Tamil
National Alliance on SL President's UN
Speech, 24 September 2004
"The Parliamentary Group
of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) met
on September 23 2004 to consider the
statements made by President Chandrika
Bandaranaike Kumaratunge relating to
"Peace Negotiations" in Sri Lanka during
the course of her address to the 59th
session of the United Nations General
Assembly.
The President has stated that "the
Government of Norway has been playing
the role of facilitator for the
negotiation process, for nearly six
years. We have taken the process forward
with the active participation of Norway,
even though at present the LTTE is
refusing to return to the negotiating
table from which it withdrew nearly
eighteen months ago."
Most regrettably, the above statement
does not reflect the true factual
position for the following reasons:
1. After several rounds of peace talks
between the LTTE and the then UNF
government, the LTTE in April 2003,
for
certain reasons, without withdrawing
from the negotiation process, suspended
its participation in peace talks. The LTTE however continued to be in contact
with the facilitator, the Government of
Norway and through the facilitator with
the then UNF government.
2. In consequence thereof, the LTTE put
forward proposals in writing for the
setting up of an
Interim Self Governing
Authority (ISGA), on 31st October 2003.
Simultaneously the LTTE requested that
dates be fixed for the commencement of
talks on this said proposals.
2. On 4 Novemer 2003, within four days
of the LTTE's ISGA proposals, the
President in the exercise of powers
vested in her under the 1978
constitution took over from the UNF
government which enjoyed a majority in
Parliament, the Ministries of defense,
Interior and Media, which were directly
linked to the peace process, and
assigned the said portfolios either to
herself or to nominees from within her
party.
3. This action of President resulted in
the facilitator, the Norwegian
Government suspending its role in
November 2003, in view of the lack of
clarity in regard to who was responsible
for the peace process.
4. The ensuing stalemate resulted in the
dismissal of the then UNF government,
the dissolution of Parliament and the
installation of a new Government after
the General Elections held in April
2004.
5. President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunge heads the new United Peoples
Freedom Alliance Government which is an
alliance between the Peoples Alliance
(PA) and the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP).
6. That the JVP campaigned and continues
to campaign country wide against the
peace process is well known. It has in
fact, threatened to leave the Government
and bring about the downfall of the
Government, if the President commences
talks on the ISGA proposals.
7. However, at the meeting the President
had with the Parliamentary Group of the TNA on 10 June 2004, the President while
expressing her reservations in regard to
some of the ISGA proposals,
unambiguously stated that she was
prepared to commence talks on the ISGA
proposals, without linking such talks to
any other issue.
8. The Government has
hitherto not taken any action to
implement this commitment.
It must not be
forgotten that the
initial reaction of
the PA to the ISGA proposals was totally
negative. The PA thereafter knowing very
well the attitude of the JVP entered
into an alliance with the JVP. This
alliance resulted in the hardening of
the position against the ISGA proposals
and against the peace process. The
President's inability to take the peace
process forward is clearly attributable
to this situation.
The President's
alliance partner within the Government,
the JVP, has heightened its opposition
to the ISGA proposals and the peace
process. It is significant that the main
opposition party, the United National
Party (UNP) has urged the government to
commence talks on the ISGA proposals and
has publicly stated that it will support
any agreement that is arrived at between
the government and the LTTE after such
discussions.
The LTTE has
repeatedly stated that it is eagerly
awaiting the recommencement of the talks
on the basis of the ISGA proposals, and
that when the talks commence, any
proposals that the Government may bring
to the negotiating table in regard to
the ISGA could also be discussed. This
consistent position was once again
conveyed to the special envoy of
the Norwegian Government at a recent
meeting.
In this background,
the statement made by the President in
the course of her address to the United
Nations that "the LTTE is refusing to
return to the negotiating table" is
singularly unfortunate, as it does not
reflect the true factual position. The
lack of clarity, the contradictions
within her own government, and her
inability apart from making
pronouncements to take definite action
to commence talks are the main stumbling
blocks to the recommencement of the
peace process.
It is pertinent to
point out that in the context of the
LTTE's request for dates to be fixed to
commence talks when it submitted its
ISGA proposals on 31 October 2003, the
LTTE would have been at " the
negotiating table" in November 2003
itself, but for the actions taken by the
President on 4 November 2003.
The TNA also questions
the President's statement that "comprehensive development strategy has
been launched in the North and East of
the country which are affected by the
conflict".
While the TNA
acknowledges that the international
community has been providing some
measure of humanitarian and development
assistance to alleviate the deprivation
and suffering of the Tamil civilian
population in the North-East, hundreds
of thousands of displaced Tamil people
in the North-East yet continue to
languish away from their homes, awaiting
the implementation of a comprehensive
programme of action that would resettle
and rehabilitate them.
This task, together
with the task of reconstructing the
devastated North-East can be
accomplished only by a duly constituted
Interim Self Governing Authority for the
North-East.
