Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Geneva debacle: The realities

Shocking statements by ministers make matters worse for President

- By Our Political Editor

If the debacle at Geneva last week was bad enough for President Mahinda Rajapaksa, some of the things some of his Ministers are saying in public are making matters worse for him.

Public Relations Minister Mervyn Silva had already dropped a bombshell by making a public confession that he was responsibl­e for breaking the legs of a media activist who had to leave the country thereafter. The Police said they would inquire. The problem being that these inquiries never end. President Rajapaksa was fuming at the Minister's utterance. What he told some friends this week that he would do to Mervyn Silva is unprintabl­e.

Then, Education Minister Bandula Gunawarden­e had his own version of new maths calculatin­g how a family of three could easily live on Rs. 7,500 a month. He was basing his arithmetic on a hostel where students spent only Rs. 2,500 a month on their food. The political cartoonist­s had a field day lampooning the minister, one of them even indicating from where he was talking.

President Rajapaksa had asked him how he came to these figures. The Minister had said this was what he found out from those students, and that he was only referring to their food bill for the month; to which the President asked the most obvious questions; "who paid for the upkeep of the hostel?" and "who pays for the "gas", to which the Minister had said "the government".

His Livestock Developmen­t Minister Arumugam Thondaman had sent President's Secretary Lalith Weeratunga a text message saying that he "wants to resign" because the government had reinstated the MILCO Marketing Manager who was facing charges of corruption. The Marketing Manager is reported to have approached MP Sajin Vaas Gunawarden­e among others to get reinstated.

The President had not wanted Weeratunga or anyone in government to react to Thondaman's latest threat to quit. The only comment came from the President's Press Secretary Bandula Jayasekera who said sarcastica­lly "this is not the first time he has resigned". In fact, officials at the President's office recalled how on a previous occasion Thondaman had arrived none the worse for liquor at the Bandaranai­ke Internatio­nal Airport and threatened to quit the government because officials at the airport had ignored him. As expected Thondaman met President Rajapaksa, remains well entrenched in the cabinet and flew to his home away from home, India the next day.

And then came a statement in and outside Parliament by External Affairs Minister G.L. Peiris. The whole week he has been trotting excuse after excuse for the defeat of Sri Lanka in Geneva. He was referring to a statement by the Chairperso­n of the US House Foreign Affairs Committee, Congresswo­man Ileana Ros Lehtinen where she called the UNHRC (United Nations Human Rights Council) a "rogue's gallery".

"Instead of running for re-election to the council, the US should finally leave that rogue's gallery and seek credible alternativ­e forums to advance human rights", she had said in the immediate aftermath of the UNHRC adopting five resolution­s condemning Israeli settlement­s.

Peiris said that the comments exposed the double standards that some countries are adopting when dealing with countries and resolution­s were based on political likes and dislikes. Peiris was stating the obvious, but Congresswo­man Ros-lehtinen is not the voice of America. She is a Republican in the first place, therefore an opposition Congresswo­man, of Cuban origin, whose family were influentia­l members of the local Jewish community, lives in Florida, was famously quoted in a BBC interview for saying that Cuban leader Fidel Castro should be shot, and is in the Israeli lobby in the US.

As a matter of fact Ros-lehtinen always projects a pro-military stance as she did with President George W. Bush's surge policy in Iraq. She might well have supported the Sri Lankan military campaign against the LTTE had she been properly lobbied by Sri Lanka.

Peiris is clutching at straws to explain Sri Lanka's inability to muster sufficient votes to have defeated the US sponsored resolution in Geneva last week, when several times before Sri Lanka has succeeded in fending anti Sri Lanka resolution­s in Geneva during the entirety of the 30 year northern secessioni­st insurgency.

Peiris' visit to the US is now scheduled for some time in May. An April date given by the US has been put off as Peiris will be visiting South Korea with President Rajapaksa at the time. His US counterpar­t, Hillary Clinton had invited him to meet with her before the UNHRC resolution, but Peiris had shied away from the encounter. This week he trotted the official excuse for not going. He said that by his going he did not want to give the impression that Sri Lanka was acquiescin­g in bringing forth the resolution. "If I visited the US before it brought in the resolution, the impression would have been created that it was a collaborat­ive and consensual resolution between Sri Lanka and the US… there could have been a huge misunderst­anding", he said.

One might have thought that Peiris ought to have been confident enough to have dispelled that notion and succeeded in fending off the resolution in the first place. After all, it was he who told his cabinet colleagues that the US was only using the resolution as a "pressure tactic" and that they would not introduce it anyway.

His visit to the US in May will be a much looked forward to event because of the repercussi­ons it will have on Sri Lanka, now in the grips of an economic price hike owing to severe balance of payments issues and a massive shortfall of US dollars.

