Pilgrimage to Geneva
The recent US decision to slap a travel ban on Sri Lanka’s Army chief and his family is either a warning salvo across the bow – for the Government to fall in line, or an utterly ill-conceived move that pits ordinary Sri Lankans against the US.
In announcing its decision, Washington said it had “credible” information of war crimes committed by the Army commander. It also famously said it had “credible” information that Saddam Hussein had Weapons of Mass Destruction.
Former Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez once described an Obama1 and an Obama2 running US policy. One danced to the dictates of the Defence Department knocking the daylights out of people around the world in various wars, while Two preached human rights to the world through the State Department. When the US is seeking to find ‘entrée’ here through proposed military and economic pacts like SOFA and the MCC which remain on the table, how blacklisting the Army commander helps Washington is difficult to fathom. This is probably why the Sri Lankan Foreign Relations Minister told the US ambassador last Sunday that already icy and dicey US-SL relations have now got “complicated”.
Then we have Resolution 30/1 and 40/1 at the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) against Sri Lanka. The Cabinet decision this week has been more moderate than the hype leading to it that Sri Lanka will be pulling out of these Resolutions. The official account states that Sri Lanka will “announce” its decision to withdraw from the co-sponsorship, and “work towards the closure of the resolution in cooperation with the members of the UN”.
How ready the Government is to adopt a confrontational course on the world stage is questionable. While Sri Lanka co-sponsoring the Resolutions against itself sounded absurd ex-facie, and an affront to national pride, it nevertheless acted as a buffer against any immediate sanctions on Sri Lankan political and military leaders -- and the country. The former Government was able to buy time through a moratorium until it got its act together and warded off any international scrutiny and intrusion of an adverse nature.
It is noteworthy, that despite a fifth column like the Tamil National Alliance dancing to the drum of the Diaspora by calling for an international war crimes tribunal to investigate and adjudicate on the conduct of the country’s Armed Forces for defeating the LTTE, the latest UNHRC Country Report on Sri Lanka has only a veiled mention on the subject. It merely refers to the need for an even more independent judiciary and more robust action on missing persons etc. For the Resolutions to be thrown away requires 27 votes in the UNHRC -- an uphill task. The UK and puppet states like Macedonia stepped in to support the Resolutions when the US pulled out of the UNHRC – they are, therefore, not going to stand by and eat humble pie. This is too big an UNHRC test model for them to let small countries get off so easily.
The Government has, fortunately, acted soberly. It has offered to explore a way-out for both sides by suggesting only a symbolic co-sponsorship withdrawal. They will have to get “undeliverables” like foreign judges discarded, but agree to implement what is “doable” such as following the recommendations of the LLRC (Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission) and implementing the OMP (Office of Missing Persons), taking credit for both, and pay compensation etc. One foreign policy expert described it best; “The Yahapalana Government blundered by signing on to a Western wish list without negotiating a deliverable outcome. This Government should not blunder as well by signing off unilaterally without negotiating. Neither the West, nor Sri Lanka can afford to rub their mutual noses”.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2020