We urge the President to refrain from
rhetorical statements and focus on
resolute action that would enable the
recommencement of talks, and meaningful
consensus-building that would ensure the
success of the negotiations.
The Tamil people in the North-East more
than anyone else yearn for a peaceful
resolution of the conflict. The Tamil
people strongly urge the President not
to miss the opportunity that presently
exists, to take the peace process
forward by commencing talks with the
LTTE on the ISGA proposals, in
accordance with the assurance given to
the parliamentary Group of the TNA on 10
June2004.
The TNA desires to point out that the
President has used the forum of the
United Nations General Assembly,
attended by Heads of Governments to
present a distorted picture of the
current peace process.
An enunciation of the
steps that the President contemplates to
take the peace process forward could
have greatly contributed to building
confidence. The TNA emphatically states
that the present peace stalemate should
not continue."
TNA press release, 24 September 2004, signed by Mr.R.Sampanthan, parliamentary group
leader of the TNA, Mr.Selvam
Adaikalanathan, President of the TELO,
Mr. Mavai Senathirajah, General
Secretary of the Ilankai Thamil Arasu
Katchchi, Mr.Gajendrakumar Ponnambalam,
General Secretary of the All Ceylon
Tamil Congress and Mr.Suresh
Premachchandran, Secretary General of
the EPRLF (Suresh wing)
|
And
Without Comment -
|
Dayan Jayatilleka, Sinhala Political
Analyst says
Well Done, Chandrika!
"President Kumaratunga has
just proved in New York why the country
is luckier to have her than Ranil
Wickremesinghe as its leader, and why
she is the best leader that Sri Lanka
could have given the available choices
at this moment in history. Her address
to the UN General Assembly was the best
by a Sri Lankan head of state or
government, barring � and bettered only
by - her father�s brilliant peroration
in 1956 on the twin crises, Suez and
Hungary.. Her resounding reaffirmation
of the UN was a subtle critique of
unilateralist militarism, her pitch for
the democratization of the Security
Council and the discreetly camouflaged
but
discernible plug for India, was a
combination of laudable reformist ideal
and Realpolitik.
She did her bit for Buddhism by
criticizing its vulgar commercialization
in the West.
Above all she exposed the LTTE before
the biggest possible audience of world
leaders for pulling out of talks 18
months ago and
obstreperously ducking a
return to the negotiating table.
With an admirable sense of diplomatic
tact and prudence,
she commended the
facilitation by Norway.
In short, by adopting a centrist course,
she also took the
moral high ground... " |
|
"Mr. President,
I congratulate you on your assumption of the high office of
President of the Fifty-Ninth Session of the General Assembly of the
United Nations and assure you of Sri Lanka's fullest support and
cooperation as you undertake the onerous responsibility of presiding
over the deliberations of this august assembly. I also thank the
outgoing President, Honourable Julian Hunte, for his able and
efficient conduct of the Fifty Eighth Session.
Mr. President, Distinguished delegates,
The International Day of Peace we celebrate today is indeed a
significant event in the UN calendar. It is a Day dedicated to the
creation and pursuit of a culture of peace. As I speak today in this
Hall of Peace, men, women and children in my country are celebrating
the Day of Peace through a wide variety of civil society events.
Prayers and meditations, the resonating chimes of bells and the
gentle glow of candlelight are powerful symbols of our deep
collective yearning for peace.
We recognize that the pursuit of peace requires more than symbols.
It requires consistent commitment, patience, perseverance and, above
all, resolute action and consensus building.
Mr. President, peace and resolution of conflict through dialogue
takes centre stage in our lives and hence need to be accorded the
highest priority on the UN Agenda. All of us here are only too aware
that peace is not the simple absence of war, it entails an active
engagement to understand the root-causes that endanger peace and
generate conflict.
In Sri Lanka, my government has implemented a series of programmes
to engage the armed group, the LTTE, in comprehensive peace
negotiations for ten years."
Comment:
"I have studied and acquired considerable knowledge on guerrilla
warfare when I was a student in Paris, and we knew how they would behave. We conducted
talks on the basis that the LTTE would not agree to any peaceful settlement and lay down
arms." President Kumaratunga, Sri Lanka Sunday Times,
20 August 1995
"..On the most critical issues of opening a passage to Jaffna by removing the Pooneryn
army camp and the mobility of our armed cadres in Eastern Province, your
decisions are unacceptable to us ...The manner in which these critical issues have been side-tracked demonstrates the
fact that your Government is not acting in good faith to create genuine conditions of
peace and normalcy but rather seeks to promote the interests of the military. Furthermore, we are convinced beyond doubt, that your Government is making every effort
to strengthen and consolidate the military capability of the armed forces under the guise
of the current cessation of hostilities, violating the very terms of the agreement that
insists on the maintenance of the status quo."