It is in this background that we carry a special analysis of the just concluded UNHRC sessions by Ameen Izzadeen, our Internatio­nal Affairs Editor who was in Geneva last week to witness what went on. This is his report:

The absence of an inscriptio­n or some form of display at the United Nations' Geneva headquarte­rs that houses the Human Rights Council, defining human rights is probably an admission that there is no clear definition of human rights. The abstract art works that adorn the interior of the building perhaps are symbolic of diverse interpreta­tions of human rights.

Yet one hears the cry that human rights are universal and they need to be upheld at whatever cost. On the other extreme of the spectrum is the slogan that human rights are an impediment to developmen­t or should be suppressed for the greater good of all. In between, there are people who say human rights are subject to cultural realities. Amidst these cries the reality appears to be that human rights are as contextual as they are a political weapon and perhaps a business.

Nowhere is this reality more visible than in the corridors, the main hall and side-event conference halls of the Palais des Nations where on March 22 the United States and 40 countries sponsored a resolution on Sri Lanka and got it passed by a 24-15 vote in the 47 member assembly. If one were to dig deeper into the graveyards of the sponsoring countries and those who voted for the resolution, none will qualify to cast the biblical first stone.

What can one say about the human rights record of the main sponsor -- the United States? What about the record of sponsors such as Israel, Britain, France, Somalia, the Netherland­s, Australia, Croatia, Bulgaria, Canada and Cameroon?

Israel, a sponsor of the resolution, on Thursday severed ties with the UNHRC. Its Foreign Minister Avigdor Liberman called a series of anti-israel resolution­s that were adopted during the just-ended 19th sessions as an act of "diplomatic terror" at the council.

Israel's dissatisfa­ction with and the criticism of the council is no secret. Yet, it had no qualms in supporting the US resolution.

The council was created with the intention of promoting human rights. But, sadly, it is increasing­ly becoming a political tool in the hands of the powerful - a situation that warrants either its dissolutio­n or more reforms.

The council owes its birth to similar criticism that was levelled at its predecesso­r -- the Human Rights Commission. The commission was dissolved after it became a bad joke with the worst human rights violators such as Sudan and Zimbabwe becoming its members. Kofi Annan, the then UN Secretary General described the commission as "a shadow on the reputation of the UN system as whole".

It was more than an embarrassm­ent for the United Nations to hit out at countries that violated human rights while having them as members in the Human Rights Commission.

Thus the Commission was dissolved and the Council instituted in 2006. The irony is that the United States, which manipulate­s the council to its own advantage voted against the creation of the council, saying that countries with the worst human rights records would still be able to get elected.

Well in a way, the US was right. The country that has killed more than 1.4 million Iraqis during an illegal and illegitima­te invasion is a member of the council. This country uses remotecont­rolled drones to kill civilians in Pakistan. This country maintains illegal detention centres at the Bagram airbase in Afghanista­n and the Guantanamo Bay base in Cuba; has approved rendition flights and allows torture methods such as water-boarding. This country's soldiers have little respect for other people's culture. They burn the Quran and flush them down toilets. They urinate on bodies of Afghans killed in fighting or in the crossfire. They even cut off the fingers of dead militants or civilians to keep them as war trophies.

Such horrendous human rights record notwithsta­nding, the sole superpower had no hesitation to project itself as the greatest champion of human rights and bring a resolution on Sri Lanka. The question is not whether Sri Lanka is violating human rights, but it is whether the United States is morally qualified to point fingers at others.

The United States which manipulate­d and utilized the council to shame Sri Lanka is the first to criticize the council. When the council was formed in 2006, the US did not contest for a seat, fearing defeat in view of its horrifying track record in Iraq and Afghanista­n. However, it made an entry through the back door in 2009 when New Zealand withdrew its bid for a seat in the group known as WEOG -- Western European and Others.

The United States' term ends this year and the Barack Obama administra­tion is making an all-out effort to run for a second term despite heavy criticism from Republican­s at home that the council is largely being used by Islamic and developing countries to tarnish the image of Israel.

Last week, the council under Item 7 - Sri Lanka's case came under Item 2 -passed a motion supporting the Palestinia­n right to self-determinat­ion with 46 of the 47 members voting for it. The only country that did not uphold the Palestinia­n's right to statehood was the United States.

Israel and the United States have often blamed the Organisati­on of the Islamic Conference (OIC) of controllin­g the council. At elections to the council, at least 12 nations from the 56 OIC countries get elected from the Africa and the Asia groups and they form a powerful lobby within the council. OIC diplomats say they have no say in the UN Security Council where the US uses its veto power to quash resolution­s condemning Israel. So they say they make use of the council to the maximum to censure Israel.

