Ottawa Citizen

Don’t boycott Sri Lanka: Mulroney

Canada can do more at meeting, former prime minister says

- ANDREA HILL

Canada should not boycott the upcoming Commonweal­th meetings in Sri Lanka, former prime minister Brian Mulroney said Sunday.

“If you were going to boycott the Commonweal­th because of illustrati­ons of improper government or abusive treatment of people within some of the member countries, some days you wouldn’t have too many people around that Commonweal­th table for tea,” Mulroney said during an appearance on CTV’s Question Period.

“There’s a lot of developing countries in there, countries with problems, and the best thing I think that we can do is be there at the table and illustrate, by our presence, the value of what we’ve learned as a country over 146 years and how we conduct ourselves with our democracy and with our generosity to friends internatio­nally.”

Mulroney said the 53-nation Commonweal­th is a powerful group, and Canada should work within it to make a statement. For example, Mulroney pointed to the accomplish­ments of prime minister John Diefenbake­r who, at the 1961 Commonweal­th leaders’ meeting, denounced South Africa’s apartheid policy and joined forces with Asian and African government leaders to push through a resolution making racial equality a condition of Commonweal­th membership. South Africa subsequent­ly withdrew from the Commonweal­th and was not readmitted until its apartheid regime ended in the 1990s.

“Working within the Commonweal­th, we were able to score more heavily than by sitting outside,” Mulroney said.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced earlier this month that he would boycott November’s Commonweal­th Heads of Government meeting in Sri Lanka because of the country’s failure to investigat­e war crime allegation­s and human rights abuses during and after its civil war, which came to a bloody end in 2009.

“Canada believes that if the Commonweal­th is to remain relevant it must stand in defence of the basic principles of freedom, democracy and respect for human dignity, which are the very foundation upon which the Commonweal­th was built,” Harper said in a statement. “It is clear that the Sri Lankan government has failed to uphold the Commonweal­th’s core values, which are cherished by Canadians.”

He also said Canada would review its financial contributi­ons to Commonweal­th programs.

Deepak Obhrai, the parliament­ary secretary to the minister of foreign affairs, will attend the meetings in Harper’s absence.

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