LTTE leader Velupillai Pirabaharan
to President Kumaratunga, 18 April 1995
"Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Lakshman Kadirgamar on Tuesday blamed a
lack of political will for the collapse of a bid by Norway to end his country's
18-year ethnic war. Norwegian diplomats have spent the past two years shuttling between the
government and Tamil Tiger guerrillas fighting for a separate state in the
country's north and east.
That brought the country to the threshold of negotiations earlier this year,
but the effort was hamstrung by haggling over conditions for talks and then
smothered by political turmoil that led to the collapse of the government.
"It's quite simply a lack of political will," Kadirgamar told
state television in an interview.
"Blame will lie where it falls, but we, collectively, seem unable to lift this
matter out of the arena of day to day politics," he said
Reuters, 6 November 2001
"This process has had its successes and setbacks. Armed hostilities have been halted for the past two-and-a-half
years under a Ceasefire Agreement.
"
Comment:
"Chandrika Kumaratunga sent her formal response on the
ceasefire agreement signed between the government and northern
rebels by slamming Norway's elevated status in the peace
process and a call for the country's sovereignty to be
protected at all costs. In a letter to Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, President Kumaratunga reiterated her
complaint that she was not properly consulted before
Wickremesinghe committed the Colombo government to a truce
accord signed by Tamil Tigers (LTTE) leader Velupillai
Prabhakaran. .. She hit out at Norway's
efforts to upgrade itself from the role for which they were
first invited by her government as that of a facilitator "to a
mediator and arbitrator" referring to the fact that Oslo has
been given the "final authority" on the interpretation of the
ceasefire agreement. Kumaratunga also criticised the
powers given to Norway through a monitoring mission Oslo would
appoint in demarcating "lines of control" within Sri Lanka
that would separate government-held areas and rebel-held
areas..."
Chandrika Resents Truce -
Gulf News 1 March 2002
"...Despite the initial optimism generated by the possibility of co-operation to
achieve peace,
the increasing acrimony between the UNF and the opposition People’s Alliance
(PA) has the potential of destabilising the whole process.."
Sri
Lanka: Return to Uncertainty, British Refugee Council Report
"A comprehensive development strategy has been launched in the
North and East of the country which are affected by the conflict.
The Government of Norway has been playing the role of facilitator
for the negotiation process for nearly six years.
We have taken the
process forward with the active participation of Norway, even though at present the LTTE is refusing to return to the
negotiating table from which it withdrew nearly eighteen months ago."
Comment:
"..In our view, resolution of the Sinhalese political party struggle is the top
priority. This
(intra Sinhala) conflict—whatever the merits of the arguments—is selfish in the short-term
and self defeating
in the long-term. The country is ready for peace. The LTTE is ready to
continue negotiations. The world cannot understand why Sri Lanka does not
move ahead
to peace. All parties need to seize this moment, honor their constituents’
faith in them,
and settle their dispute immediately. The critical next steps we explore in
this report will
go unaddressed if this issue is not resolved immediately."...Securing Peace: An Action Strategy for Sri Lanka
- A Report Prepared by Princeton
University
for the
Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), June 2004
"...The international community was perhaps shocked at the decision of the
President the Hon. Chandrika Kumaratunga to dismiss key ministers and
dissolve the Parliament just at the very time when the peace process
with the Tamil LTTE was achieving results. These moves and the
subsequent elections virtually destroyed the peace process while at the
same time the LTTE or Tamil Tigers were showing a considerable openness
to seek a resolution to the conflict..."
Intervention by Charles Graves, Interfaith
International (Non Governmental Organisation with Special
Consultative Status with ECOSOC under
Agenda Item 2:Question of the Violation of Human Rights and Fundamental
Freedoms
"....
The lack of a genuine bi-partisan commitment and approach by the
(Sinhala) political establishment represented mainly by the two major
parties, the UNP and the SLFP has been the single-most important
obstacle in achieving a negotiated political settlement. This is
accounted for by the longstanding struggle for power by both
parties...."
European Community
Conflict Assessment Mission, 1 August 2002
"..The delay in the peace process will cause
delay in international assistance and directly affect economic
recovery and the rehabilitation and resettlement of some 500,000 IDPs.
At the
root of the problem lies the power struggle between the two major
(Sinhala) political parties, without the cooperation of which, the peace
process is doomed. Observers say that the international community
has not concentrated on this issue and has so far failed to bring
sufficient pressure on these parties to enter into a sustainable
bipartisan agreement."