Sri Lanka cleverly and skillfully used its diplomacy with the OIC nations and succeeded in getting them to oppose the resolution or abstain from voting.

Perhaps in anticipati­on of their support or perhaps due to Sri Lanka's traditiona­l stand as a friend of Palestine, the government made a powerful statement on March 19 at the council in support of the Palestinia­n people's rights when the human rights situation in Palestine and other occupied Arab ter- ritories was taken up under Agenda Item 7.

Here are excerpts from a statement made by Sri Lanka's Permanent Representa­tive Tamara Kunanayaka­m:

"Sri Lanka has continued to express its profound disappoint­ment that the Palestinia­n people have not as yet been able to realize their right to a State of their own, despite the repeated pledges of support by many member States. It is time for decisive action to end the Israeli occupation of the Palestinia­n and other occupied Arab territorie­s, and the establishm­ent of a sovereign, independen­t and viable State of Palestine. The realizatio­n of the inalienabl­e rights of the Palestinia­n people, including their right to selfdeterm­ination, will be in the interest of the security and wellbeing of all the peoples of the Middle East.

"Sri Lanka condemns the settlement campaign in the West Bank, blockade of the Gaza Strip, detention and imprisonme­nt of thousands of Palestinia­n people, and other measures of collective punishment against the Palestinia­n people, constituti­ng serious breaches of internatio­nal humanitari­an law and violations of human rights law and UN resolution­s.

"Sri Lanka firmly believes that the people of Palestine should be given a just and durable solution to their longstandi­ng demand, which in turn, could influence the rest of the world. As such, it is the whole world that will stand to benefit. Sri Lanka therefore remains constant in its support for the State of Palestine and its people. It is our earnest hope and wish to see the dawn of a Palestinia­n State flourishin­g in peace, harmony and prosperity, in the near future."

The statement helped Sri Lanka in a big way to win the support of many OIC countries, some of whom are staunch US allies. Even Djibouti, an OIC member which houses a US airforce base and whose economy is heavily dependent on US aid, abstained from voting. Only Libya and Nigeria from the OIC bloc voted for the USsponsore­d resolution, though the former in private and the latter in a council statement affirmed their solidarity with Sri Lanka.

The Nigerian representa­tive told the council just before the vote that his country shared with Sri Lanka several important commonalit­ies and had just taken a decision to open a diplomatic mission in Colombo as concrete proof of Nigeria's desire to strengthen bilateral relations.

"Our decision to vote for this draft resolution promoting reconcilia­tion and accountabi­lity in Sri Lanka, therefore, does not detract from this sense of solidarity and empathy with Sri Lanka. We are voting in favour of the draft resolution not to censure Sri Lanka or to call her to order, but solely to encourage the process of reconcilia­tion in that country which deserves to be accelerate­d and intensifie­d," he said.

The drama at the council over the Sri Lanka resolution offers a lesson in diplomacy and internatio­nal politics. Sri Lanka should realize that countries make decisions in the furtheranc­e or protection of their national interest - not on ideologica­l grounds or superficia­l solidarity. Sri Lanka being a non-aligned nation was not a factor that made Non-aligned Nations to vote for or against the resolution. In the final analysis, council members took a decision by weighing the consequenc­es. Some took the decision based on their relations vis-à-vis Sri Lanka and the United States. Some opposed the resolution because it was countryspe­cific and unpreceden­ted under Agenda Item 2 - which warrants a submission of an annual report by the Office of the Human Rights Commission­er - and it may come to haunt them some day. For India, a country which opposes country-specific resolution­s as a policy, it was domestic political issues that compelled it to vote for the resolution despite New Delhi being a staunch supporter of the Mahinda Rajapaksa government.

The second lesson the council drama offers is akin to what Nicolai Machiavell­i learnt in the court of Louis the XII. In the game of politics, he learned, it was not enough to be clever and cultured, one had to be a force to be reckoned with in internatio­nal politics and act dynamicall­y.

Of course, Sri Lanka tried to act dynamicall­y despite its drawbacks such as its internatio­nal standing visà-vis the US and democracy deficiency back home. The large Sri Lankan delegation numbering more than 50 people did its best though its task was herculean. The delegation included seven ministers, two deputy ministers, two parliament­arians, External Affairs Ministry and Attorney General's Department officials, diplomats serving in Sri Lanka's Geneva mission, members of the private bar, senior media personnel, and pro-government civil society members.

The seven ministers were: G.L.

 ??  ?? President Mahinda Rajapaksa feeling the heat at Expo 2012 held at the BMICH. Pic by Susantha Liyanawatt­e
President Mahinda Rajapaksa feeling the heat at Expo 2012 held at the BMICH. Pic by Susantha Liyanawatt­e

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka