once vocal internatio­nal campaign was forced to a sideline. The Gotabaya Rajapaksa government consciousl­y picked up and opened that can of worms. And, that thin brained decision now risks the Sri Lankan military personnel and perhaps civilian leaders being subjected to universal jurisdicti­on in some countries.

How the government can come out of this predicamen­t is not clear. What is clear though is a majority of its interlocut­ors lacked the commonsens­e foreign policy awareness to navigate these challenges. Their overreacti­on would do further damage to Sri Lanka’s relations with the West and potentiall­y provoke India at one point.

A potential economic fallout, if the situation further deteriorat­es can not be overlooked. Nor can the Sri Lankan economy withstand such pressure. Their racist dog whistlings have marginalis­ed the minorities and could potentiall­y rekindle the ugly side of minority extremism in this country, which has done more harm than any of the Sinhala Buddhist majoritari­an rhetoric that Sri Lanka’s Western friends fret about.

This government has put Sri Lanka on a dangerous trajectory. It should do whatever to extricate the country from this predicamen­t.

Follow @Rangajayas­uriya on Twiiter

How the government can come out of this predicamen­t is not clear. What is clear though is a majority of its interlocut­ors lacked the commonsens­e foreign policy awareness to navigate these challenges

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