British Refugee Sri Lanka Project Briefing
1 April 2004
"Sri Lanka's main (Sinhala) opposition has accused the
government of taking a cavalier and casual attitude towards the
peace process with Tamil Tiger rebels. United National Party
spokesman GL Peiris said the government had again changed its
stand on resuming talks..."Sri
Lanka's U turn attacked reports BBC, 10 August 2004
"...(Ruling Sri Lanka Government
Coalition Partner) the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP).. propaganda secretary Wimal Weerawansa
gave the lecture at Colombo’s Youth Council Centre (on 17
August). He began by
demagogically denouncing all those promoting the peace talks as
stooges for the LTTE. He branded the previous United National
Front (UNF) government, which signed the ceasefire agreement
with the LTTE in 2002, as “Green Tigers”—green being the UNF’s
official colour. The Norwegian facilitators, he declared, were
“White Tigers”. He accused various non-government organisations,
which were calling for negotiations, of “crowing for dollars”.
Ruling Sri Lanka Government Coalition Partner, Janatha
Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) intensifies its campaign against Sri
Lankan peace talks 31 August 2004
"We deeply appreciate the strong support we have received and
continue to receive from the international community."
Comment:
" Inter-state relations are not governed by the
logic of morality. They were and they remain an amoral phenomenon..."
Jyotindra Nath
Dixit, Indian High Commissioner
in Sri Lanka 1985 to 1989, Foreign Secretary in 1991 to 1994 and currently, in
2004,
National
Security Adviser to the Prime Minister of India, Negotiating
Peace in Sri Lanka (published by International Alert) February 1998-
India & the Tamil
Struggle
"The recent revival of
interest in Trincomalee in the Pentagon can only be associated with the
growing overall US interest in
acquiring bases for intervention and
rapid deployment for the sake of developing a quick strike capability in
the general area...."
Ramtanu Maitra on Covetous
Eyes on Sri Lanka's Strategic Jewel 30 January 2004
"...Tamils seek a just peace and not a peace
with surrender. LTTE leadership will not relent until political
and social dignity is restored to the lives of Tamil people...We
are not 'Vadi Kattina
Mutalkal'. We are not stupid. The world has not come to Sri
Lanka to save the Tamils. They have come to save Sri Lanka.
There are 50 countries who have come to help Sri Lanka. We have
only one country to help us - and that is Sri Lanka (loud
laughter) ..."
Senior member of the Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam, V. Balakumaran in Oslo
"While Norway is playing an essential facilitatory role, others such
as India, Japan, the EU, the US, UN Agencies and some international
non-governmental organizations are deeply involved with the
development and rehabilitation process of the war affected areas. They are also engaged in
poverty alleviation programmes in the rest
of the country."
Comment:
"...Your government, in international forums,
continues to place poverty as the common phenomenon affecting
the entire country. .. Though poverty and poverty
alleviation constitute the centrality of the new economic vision of your
government as exemplified in 'Regaining Sri Lanka' the document fails to
examine the causality of the phenomenon of poverty, the effects of ethnic war
and the unique conditions of devastation prevailing in the northeast...The
war-affected people need immediate help to regain their dignity. They need
restoration of essential services to re-establish their lives. Reconstruction
of infrastructures such as roads, hospitals, schools and houses are essential
for them to return to normal life...The government's 'Regaining Sri Lanka' document completely lacks any form
of identified goals for the northeast. Statistics presented for substantiating
the policy totally ignore the northeast and solely concentrate on southern Sri
Lanka. However, this has been promoted as the national strategy to the
international community to seek aid. ..In seeking international assistance your
government disingenuously speaks of reconstruction being needed in all areas,
thereby masking the total destruction of the infrastructure of the northeast
which has resulted from the militarist policies of the past three decades. .."
LTTE suspends negotiations with Sri
Lanka pending implementation of agreements reached, 21 April 2003
"My government has obtained a clear mandate at numerous elections
to end the war and to bring about a negotiated settlement of the
conflict that would satisfy all the people of Sri Lanka founded on
democracy, respect for human rights, a
pluralist polity and good
governance."
Comment:
" ...a 'multi ethnic plural society' is a
mantra which the Sri Lanka government has found useful to chant
from time to time. The mantra has a nice meditative ring to it. It conjures up the soothing vision of a
society where all ethnic groups are equal and a plurality of view points is encouraged and
secured. But mantras intended to resolve an armed political conflict, must fit the
political reality on the ground. The political reality is that there is nothing 'multi ethnic or plural' about the
society over which the Sri Lanka government seeks to impose unitary rule. If nothing else,
forty years of gross and consistent violations of the human
rights of the Tamil people is proof of that. That these violations were no accidental
happenings is evidenced by the
statements of Sinhala political leaders and opinion makers
during the past several decades... It was the Sinhala attempt to subjugate and assimilate which led, eventually, to the
rise of the armed resistance of the Tamil people, led today by the
Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam... " Self Determination & the 'Multi Ethnic Plural Society'
September 1993
"We are fully aware that peace is not achieved easily. It is a
constant struggle for mutual understanding and reconciliation, and
the establishment of the rule of law, justice and equality."
