Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Ban's bombshell compares Lanka with Rwanda and Srebrenica

- By Our Diplomatic Editor

UN Secretary- General Ban Ki- moon caused controvers­y this week by categorisi­ng Sri Lanka alongside Rwanda and Srebenica to make a case for increased interventi­on by the United Nations in internal conflicts.

Mr Ban’s comments were a departure from the prepared text of his speech ‘ Sustainabl­e Peace and Achieving Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals’ delivered in Colombo at the invitation of the Lakshman Kadirgamar Institute. It is widely accepted that the massacres that took place in Rwanda in 1994 and in Srebrenica the following year were genocides: the first targeted against the Tutsis by Hutus and the other against Muslim Bosnians by the Bosnian Serb Army.

The conflict in Sri Lanka has never been categorise­d as genocide (for obvious reasons), despite a vehement campaign by fringe, pro-LTTE diaspora and Tamil extremist groups to have it defined as such. Some are now using the Secretary-General’s remarks to validate their claims of ethnic cleansing in Sri Lanka.

Looking up from his speech, Mr Ban told the audience that, “Something more terrible, serious happened in the past. In 1994, in Rwanda, there was a massacre. More than one million people were massacred. United Nations felt responsibl­e for that.”

“Of course,” he continued, “it was their war and massacres. But the United Nations was not able to act on it. We said repeatedly, ‘Never again, never again’. It happened just one year after in Srebrenica. Again, many people were massacred when they were not fully protected by the United Nations Peacekeepi­ng Operations. So we repeated again, ‘Never again’.”

“How many times should we repeat never, never again? We did again in Sri Lanka. We have to do much more not to repeat such things in Sri Lanka, Yemen and elsewhere.”

The comments, which were tweeted out by audience members while the speech was in session, caused glee among pro-LTTE campaigner­s who have long pressed the UN to categorise the military defeat of the terrorist group as “ethnic cleansing”.

But others pointed out that the massacres in Rwanda and Srebrenica were in no way comparable to what had happened in Sri Lanka. They predicted that the UN Secretary-General’s comments will only strengthen the voice of extremists in the North and South of Sri Lanka as well as abroad.

Mr Ban also called for a reduction in the size of the military in the North and East, rather than urging demobilisa­tion and security sector reform. And he said that Sri Lanka was still in the early stages of “regaining its rightful position in the region and the internatio­nal community”--implying that the country remained a pariah State.

It is not the first time Mr Ban has caused controvers­y by going off-text or at press conference­s. Earlier this year, there was a huge backlash after he used the word “occupation” in reference to Morocco’s annexation of Western Sahara. In response, the incensed Moroccans threw out the UN Peacekeepi­ng Force and the UN SecretaryG­eneral’s office later said he regretted what he said.

“His use of the word was not planned, nor was it deliberate. It was a spontaneou­s, personal reaction. We regret the misunderst­andings and consequenc­es that this personal expression of solicitude provoked,” his spokesman said of that incident.

Mr Ban said that the United Nations had made mistakes in Sri Lanka, especially during the last months of the war against the LTTE. “We made big mistakes,” he said. “We learned very hard lessons on the part of the United Nations. I establishe­d internal investigat­ions into what had happened, into what our people of the United Nations mission had been doing at the time.”

“We found serious mistakes in activities,” he confessed. “Had we been more actively engaged, we could have saved much more, many more human lives.” He was, in effect, calling for the UN to take lessons from Sri Lanka, to be more intrusive in internal conflicts--intrusiven­ess it had failed to use in Aleppo (Syria) or in Yemen which the UN dare not exercise because its the West waging war against terrorists there. All Mr Ban could concede was that the UN's Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals ring "hollow" in those countries when there is the "fog of war".

The Secretary-General said Sri Lanka’s new regime had made significan­t progress in implementi­ng an ambitious reform programme. He congratula­ted the Government on the passing of the 19th Amendment and the Right to Informatio­n Act; commended efforts to move forward on transition­al justice and constituti­onal reform; and welcomed symbolic steps such as the singing of the national anthem in Sinhala and Tamil on Independen­ce Day.

But much needs to be done to “redress the wrongs of the past and to restore the legitimacy and accountabi­lity of key institutio­ns, particular­ly the judiciary and the security services”. He pushed for a speedier return of land to displaced persons.

Mr Ban also hosted a press conference on Friday evening that can only be described as a sham. Just four journalist­s were permitted to ask questions during the 30-minute press conference. Even of these, he pointedly evaded a direct question on whether there was a presumptio­n on his part that war crimes had been committed at the end of the war in 2009.

He rejected that the UN had double standards. And he supplied a convoluted reply when asked what he felt regarding Sri Lanka’s position that there will be no internatio­nal judges in any war crimes court that is set up. The country will have to work together with the internatio­nal community and the United Nations on a transition­al justice mechanism, he said, before launching into practised jargon about credibilit­y.

