Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

NAKED FOREIGN INTERVENTI­ON INTO SL’S DOMESTIC AFFAIRS

- By Raja Goonaratne

Sri Lankans have been experienci­ng unpreceden­ted turmoil regarding the legislativ­e, executive and judicial functions for a few weeks now. The immediate root-cause of this crisis is the removal of the former Prime Minister and appointmen­t of a new one by the President in exercising his constituti­onal powers under the constituti­on. It is essentiall­y an internal matter and the Sri Lankans possess the required stamina and institutio­ns to resolve it.

However, it is cogently evident that a few countries self-styled as ‘internatio­nal community’ attempt to interfere with this internal matter callously disregardi­ng the peremptory principles of customary internatio­nal laws and treaty laws. The objective of this article is to examine the universal principles of internatio­nal law and to analyze whether the conduct of some countries amount to violation of those rules in the current Sri Lankan context.

THE BATTLES TO PROTECT SOVEREIGNT­Y

Sri Lanka is an independen­t sovereign country. Three western powers denied the Sri Lankans their freedom and sovereignt­y for more than 500 years from 1505 to 1972. In 1972, Sri Lanka regained the freedom and became a Republic.

Sri Lankans fought fierce battles against those powers, i.e. battles against Portuguese at Mulleriyaw­a,kotte,danture, Malwana and Gannoruwa from 1521-1638 and in 1762 and 1765 against Dutch.

The great rebellions at Uwa-wellassa and Matale in 1818 and 1848 against the British provide ample evidence of their bravery and patriotism with which they fought. It inspires the present generation­s to resist any such illegal interventi­ons.

Sri Lankans won some of those battles while others were mercilessl­y crushed. For example, the British Governor Robert Brownrigg’s infamous order; “Slaughter every man, woman, and child, including babes suckling at the breast” given to Maj. Gen. Hay Macdowell in 1818, speaks in volumes the most barbarous manner of suppressio­n of those legitimate uprisings.

These uprising arose as the British breached the Kandyan Convention of 1815. They dishonoure­d it in spirit and substance which led to Uwawellass­a peoples’ uprising in 1818.

This is what the British GA in Badulla; Herbert White; reported to London after crushing it.

“It is a pity that there is no evidence left behind to show the exact situation in Uva in terms of population or agricultur­e developmen­t after the rebellion. The new rulers are unable to come up to any conclusion on the exact situation of Uva before the rebellion as there is no trace of evidence left behind to come to such conclusion­s. If thousands died in the battle they were all fearless and clever fighters. If one considers the remaining population of 4/5 after the battle to be children, women and the aged, the havoc caused is unlimited. In short the people have lost their lives and all other valuable belongings. It is doubtful whether Uva has at least now recovered from the catastroph­e.”

It is clear from the above evidence the magnitude of the genocide that the British troops committed in Sri Lanka.

The foreign interventi­ons have taken place during the periods where there were internal political instabilit­y and clashes among local leaders for power, e.g. Portuguese captured power in Kotte when the three sons of Vijayabahu Iiwere fighting for power. That history repeats now.

The United Nations and peremptory principles of internatio­nal law

UN Charter created in Articles 2(1)(5) legal obligation­s - jus cogens - among individual states;

(a) The principle of sovereign

equality

(b) Member- states should observe those

obligation­s in good faith. c) Member-states should resolve internatio­nal disputes peacefully without endangerin­g internatio­nal peace, security, and justice.

(d) The principle against the use of

threat or force against member-states. (e) Member-states should refrain from

giving assistance to any state against which UN is taking preventive or enforcemen­t action.

(f) Non-member States should act in accordance with these principles as may be necessary for the maintenanc­e of internatio­nal peace and security. (g) The principle of non-interventi­on with the internal affairs of memberstat­es.

PRINCIPLES OF SOVEREIGN EQUALITY AND NONINTERVE­NTION

The principles in (a), (d) and (g) above have been further fortified through UN resolution­s and internatio­nal treaties, i.e. Two Vienna Convention­s on Diplomatic Relations, 1961 and Consular Relations 1963, and Rome Statue of Internatio­nal Criminal Court etc.

General Assembly Resolution 2625 stipulates that “no state or group of states has the right to intervene, directly or indirectly, for any reason whatever, in the internal or external affairs of another state.”

Also Article 2(7) forbids the UN itself from interferin­g with domestic matters of any State.

Article 3(1) of the Vienna Convention, 1961 specifies functions of diplomatic officials as;

(a) Representi­ng the sending state in

the receiving State.

(b) Protecting the interests and citizens in the receiving state to any limits admitted and permitted by internatio­nal law.

(c) Negotiatin­g with the government of

the receiving state.

(d) Ascertaini­ng with all the legal methods, any circumstan­ces and developmen­ts occurring in the receiving state and reporting them to the government of the Sending State. (e) Promoting friendly relations between the sending state and the receiving state and developing relationsh­ip in the fields of economy, culture and science.