Comment:
"...The plan is to destabilize the Tigers, bait the group into
confrontation and ultimately launch an offensive aimed at destroying
the fractured Tamil movement once and for all," the analysts at
Strategic Forecasting (Stratfor) said quoting unnamed sources inside
the Sri Lankan government....Colombo probably hopes a renewed
guerrilla war will be tempered by internal struggles and that, once
weakened, the Tigers can be destroyed, the US analysts
said....According to the US analysts, in the event of a renewed war
“the Tigers will likely end up weaker - perhaps no longer in a
position to make the demands for autonomy that helped cause the
internal strife in the first place.” “On the other hand, baiting a
wounded tiger could be a dangerous game," they cautioned.
Colombo promoting Karuna to destroy LTTE with tacit approval of US
says US based think tank Stratfor, 14 July 2004
"The Buddha, popularly known as the Prince of Peace, has preached
at length about peace and all that is required to achieve it both
within each individual and between nations. I quote from the
Dhammapada:" Victory breeds hatred. The defeated live in pain.
Happily the peaceful live, giving up victory and defeat.".
"
Comment:
" The war that Gamini Abhaya waged with Elala
was so a religious character and he made it known by a solemn
proclamation that "this enterprise of mine is not for the
purpose of acquiring the pomp and advantages of royalty. This
undertaking has always had for its object the re-establishment
of the religion of the supreme Buddha. By the truth of this
declaration may the arms and equipment of my army in the hour of
battle flash, as if emitting the rays of the sun"..It was always a custom with the Sinhalese kings
when engaged in wars to take with them the "sons of Buddha" evidently to show
that the wars were conducted in a spirit of religion. To these rulers nothing appeared more supreme than this religion,
which was called the "religion of the conqueror", and was thus completely
identified with the racial individuality of the people.."
The Gospel according to
Anagarika Dharmapala
"..History records that even Kings Dutugemunu, Gajabahu, Vijayabahu and Parakramabahu have
suffered defeat at the hands of the enemy at some stage. But each time they faced such
setbacks, they had faced the enemy with renewed strength and achieved victory.
Dear war
heroes, we too have to follow in the footsteps of
our past heroes... As Head of State. I assure you that the Government will lend you
all support and assistance to accomplish that task. Your blood is boiling to liberate your
motherland and I am confident that no one can undermine your enthusiasm and commitment...
Heroic soldiers ultimate victory will be yours."
Sri Lanka President Chandrika Kumaratunga, Sri
Lanka State Controlled Daily News, 12 May 2000
"Mr. President, Global developments that provide the context of
this Session, present a mixed picture. While economic and human
development efforts in some countries have made progress, political
processes undertaken to bring peaceful resolution to conflicts have
been plagued by continuing violence, in others.
Mr. President, We are deeply saddened at the violence, instability,
loss of life and human suffering in Iraq. We in Sri Lanka know, and
have experienced first hand, the impact of violence on society and
the difficulty in finding solutions to problems of governance that
satisfy all parties.` Security measures alone, as pointed out
recently by the Secretary-General's special representative to Iraq,
will not suffice to end violence and create stability and peace.
Political consensus building, reconciliation, rehabilitation and the
promotion of the rule of law are essential for
democracy to
take root."
Comment:
"In Sri Lanka,
torture is systemic and routine.
This is partially due to the Prevention of Terrorism Act of 1979
(PTA), a piece of legislation which was introduced as a
temporary provision to curb terrorism, but which is still in
force today. The PTA has directly contributed to the routine use
of torture by the authorities by giving them the freedom to
arrest suspects almost at will, allowing for prolonged custody
of political prisoners without trial or release and providing
for the admissibility of confessions to police officers as
evidence in court.."
Written statement submitted by the South Asia Human
Rights Documentation Centre
(SAHRDC), a non-governmental organization in special consultative status
under agenda item 11(a) on Civil and Political Rights - Torture and
Detention in Sri Lanka GE.04-11648 E/CN.4/2004/NGO/129, 31 January 2004
"Equally important, in today's interdependent, increasingly
globalized world is the commitment of the international community to
remain engaged and ensure that Iraq does not become further plagued
by violence and fragmented on ethnic or religious lines."
Comment:
"... In a function room in the Presidential Secretariat, (broadcast live on Sri
Lanka television), Sri Lanka's leader (President Chandrika Kumaratunga) stood gravely
before a line of tough-looking military officers. Deputy Defence Minister Anurudha
Ratwatte, fresh from hoisting the flag in Jaffna town, presented her with a scroll rolled
up inside a red velvet container. The scroll was dated "full moon day of the month of
Uduwap in the year 2939 in the Buddhist Era." It read, "Your Excellency's rule and authority has been
firmly re-established" in the historic city. The territory was not referred to as
Jaffna, its official name, but "Yapa Patuna" the term used by conquerors in
medieval times. To outsiders, the ritual might have seemed arcane and meaningless, but to
Sinhalese, who make up three-quarters of Sri Lanka's 18 million population, it was
freighted with implications.. Kumaratunga's use of Sinhalese-Buddhist iconography carried
a message: she had conquered Tamil lands and defeated her enemies, in much the same manner
as Sinhalese kings of centuries gone by... "
Anita Pratap
reporting in Time Magazine
18 December 1995
"Mr. President, All of us as leaders, and above all as mothers
and fathers, can never forget the sheer brutality of the
terrorist attack earlier this month on a school in the Russian
Federation which led to the loss of so many lives of children and
adults."
