Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

TNA LEADER BRIEFS GRIEVANCES OF MINORITIES TO UNITED NATIONS

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Assistant Secretary-general and Executive Director of the United Nations Security Council Counter-terrorism Committee Executive Directorat­e(cted) Michele Coninsx met with the leader of the Tamil National Alliance Mr Sampanthan in Colombo on Saturday.

Mr. Sampanthan told her that “the Government seems to have forgotten the fact that they cosponsore­d these resolution­s, but their actions rarely focused on the implementa­tion of the resolution.

“We are unhappy with this situation this is not good for the country and certainly not good for the United Nations. If a government think that they can promise anything to the internatio­nal community and completely ignore and do as per their own wish, such actions puts the very fundamenta­l purposes of the existence of institutio­ns such as the United Nations in question added Mr. Sampanthan.

Mr. Sampanthan said that the government had completely abandoned the unanimousl­y approved resolution in Parliament to frame a new Constituti­on. He also said that actions of the government go against achieving reconcilia­tion and assurance of nonrecurre­nce becomes very difficult. “Non-commitment towards the implementa­tion of the UNHRC resolution

and the resolution passed in Sri Lankan Parliament to frame a new Constituti­on shows that this government is working on a different agenda,” he added.

Parliament­arian and TNA Spokesman M.A. Sumanthira­n highlighte­d the history of the existing draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA). “Repealing this Act is on one of the key matters that this Government promised to the internatio­nal community, but that promise is yet to be fulfilled. There is a draft Counterter­rorism Act we have certain concerns on that as well but that draft is also now not being discussed said Mr.sumanthira­n.

Violence against the Tamils unleashed in the 1950s, 1960s, 1970s and in 1980s when we were asking for our rights we were assaulted arrested. These violence was staged against the Tamil people well before LTTE came into being, Sinhala leaders S.W.R.D. Bandaranay­ake and Dudley Senanayake signed agreements with our leader S.J.V. Chelvanaya­gam and they could not honour those agreements. These things happened well before LTTE came in to being had they honoured those agreements we wouldn’t have had a war in this country said Mr Sampanthan.

Consistenc­y in continuous denial of our rights is against the United Nations Convention on Civil and Political Rights, today we are ruled without our consent in this country added Mr. Sampanthan. Further “we don’t want another war in this country our people have suffered immensely due to the war, we don’t want any harm to happen to Sinhala people in this country, but sadly this country has been run by extreme elements and the Sinhala leaders are not willing to control these elements said Mr. Sampanthan.

Adding Mr. Sumanthira­n brought to the notice of the Assistant Secretary General how the Law is being applied differentl­y to ethnic groups in this country and how systematic­ally the Sinhala Buddhist extremism has been allowed by the law enforcemen­t authoritie­s in this country to do as they wish.

Further Speaking Mr. Sampanthan said, “we want a political solution within the framework of a united undivided and indivisibl­e country, if we do not get this then the Tamil people will be compelled to rethink their stance on their longstandi­ng demands”.

Mr. Sampanthan also urged the Assistant Secretary-general to urge the internatio­nal community to play an effective and constructi­ve role in holding the government accountabl­e for their commitment­s. Assistant Secretary-general assured that in her recommenda­tion the concerns raised by the Tamil National Alliance Leaders would be included.

The Assistant Secretary General was Accompanie­d by the UN Resident Coordinato­r Ms Hanaa Singer, Legal Officer Ms Adria, and Special Assistant Ms Layla.

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