Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Action Plan evasive or deceptive

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Reactions to the Government's announceme­nt that it would - finally - act on the recommenda­tions of the LLRC (Lessons Learnt and Reconcilia­tion Commission) have been mixed. They range from a US Government statement welcoming the announceme­nt to critics calling it a big bluff laced with dishonesty.

There's no argument, however, that the LLRC was the outcome of internatio­nal pressure exerted in the aftermath of the historic military defeat of the LTTE (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) in May 2009. Pressed for an internatio­nal probe on the conduct of the Armed Forces during that military campaign, the Government managed to manoeuvre itself out of that situation with the appointmen­t of the LLRC. It may not have been overjoyed with the findings of the LLRC, but the commission in fact provided the Government with an escape route to fend off pressure for an internatio­nal tribunal, with otherwise hostile foreign government­s cautiously welcoming its recommenda­tions.

Initially, the Government appointed an inter-ministeria­l committee under the chairmansh­ip of the Minister of External Affairs to implement the recommenda­tions. It was a half-hearted, lacklustre approach at first. Arguably, the USsponsore­d resolution against Sri Lanka at the UNHRC (Human Rights Council) could have been warded off- or defused - or even won - had the Government acted more swiftly and displayed a greater sense of urgency in implementi­ng the LLRC report once it was presented to the President in November last year.

It was bad counsel all along. Firstly, the President was told by his Minister of External Affairs that the US was only 'shadow boxing' and would not bring a resolution against Sri Lanka. Then, Sri Lanka spurned the opportunit­y to meet the US Secretary of State and effect a change of mind. The Government has now done a 180 degree turn on its policy towards these internatio­nal moves.

This though should serve the country well. The LLRC report has seen the 'bigger picture' of issues facing the country rather than the parochial one that the sulking sections of the Sri Lankan Diaspora and some internatio­nal human rights watchdogs have got their teeth into.

It is no doubt unfortunat­e to say the least, that the Government has been propelled into action only because of this internatio­nal pressure now formalised and coming through Geneva rather than of its own volition.

The forthcomin­g Universal Periodic Review (UPR) at the UNHRC has been what has spurred the Government to produce an Action Plan on the LLRC report. Still, the end result is what is important.

That the entire exercise was moved away from an interminis­terial committee to the President's Secretary is a move in the right direction. The country and the internatio­nal community will have more confidence in a job being properly done.

Equally, the fallout for non-performanc­e will now lie at the very apex of this Government -- the President's Office. Our Focus on Rights columnist in a strongly-worded commentary last week referred to one of the items in the Action Plan presented to the UPR - the disarming of persons in possession of unauthoris­ed weapons and prosecutin­g them in six months - and likened it to a fairy tale from Alice in Wonderland.

There are several other proposals in the Action Plan that are vague. For example, one of the major recommenda­tions relates to the appointmen­t of a special commission­er under the Attorney General to probe involuntar­y disappeara­nces, but the Action Plan relies on the Penal Code provisions; a National Land Commission has been mooted but the Government's position on it is not clear; the Independen­t Commission­s under the 17th Amendment are ignored; a Grievances Redress Mechanism is in limbo, so on and so forth.

Conceptual­ly, and functional­ly, there appears, prima facie, a minimalist approach to the LLRC recommenda­tions adopted ignoring the testimony of thousands of people who came before the LLRC. On the other hand, neither does the Government say which of the 248 LLRC recommenda­tions it will not agree to.

A classic case in point is the Right to Informatio­n Act that the LLRC has recommende­d as a useful, modern democratic instrument that empowers the citizens to obtain informatio­n that is otherwise locked up in total secrecy when in fact they deal with the funds of the public and the lives of the people. The Action Plan is plainly deceptive. It is not honest enough to say that this Government will not bring about such a law. Instead, it says the Government will "enact legislatio­n to ensure a right to informatio­n. Cabinet to decide the suitable time frame for drafting legislatio­n. The Cabinet office will be the interface for the interactio­n with the Cabinet of Ministers on the acceptance of the legislatio­n by the legislatur­e".

It would seem from this that the Government is, to put it kindly, simply prevaricat­ing. Draft laws for a Right to Informatio­n Act have been ready since 2004, and were updated by the Justice Ministry in 2010. One could see the Government taking evasive action here. This is why the bona fides of the Action Plan come in for criticism.

In any event, the Government's exercise, whatever the motives maybe, must not be an attempt merely to buy time and ride over the UPR hurdle and the UNHRC sessions until next year.

Fortunatel­y, there is some wisdom that has seeped into the Government's foreign policy strategy lately. There seems to be a concerted move to reverse its hostile approach to the internatio­nal community (the West and India) and adopt a more conciliato­ry stance with engagement as the fundamenta­l basis for such a policy. A country like Sri Lanka, interlinke­d so much with the global village cannot afford to make enemies with the world community.

What the Government must understand is that internatio­nal pressure cannot be easily glossed over. The country is crying out for serious reform in many sectors of governance. The ill-conceived Darusuman report commission­ed by the UN Secretary General must not be given a chance of raising its ugly head because of the Government's own negligence. The Government is not out of the woods yet.

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