Comment:
"..Thirteen babies were among the 65 dead found under the rubble of a Catholic
church bombed by the Sri Lankan air force, (on 9 July 1995), an International Committee of the Red Cross
(ICRC) official said on Tuesday. ICRC field coordinator Dominique Henry said at least
one bomb hit St Peter's Church at Navali, north of Jaffna town, on Sunday, the day the
armed forces launched their ``Operation Leap Forward'' against Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam. The military, which said it was not aware of any church being bombed, had dropped
leaflets warning civilians in the rebel-held peninsula to seek refuge in temples and
churches to minimise the chance of death or injury in air strikes
`This is really a
violation of humanitarian law if a civilian area has been deliberately targeted,'' Henry
said, adding that he had no information on whether the attack was deliberate or an
accident.
Reuters Report 11 July 1995
"The Sri Lanka government, initially denied the
bombing of the St.Peters Church. Then it criticised the ICRC
representative for reporting the incident to the world media
without consulting the Government. Later the government
promised to hold an inquiry into the incident
The aerial
bombardment of civilian population centres and places of
worship follow a pattern set by the Sri Lanka armed forces
over the past several years and President Kumaratunga's
belated promise to investigate the recent violations, must
ring hollow in the ears of the Tamil people whose kith and
kin have lost their lives or their limbs in the bomb
outrage." (Joint written
statement submitted at the 47th Sessions of the UN Sub
Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of
Minorities on 9 August 1995, by International
Youth and Student Movement for the United Nations and World
Federation of Democratic Youth, non governmental
organisations in consultative status (category I), African
Association of Education for Development, American
Association of Jurists, Indigenous World Association,
International Association against Torture, International
Association of Democratic Lawyers, International Federation
of Human Rights, International Indian Treaty Council,
International Islamic Federation of Student Organisations,
International League for Human Rights, Pax Romana and World
Society of Victimology, non governmental organisations in
consultative status (category II) and Centre Europe-Tiers
Monde, International Association of Educators for World
Peace, International Educational Development, International
Federation of Free Journalists, International Movement
against all Forms of Discrimination and Racism, Liberation
and Movement against Racism, For Friendship Among Peoples and
Regional Council on Human Rights in Asia, non governmental
organisations on the roster.)
"Terrorism in all its manifestations must be condemned and
fought relentlessly and globally."
Comment:
"...The peoples of the world are engaged in a fundamental series
of struggles for a just and peaceful world based on
fundamental rights
now acknowledged as sacred in a series of widely endorsed
international legal conventions. These struggles are opposed in
a variety of cruel and brutal ways by the political, economic
and ideological forces associated with the main structures of
domination present in the world that spread terrorism in a
manner unknown in prior international experience... The
terrorism of modern state power and its high technology weaponry
exceeds qualitatively by many orders of magnitude the political
violence relied upon by groups aspiring to undo oppression and
achieve liberation. .. It is a cruel extension of the terrorist
scourge to
taunt the struggles against terrorism with the label "terrorism".
We support these struggles and call for the liberation of political language
along with the liberation of peoples.
Terrorism originates from the statist system of structural violence and
domination that denies the
right of self-determination to peoples..."
The Geneva Declaration on the Question of Terrorism, 1987
" While no cause
justifies terror unleashed upon the innocent, such outrages must
make us redouble our efforts to address their root causes and seek
political and socio economic explanations and solutions to them. We
are currently engaged in this task in Sri Lanka."
Comment:
".. The record shows that the Sri Lanka security forces (acting on the implicit or explicit
authorisation of its commander in chief, President Chandrika Kumaratunga) have with
impunity committed gross violations of the international humanitarian law relating to
armed conflict and that the genocidal intent of the Sri Lanka government was
proved by the 'broad
front steamrollering' attack launched on the Jaffna
peninsula; the
deliberation with which the Sri Lanka security forces have
killed Tamil non combatants, shelled
densely populated Tamil villages,
destroyed
Tamil homes and
cultivable land, bombed
Tamil schools and
places of worship, and
blocked the supply of essential food and medicine to the
Tamil homeland; the persistent and frequent
breaches by Sri Lanka authorities of the laws and regulations
relating to arrest and detention and the unprecedented
number of
"disappearances"; the systematic use of
torture and
rape as instruments of state terrorism; the
mass graves; the use of Tamil civilians
as human mine detectors and as
forced labour; the
murder of Tamil prisoners whilst in the custody
of Sri Lanka authorities; the
imposition of a
press censorship which went beyond any needs of 'national
security'; by calculated resort to
disinformation and war mongering; the
public pronouncements of President Kumaratunga and her
ministers, together with the
'victory' ceremony on establishing 'Sinhala rule' of Jaffna;
and the
failure of President Chandrika Kumaratunga and her government to
condemn the gross and systematic violations of humanitarian
law by the forces under their command and the
impunity afforded to the offenders."
