Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

UN 'clarifies' Sec.Gen.'s comparison of SL with Rwanda, Srebrenica

- By Our Diplomatic Editor

United Nations (UN) Official Spokespers­on Stephane Dujarric on Tuesday clarified UN Secretary General (SG) Ban-Ki moon’s controvers­ial remarks in Colombo last week, by saying he was only engaged in self-criticism of the world body in protecting vulnerable people and that, he did not mean to compare situations in the different countries.

Asked at the press briefing at UN headquarte­rs in New York, to explain what the UN SG meant by referring to Rwanda, Srebrenica, Sri Lanka and Yemen, while delivering a lecture in Colombo, Spokespers­on Dujarric said Mr Ban was “speaking off the cuff” and “what he was doing was saying that the UN had failed as a whole to protect the vulnerable and “those who we are meant to protect and in the context of Srebrenica and of Rwanda, you know, he had also engaged in self-reflection, self-criticism”.

The official clarificat­ion came in what appeared to be a damage control exercise, after the UN SG rather undiplomat­ically, left open to interpreta­tion certain remarks on Sri Lanka, during his visit here last week.

Mr Ban departed from his prepared text during a speech on ‘Sustainabl­e Peace and Achieving Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals’ to categorise Sri Lanka alongside Rwanda, Yemen and Srebrenica to make a case for increased interventi­on by the UN in internal conflicts.

Looking up from his speech, Mr Ban said, “Something more terrible, serious happened in the past. In 1994, in Rwanda, there was a massacre. More than 1 million people were massacred. The UN felt responsibl­e for that.”

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

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

Mr Ban’s comments have raised a storm of protest because the incidents in both Rwanda and Srebrenica are internatio­nally accepted as genocide--in stark contrast to the situation in Sri Lanka, during its military campaign to defeat the LTTE in 2009. The LTTE had been declared a terrorist organisati­on in the US, EU, India, Malaysia etc.,

“He wasn’t making a direct comparison between those situations in... you know, situation in Srebrenica and Sri Lanka, nor was he making any parallels as to the actual nature of the crisis,” Mr Dujarric said.

In Parliament, Mr. Ban’s controvers­ial remarks were the subject of an adjournmen­t motion brought by the Opposition. MPs Dinesh Gunawarden­e, Bandula Gunawarden­e and Keheliya Rambukwell­a were critical of the UN SG’s remarks lumping what happened in Sri Lanka with what happened in Rwanda and Srebrenica. Minister Mahinda Samarasing­he and Acting Minister Harsha de Silva defended the UN SG, saying he had said “more terrible, serious” things happened in Rwanda and Srebrenica and therefore, he hadn’t compared what happened in Sri Lanka with what happened in Rwanda and Srebrenica.

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