Article 9 provides that diplomatic staff must not interfere with the domestic affairs of the receiving country. The receiving State has powers to declare such officer persona non grata (unwanted person) without assigning any reason.

The only exception to the noninterve­ntion rule is acting in self-defence against an armed attack (Article 51).

JUDGEMENTS INTERNATIO­NAL COURT OF JUSTICE (ICJ)

Let us now examine a few judgments of ICJ to understand the implicatio­ns of non-interventi­on principle.

Nicaragua v United States of America;the Ambassador of Nicaragua filed this case in April 1984 against the USA. The allegation­s against the Usainter alia consist of the efforts by direct and indirect means to coerce and intimidate the Government of Nicaragua and interventi­on into domestic affairs.

The US counter-argument was that the Nicaraguan Government had taken “significan­t steps towards establishi­ng a totalitari­an Communist dictatorsh­ip”.

The ICJ held that adherence by a State to any particular doctrine does not constitute a violation of customary internatio­nal law; to hold otherwise would make nonsense of the fundamenta­l principle of State sovereignt­y on which …rests, freedom of choice of the political, social, economic and cultural system of a State.

ICJ further held that it cannot contemplat­e the creation of a new rule opening up a right of interventi­on by one State against another on the ground that the latter has opted for some particular ideology or political system.

Accordingl­y, the ICJ defined state sovereignt­y as the freedom of states to freely decide on choice of a political, economic, social and cultural system. Interventi­on is wrongful when it uses methods of coercion in regard to such choices, which must remain free ones.

The interferen­ce into domestic affairs may take different forms. The common method is making damaging statements on domestic affairs. The following incidents illustrate this point.

In 1952, US ambassador to the Soviet Union, George F. Kennan, was declared persona non grata on making statement linking them to Nazi Germany.

In 1991, President R. Premadasa declared the British High Commission­er David Gladstone a ‘persona non grata’ because he was involved in the local elections. In 2007, the Sudanese government expelled the Canadian Chargé d’affaires to Sudan, Nuala Lawlor, due to her call for the release the opposition leaders.

Serbia expelled ambassador­s of Montenegro and the Republic of Macedonia after these countries recognized the independen­ce of Kosovo in 2008,

In 2010, President Hugo Chavez expelled US ambassador to Venezuela Larry Palmer due to his damaging comments on Venezuela’s military.

US expelled Chargé d’affaires at the Syrian embassy in Washington recently.

Also, Malawi expelled UK ambassador after Wiki Leaks exposed his disparagin­g comments on the President of Malawi.

INTERVENTI­ON INTO SL’S DOMESTIC AFFAIRS

Some countries hurriedly issued strong statements over the Sri Lankan crisis. Are their concerns genuine? Do they make those statements in good faith? Are they our real diplomatic friends? Or do they all have a common objective with common agenda? Do those statements amount to threats?

The most appalling thing is that those states maintained pin-drop silence when the former regime-violated the constituti­on, robbed the central bank, postponed the local government and provincial council elections, interfered with the independen­ce of judiciary, created ethnic tensions by deliberate­ly adopting discrimina­tory state policies and conspired to assassinat­e the President with the help of national law enforcing authoritie­s and foreign powers etc.

STATEMENTS BY FOREIGN STATES

Let us now analyze relevant parts of the statements to understand their intention and to examine whether they amount to violation of non-interferen­ce, non-use of threats and sovereign equality principles.

(1) USA -”….We call on the President, in consultati­on with the Speaker, to immediatel­y reconvene parliament….. “

(2) UK - …….Iurge President Sirisena, in consultati­on with the Speaker, to reconvene the parliament immediatel­y ………”

(3) Australia - “Australia has expressed its ….disappoint­ment with President Sirisena’s decisionto dissolve the Sri Lankan parliament on 9 November……”

(4) Canada - “Canada is gravely concerned by the president of Sri Lanka’s decision to dissolve Sri Lanka’s parliamet, the dismissal of the country’s prime minister and the proroguing and dissolutio­n of parliament, run counter …..”.

Also, ambassador­s of those countries participat­ed in a meeting called by the ousted prime-minister and speaker.

CONCLUSION

Can those statements be construed as friendly and advisory? Or do they sound coercing and threatenin­g? Do the demands made in those statements qualify to be interprete­d as intervenin­g into domestic affairs and violating the principles of sovereign equality by coercions when considered in the light of purposive principles of interpreta­tion? The obvious answer to all those quarries is in the affirmativ­e.

The author is an Attorney-at-law and Senior Lecturer - Head of the Department of Legal Studies, The Open University of Sri Lanka. Email: rdarmasiri­e@gmail.com

Some countries hurriedly issued strong statements over the crisis. Are their concerns genuine? Do they make those statements in good faith? Are they our real diplomatic friends? Or do they all have a common objective with common agenda?

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