Sri Lanka's Genocidal War, 1995 to 2001
"My Government is firmly committed to the global endeavour to fight
terrorism. We have signed and ratified the UN Conventions aimed at
combating this menace and we continue to contribute to the process,
by Chairing the Ad Hoc Committee on Measures to Eliminate
International Terrorism. We hope that at this session of the General
Assembly, substantial progress could be made on the draft
Comprehensive Convention on International Terrorism and the draft
Convention on Nuclear Terrorism.
Mr. President, Sri Lanka believes in the UN and its potential to be
the principal forum where the voice of the poor, the defenceless and
the weak is also heard as much as the voice of the rich and
powerful. We look to the United Nations - its Specialized Agencies
and programmes - together with international civil society, as the
institutions that are capable of empowering people and promoting
their rights, advancing free and fair trade, and forging a new level
of international cooperation, with a shared responsibility for
global governance and collective action for peace and security.
We recognize therefore, the need for reform to render the United
Nations more responsive to the needs and aspirations of all of its
member States. We look forward to the recommendations to be
presented to this Session of the General Assembly by the 'High Level
Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change', appointed by the
Secretary-General.
There is general agreement that the Security Council, as presently
constituted, does not reflect the current geo-political realities.
Reform has to be comprehensive and should not be confined to the
question of enlargement of the Security Council alone.
However, we share the concern over the lack of progress on the
question of equitable regional representation and the increase in
the membership of the Security Council, in both the permanent and
non-permanent categories.
For many years, most of the member States, particularly the
developing countries, have consistently urged that the composition
of the Security Council be broadened to accommodate the basic
principles of democratic representation. This includes adequate
representation of developing countries. In this context, we observe
that Asia, the most populous continent that is home to expanding
economic powerhouses is grossly under-represented in the present
Council.
Mr. President, we take note that four countries - Brazil, Germany,
India and Japan - will announce their participation in a compact in
terms of which they will collectively support their respective
candidatures for permanent status in an expanded Security Council.
Sri Lanka supports their candidatures, as each of them complies with
one or more of the objective criteria applicable to the expansion of
the permanent membership of the Security Council.
It is hoped that the Open Ended Working Group would continue to
exert efforts to resolve all outstanding issues expeditiously. Sri
Lanka would also wish to see a consensus emerging on the permanent
representation of Africa in the Security Council.
Africa must be included when a final determination is reached on the
future composition of the Security Council.
We also believe that the General Assembly, which is representative
of all member States of the UN should have a larger and more active
role to play as a deliberative and decision-making body.
Mr. President,.At the dawn of the new millennium, four years ago, we
forged a consensus to pursue a vision of an inclusive globalization
process that provides benefits for the widest possible segments of
society. Leaving aside the common place clich,s about globalization,
we agreed on a number of goals to be implemented within specific
time frames. My government's economic and social development
programmes were planned and put into action ten years ago.
We have now made the necessary changes to align our plans more
closely with the UN's Millennium Development Goals. The Sri Lankan
Government's strategy for development seeks a constructive
partnership between a strong and accountable private sector,
including foreign investment, and a robust and responsive public
sector. The major thrust of our vision is to eliminate poverty,
reduce inequalities, enhance the standard of living among the
different sectors of our population, thus providing equal
opportunities for all.
Through decades of free education and health services, Sri Lanka has
already made significant strides in achieving some of the Millennium
Development Goals in certain areas of human development in the
spheres of education, health and nutrition.
In the field of education, my government's new education reforms
plan which commenced implementation in 1998, as well as achievements
since independence have ensured gender equality in both primary and
secondary education, a literacy rate of 92% and school attendance of
98% up to end of primary school. We also have a wide network of
vocational training centres and programmes for non-formal education."
Comment:
"Lawlessnes in Sri Lanka - A general militarisation
of society has taken place over the years helped on by the war. In
the course of the civil war in the Northeast, 55,000 soldiers are
reported to have deserted the ranks taking their weapons with them.
Repeated proclamations of amnesties have not been headed, thus
allowing for a wide circulation of weapons and the easy formation of
armed bands ready to offer their services to politicians or business
men. Thus, violence has become the preferred means of competition in
politics and business to gain the upper hand against unwelcome competitors.
The situation in Sri Lanka can be characterised as increasingly
institutionalised lawlessness... There has been a widespread
privatisation of violence..."
