Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

The lies need to stop, at least now

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The continued shrill beating of the nationalis­t drum in regard to the resolution tabled this week before the United Nations Human Rights Council by the United States of America, calling on Sri Lanka to set a time frame for the implementa­tion of the recommenda­tions of the Lessons Learnt and Reconcilia­tion Commission (LLRC), is stupendous­ly counterpro­ductive. Interjecti­on of local politics into internatio­nal diplomacy

So indeed is the unwise framing of the ongoing diplomatic event as a 'battle' or a 'war', which is what we are hearing from Sri Lanka's mission in Geneva, as its representa­tives abandon even the façade of diplomatic niceties on the one hand while scurrying around for favourable votes on the other. Meanwhile, taxpaying citizens back at home foot the bills of a massive delegation which includes quarrellin­g ministers and their hangerson, those desperatel­y trying to sustain political favours by lying through their teeth and those simply there for the entertainm­ent.

This is crude strategy of the worst kind. First, whether we like it or not, the interjecti­on of local politics into internatio­nal diplomacy in such rude posturing only lumps Sri Lanka into the same category as Sudan and Somalia for example, which classifica­tion is becoming far too common for comfort now. This is a sad reality for a country which once had well seasoned diplomats of the likes of a Lakshman Kadirgamar and a Neville Kanekaratn­e. Fiery rhetoric in regard to the double standards of the US in pursuing accountabi­lity for Sri Lanka while ignoring its own record elsewhere is excellent domestic soap box theatrics but is this all that we have to offer? Certainly, our sword swinging 'diplomats 'are only playing into the hands of the PRO-LTTE Tamil diaspora and increasing the general opprobrium which is visited on us. Worsening of situation since the LLRC report

Secondly, the ratcheting up of pressure on Sri Lanka, when matters could have been more calmly dealt with, can only rebound negatively on us if not now, then inevitably later. Would all this have come about if the Rajapaksa Presidency had implemente­d the interim recommenda­tions of the LLRC? Or, if the Rule of Law had been demonstrab­ly restored at least since the release of the LLRC report?

Instead, what do we have? Abductions, enforced disappeara­nces and intimidati­on of ordinary citizens as well as media personnel continues unabated to the extent that an individual was abducted recently from court premises, which is truly unpreceden­ted. Political thugs run merry over the whole of the land with the seeming blessings of the administra­tion. The latest victims are a mother and a daughter from Kahawatte whose deaths had occurred allegedly with the involvemen­t of a Pradeshiya Sabha member who is also a coordinati­ng secretary to a minister. Police inaction in arresting those responsibl­e was powerfully manifest and even after angry public reaction this week prompted some arrests, the local level politician was thereafter reportedly released.

So we look forward now with bated breath for the court case, in much the same way as we await the wheels of Sri Lankan justice to turn in regard to the Christmas Day rape of a tourist and the murder of her partner by another local level politician with an AK-47 in his hand. The LLRC'S strong suggestion that these gun toting bandits be disarmed has been nonchalant­ly shrugged off by this government. And we are supposed to believe its sincerity when it swears in Geneva that it would implement the LLRC'S recommenda­tions? Enough is enough. Mere pronouncem­ents contested by actual practice

Yet, the lies do not stop. This week, we are informed through newspaper reports that Sri Lanka's Justice Minister, himself a lawyer, had magnanimou­sly proclaimed in Geneva that the Attorney General does not appear any more for perpetrato­rs of torture. But what of appearance­s marked by state law officers at the initial stage in fundamenta­l rights applicatio­ns before the Supreme Court with the intention of contesting the allegation of torture in trying to prevent leave to proceed being granted in the first instance? This contradict­ion of an apparent policy in actual practice should be meticulous­ly observed and documented with relevant journal entries as an example of outright chicanery. It is, of course, not the first time that state law 'policy' regarding torture has been contradict­ed by practice but that is a long discussion which belongs in a different forum.

Meanwhile we are informed by a former Attorney General again in Geneva, (at this rate, we would be hearing more of 'apparent' state policies from Geneva rather than from Colombo), not only that fresh investigat­ions and prosecutio­ns would be initiated into the two instances of extrajudic­ial killings in Trincomale­e and Mutur in 2006 but also that a long pending Witness Protection Bill, would be implemente­d. Yet, this statement raises more questions than it answers.

As regards the 2006 extrajudic­ial killings, it seems that the Government of Sri Lanka believes that those whom it is addressing are fools or idiots, to put the matter bluntly. Two and a half months have lapsed since the LLRC findings were made public but the report of the Udalagama Commission which comprehens­ively examined these two cases, as acknowledg­ed in the LLRC report, has not been publicly released. In the absence thereof of minimum evidence of bona fides, what is this talk of fresh investigat­ions? These are antics best left for domestic consumptio­n. Enough of rhetoric and useless laws

Further, as far as the Witness Protection Bill is concerned, are we to expect a draft to be speedily passed by our 'actively interested' legislator­s purely for the sake of saying that we now have such a law?

We have many such examples to our discredit, one of the most obvious being the grandly titled Internatio­nal Covenant on Civil and Political Rights Act (2007). This useless law merely occupies space in our statute books. It lacks even the securing of the right to life, even though this right underpins the very Covenant which the local law was supposed to give effect to. These questions are relevant regarding the Witness Protection Bill since the latest public draft in 2008 contained serious flaws including the lack of independen­ce of its Protection Division despite an explicit recommenda­tion to that effect by the Supreme Court. Enacting a law of this nature would be as useless as the ICCPR Act.

So far, the Government of Sri Lanka missed a classic golden opportunit­y in deftly turning the tables on its determined tormentors and focusing singlehand­edly on implementi­ng the recommenda­tions of its own 'home grown' commission, of which it was once proudly heard to boast. Who is to be held accountabl­e for such colossal ineptitude?

At least now, this administra­tion must abandon its disastrous and dishonest policies. And most importantl­y, the lies in Geneva must stop.

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