Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

'Sri Lankans' who hold sway in UN staff unions

- By thalif deen at the united nations

If the United Nations in Geneva goes on strike – as threatened by staff unions – that proposed work- stoppage will be virtually led by Ian Richards, whose family hails from Moratuwa.

Richards is president of the 60,000- strong Coordinati­ng Committee of Internatio­nal Staff Unions and Associatio­ns (CCISUA), described as one of the most powerful staff unions in the UN system.

As UN staffers in Geneva threaten a strike, protesting a proposed salary cut of over 7.5 percent, a token two- hour “work stoppage” last month forced the Human Rights Council to suspend its meeting. But there is more to come, warned Richards, pointing out that a strike would only ever be the last resort.

With a Sri Lankan mother and a British father, Richards symbolises the concept of globalisat­ion advocated by the United Nations.

He was educated in Switzerlan­d ( primary and early secondary) and the rest in the UK ( secondary, bachelors and masters in economics) and graduated f rom the University at Wa r w i c k wh e r e he intermingl­ed with scores of Sri Lankans.

Asked about his family history, Richards told the Sunday Times: “I lived in Sri Lanka for a year, working for an organisati­on called the Nest. It works on community and mental health issues. It was a great way to discover the country and my family”.

“My mother grew up in Kurunegala and Amparai. Our family is from Moratuwa, home of the alternatel­y named Tyronne Fernando/De Soysa stadium. (Although the fact that Tyronne Fernando married a De Soysa should surely have put this debate to rest.) Family luminaries include Matthew Peiris (though sufficient­ly removed) and Puran Appu’s brother ( the one who betrayed him). However, everyone else is good and decent, and my cousin recently restored the record by being the first Sri Lankan to climb Everest,” he said.

Asked how best to describe his heritage, Richards said half- jokingly: “A Sri Lankan when it comes to enjoying life, a Briton when it comes to queuing and somewhere between the two when it comes to being on time.”

Meanwhile another fullfledge­d Sri Lankan, Chandana Mutucumara­na, has earned the distinctio­n of being the first Sri Lankan to be elected to the executive board of the United Nations Headquarte­rs Staff Union in New York representi­ng over 6000 staff members.

Mutucumara­na is Rapporteur of the UN Staff Union Staff Representa­tive, Unit 30 in the Department for General Assembly and Conference Management ( DGACM), and is a former President of the Royal College East Coast Associatio­n.

He told the Sunday Times he joined the UN two decades ago and wo rke d for the Department for General Assembly and Conference Management-- which provides high quality meeting and documentat­ion services to all Member States in New York, Geneva, Vienna, Nairobi, and wherever inter national conference­s and meetings are held by the United Nations.

He said the Department also helps interpret at meetings, translate documents into all six official UN languages, edit, revise and process texts and data, and advise on meeting procedures and protocol, to name just a few.

 ??  ?? Union leader Ian Richards
Union leader Ian Richards

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