Statement by International League for the Rights
and Liberation of Peoples (Non Governmental Organisation with Special
Consultative Status at the United Nations)under Agenda Item 2: Question of the violation of Human Rights
and Fundamental freedoms 28 July 2004
"The UN Special Session on Children held in 2002, which I had the
privilege to attend, arrived at important decisions with regard to
the advancement and protection of child rights. It was decided that
all member States should prepare and implement an action plan for
children from 2004 - 2008. We have recently launched Sri Lanka's
Action Plan for Children which we believe would contribute to
creating a world fit for children as decided at the Special Session
in 2002.
Mr. President, on the subject of social progress, I must commend the
United Nations for its continued commitment and perseverance in
promoting and protecting children's rights. Apart from guaranteeing
the rights of every child to education and good health services, Sri
Lanka believes that children must be protected from abuse of all
types, sexual, alcohol, drugs and tobacco.
Children in some of our countries suffer from the ignominious
practice of being used as child soldiers. We are addressing this
problem by seeking to engage the LTTE in the process of negotiation
and by supporting the activities spear headed by UNICEF and civil
society organizations working on this issue.. Our economic strategy
is market driven but geared to achieve human development and
prosperity at the grass roots level.
We have crafted a policy and launched programmes to channel
development efforts and resources to domestic capacity builders at
the village level who are the pillars of our national economy.
Over 60 percent of our population belongs to the rural sector and
depends on agriculture for their livelihood. Promotion of small and
medium scale enterprises is therefore vital to sustain
development.
Sri Lanka draws strength from the recognition the United Nations has
granted for the small and medium industrialists in the developing
world through the declaration of 2005 as the Year for Micro-Credit."
Comment:
".. Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe presented a bleak outlook for the
Sri Lankan economy on Thursday, saying the high cost of fighting the Tamil
separatist war had bloated the deficit and slowed growth. ``Even if peace dawns and no shot is fired thereafter, we will be paying for
our military purchases until 2008,'' Wickremesinghe said in an address on
state-run Rupavahini television. He said the government had 13.6 billion rupees (dlrs 141 million) in
outstanding loans for military purchases ``I may become unpopular because I speak the truth, but that's not a problem
to me,'' Wickremesinghe said about critics who accuse his administration of
doing little to bring down the rising cost of living..."
Sri
Lanka Prime Minister, Ranil Wickremasinghr, blames Sri Lanka's economic woes on borrowing to fight Tamil separatist war, July 2002
"Mr. President, the Millennium Declaration Goals have given to the
United Nations and member States a massive and challenging task.
While the United Nations has been criticized by some, many have
praised the Organisation..All agree that the United Nations remains
an indispensable instrument for preserving international peace and
security and promoting socio-economic development, social justice
and human rights.
In a rapidly changing world economy and strategic environment, the
UN however must meet the emerging challenges. It has a pivotal
contribution to make in providing the political, legal and moral
force underpinning the collective efforts of the member States
towards creating a world where human rights, freedom and equitable
development are promoted and protected.
It is perhaps in such an environment that those who suffer from
deprivation and marginalisation will reject the advocacy of violence
offered by extremists and terrorist groups as the only instrument of
change. To this end, the UN can make a collective contribution. We
expect the UN to epitomize the force of law not the rule of force.
However, we cannot expect the UN to deliver what the member States
fail to support. The UN can do what its member States want it to do;
no more, no less.
We witness with concern the emergence of a contrived association of
certain religious beliefs with some groups of fanatics.
Extremism,
violence and terrorism are the complete anti-thesis of the ethical
and spiritual foundation of all religious philosophies and
practices. We should work resolutely to prevent these aberrations
from becoming irreversible trends.
On the other hand, Mr. President, we are disturbed to witness
religious symbols being defamed or abused for commercial purposes.
Whether the symbols belong to the Christian, Buddhist, Hindu,
Islamic, Jewish or any other faith, such abuse should be condemned
and prohibited.
The recent phenomenon of
Buddhist symbols being used for commercial
purposes, thus causing concern and pain of mind to Buddhists all
over the world is a case in point. Fortunately, most of these
organizations have agreed to refrain from such abuse in the future.
Sri Lanka together with other like-minded States has brought this
situation to the attention of UNESCO and other relevant
inter-governmental bodies. We propose that the United Nations should
call upon those responsible to pay due respect to religious symbols
and practices. This would be a fitting contribution by the UN to its
own initiative on a `dialogue among civilizations.'
This year Sri Lanka will begin events to celebrate the 50th
anniversary of our membership of the United Nations that falls in
2005. On that occasion, we will renew our commitment to the purposes
and principles of the United Nations.
We expect the Organisation to provide leadership in the task of
creating a world where understanding and harmony prevails with
economic, scientific and technological advancement.
My commitment, and that of my government and the people of Sri
Lanka, to the United Nations remains undiminished. Our hope, Mr.
President, is that all member States will cooperate fully with the
United Nations to realize the goals of the Millennium Declaration." |