Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Top level EU team here tomorrow to review GSP+ compliance

- By Namini Wijedasa

The EU continuous­ly monitors GSP+ beneficiar­y countries through exchanges of informatio­n, dialogue and visits, usually every two years.

A European Union delegation will arrive tomorrow for a routine review of whether Sri Lanka’s level of adherence to 27 internatio­nal convention­s on human and labour rights, environmen­tal protection and good governance warrants a continuati­on of the GSP+ trade concession.

It is not a sign, however, of the country having been placed on notice, authoritat­ive sources here insisted. Nor is there any danger of the GSP+ being revoked. But strong questions are likely to be asked regarding the Prevention of Terrorism Act ( PTA) which Sri Lanka expressly undertook to repeal in exchange for regaining the GSP+.

The EU continuous­ly monitors GSP+ beneficiar­y countries through exchanges of informatio­n, dialogue and visits, usually every two years. This is the third trip since the incentive was reinstated in 2017, but the first after the European Parliament in June passed a resolution questionin­g Sri Lanka’s continued use of the PTA.

The resolution came up after Sri Lanka banned eleven organisati­ons under the PTA in March 2021, citing national security. Among other things, it points out that Sri Lanka regained access to “generous tariff preference­s” under the EU Generalise­d Scheme of Preference­s Plus (GSP+) on condition that it would replace the PTA and effectivel­y implement 27 internatio­nal convention­s, including those governing human rights.

Sri Lanka failed to repeal the PTA despite its commitment, the resolution states. The upcoming review of Sri Lanka’s eligibilit­y for GSP+ status and that the renewal of GSP+ trade preference are not automatic and the EU takes due account of current events when assessing continued eligibilit­y, it stresses.

Sri Lanka points to “progress” in the recent months. For instance, the PTA has provisions for the appointmen­t of an Advisory Board to instruct the Defence Minister on whether or not a person should continue to be detained under the law. This was recently constitute­d under the chairmansh­ip of retired Chief Justice Asoka de Silva and more than 50 detainees have already applied, Justice Minister Ali Sabry said.

“While GSP+ is of recent origin, the debate regarding the PTA and its implicatio­ns are longstandi­ng but there are two schools of thought," he said. “The security apparatus feels it’s a necessary evil and has helped to curb terrorism, citing various examples such as what recently happened in New Zealand, where existing legislatio­n was insufficie­nt."

“Human rights activists, lawyers and jurists continue to argue the PTA is intruding into public rights to freedom and liberty,” Mr. Sabry said. “There has to be a balance between the two. There are limitation­s also on the security side, because it doesn’t foresee challenges we face today with the internet and money laundering, etc.”

The Foreign and Defence Ministries have submitted a joint Cabinet memorandum that addresses these issues. “From the beginning, we have admitted, in Parliament, too, that there is a need to revisit the PTA,” Mr Sabry pointed out.

“In addition to calling for changes to or repeal of the PTA, my recommenda­tion is that the EU explicitly calls for a moratorium on the applicatio­n of the PTA, and particular­ly for its use as a tool of political repression, which we have seen applied even to sitting MPs,” said a London- based civil society source who covers events in Sri Lanka. “It's crazy that the Government can claim to be considerin­g major changes, or even replacemen­t of the PTA while actively using it to silence its critics. The EU needs to call it on this contradict­ion.”

Second, the EU needs to move to what is called "enhanced engagement" in the GSP+ monitoring process, he said. This will bring greater scrutiny of Sri Lanka's rights record and is a necessary step before the EU can begin the formal--and complicate­d--process of withdrawin­g the benefits.

“I think the EU needs to take this step for the Government to take seriously the possibilit­y that its non-compliance with the required treaty obligation­s might actually endanger the trade benefits,” he said.

In the GSP+ review for the 20182019 period (published last year), the European Commission also said there were still concerns regarding freedom of associatio­n in Sri Lanka.

“The June 2021 EU resolution in Sri Lanka is very clear on what the issue is--PTA reform,” said Gehan Gunetillek­e, attorney-at-law, who was involved in the negotiatio­ns in 201718. “The specific issues pertaining to the PTA are contained in an earlier letter sent by the European Commission to the Foreign Ministry back in 2010.”

These are: Long term detention, i.e., detention without trial for up to 18 months; admissibil­ity of confession­s to police officers (under normal law, only confession­s to magistrate­s are admissible); and the absence of a requiremen­t to produce a PTA suspect before a judge after they’re arrested (under normal law, a suspect must be produced within 24, or 48 hours).”

In 2016, the Law Commission of Sri Lanka produced a draft to replace the PTA and this addressed all three areas. However, the Yahapalana Government rejected it and floated a draft Counter-Terrorism Act which never got passed.

The delegation will be here from September 27 to October 5. It comprises Nikolaos Zaimis, Senior Adviser on Trade and Sustainabl­e Developmen­t; Ionnis Giogkaraki­sArgyropou­los, Head of Division South Asia, European External Action Service (EEAS); Guido Dolara, Coordinato­r GSP Trade Preference­s; Lluis Prats – Head of Unit, Directorat­eGeneral for Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion, European Commission; and Monika Bylaite, Desk Officer for Sri Lanka and the Maldives, EEAS.

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