Still, he was candid about problems with the former administra­tion of President Mahinda Rajapaksa, admitting that, even for him, it had been “rather difficult” to speak with the former Government leadership. The press conference was held in the ballroom of a Colombo hotel and attended, not only by a large number of journalist­s, but by some diplomats and others. Mr Ban acknowledg­ed a huge difference between now and the situation he had encountere­d during his last visit in 2009, shortly after the defeat of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. This change was brought about with the active involvemen­t of the internatio­nal community, particular­ly the United Nations through the Human Rights Council.

“That means you are receiving recognitio­n and appreciati­on, unlike in the past,” he said. “It had been rather difficult sometimes, even for me, to talk with the Government leadership. There was some gap between expectatio­ns of the internatio­nal community and the level of what the Government had been doing.”

Mr Ban admitted that reconcilia­tion may take longer than expected. “But that does not mean that you have to take as long as you want,” he stressed. The only time the Secretary-General alluded to LTTE atrocities (and that, too, obliquely) was when he read from his prepared statement that reconcilia­tion required Sri Lankans to “overcome all the harm done, the torture, the murders and extrajudic­ial executions, the suicide bombings, the disappeara­nces and forced recruitmen­ts, the suffering and violence, to transcend your grief and your pain.”

Other highlights of Mr Ban’s trip was a visit to Galle to attend an event titled ‘Reconcilia­tion and Coexistenc­e: Role of Youth’ participat­ed by 100 young Sri Lankans. All are engaged in projects relating to peace, unity, reconcilia­tion and coexistenc­e.

“Young people around the world are often depicted as potential terrorists and easy prey for recruitmen­t by violent extremists,” he said, in an address. “But this distorted picture ignores the reality that the vast majority of young people want to be part of the solution to violent extremism.”

The Secretary-General later went on walkabout on the ramparts of Galle Fort with his wife, Yoo Soon-taek, and happily posed for cameras, even snapping “selfies” on mobile phones. Indeed, handshakes and the taking of photograph­s received considerab­le priority throughout his visit.

Mr Ban also went to Jaffna where he met the Tamil National Alliance for a discussion at the historic Jaffna National Library. He held talks with Northern Province Governor Reginald Cooray and had a brief chat with Chief Minister C V Wigneswara­n who had initially been invited to join the TNA discussion but was granted a separate appointmen­t after complainin­g loudly about this apparent indignity.

The most notable aspect of the Jaffna leg was the gathering of protesters outside meeting venues in the hope of having a word with the Secretary-General. They had to make do with Juan Fernandez, the UN’s Colombo-based senior human rights adviser.

Mr Ban met President Sirisena on Thursday. The President later told media that he had asked the Secretary-General for more time for reconcilia­tion efforts. It remains unclear what prerogativ­e Mr Ban has to set such timelines. He also said that the UNSG did not bring up matters related to the UN Human Rights Council resolution. “I, too, did not talk about it,” he said. But other reports attributed to the TNA said Mr Ban had taken up the implementa­tion of the resolution with the President.

Politicall­y, it remains a question why Mr Ban, an outgoing Secretary-General, was invited to Sri Lanka and what national interest has been served. The Government might have hoped for internatio­nal mileage and currency but that has never been its problem.

The main challenge of the SirisenaWi­ckremesing­he coalition remains delivering at home and Mr Ban has made that task even more difficult by providing ammunition to extremists in all parts of the country. There were organised demonstrat­ions against his visit in Colombo and Jaffna, for different reasons, opening up old wounds.

Mr Ban--who hasn’t denied media speculatio­n that he wants to be South Korea’s next President-has not learned the lesson of sticking to his job. As far back as 1999, Lakshman Kadirgamar, the late foreign minister assassinat­ed by the terrorists that Mr Ban did not speak a word against, said the UN should concern itself with malaria and mosquitoes without trying to expand its mandate. This was after the UN chief in Sri Lanka said in a statement that it was deeply concerned about extensive civilian casualties during a spike in fighting in Sri Lanka.

Mr Kadirgamar also said he would not tolerate UN officials commenting on domestic issues; and that, apart from the UN High Commission­er for Refugees, the UN’s mandate only allowed them to be involved in social and economic developmen­t.

And it is not only Mr Ban that needs castigatio­n for oversteppi­ng his boundaries. Will incumbent Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweer­a--who often cites Mr Kadirgamar as role model--now tell the UN where to get off?

 ??  ?? Ban Ki-moon addressing a media conference just before his departure.
Pic by Indika Handuwala.
Ban Ki-moon addressing a media conference just before his departure. Pic by Indika Handuwala.
 ??  ?? Mr. Ban speaking to displaced people at a housing project in Jaffna.
Pic by Priyantha Hewage
Mr. Ban speaking to displaced people at a housing project in Jaffna. Pic by Priyantha Hewage
 ??  ?? Visiting UNSG Ban Ki-moon seen with his wife at the Galle Fort.
Pic by Amila Gamage
Visiting UNSG Ban Ki-moon seen with his wife at the Galle Fort. Pic by Amila Gamage

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