EUROPEAN UNION & THE TAMIL STRUGGLE
Joint Motion for a Resolution
on the situation in Sri Lanka
[also in
PDF] 17 May 2006
[see also TCHR -
European Parliament resolution encouraging Sri Lanka to opt
for a military solution]
Joint Motion for a Resolution pursuant to
Rule 115(5) of the Rules of Procedure, by
� Geoffrey Van Orden, Charles Tannock,
Thomas Mann, Philip Bradbourn and Bernd Posselt, on
behalf of the PPE-DE Group
� Pasqualina Napoletano, Robert Evans, Neena Gill,
Emilio Men�ndez del Valle and Elena Valenciano
Mart�nez-Orozco, on behalf of the PSE Group
� Elizabeth Lynne, Sajjad Karim and Marios Matsakis, on
behalf of the ALDE Group
� Jean Lambert, Ra�l Romeva i Rueda, G�rard Onesta and
Frithjof Schmidt, on behalf of the Verts/ALE Group
� Eoin Ryan, on behalf of the UEN Group
replacing the motions by the following
groups:
� Verts/ALE (B6‑0281/2006)
� GUE/NGL (B6‑0283/2006)
� PPE-DE (B6‑0286/2006)
� ALDE (B6‑0290/2006)
� PSE (B6‑0293/2006)
on the situation in Sri Lanka
European Parliament resolution on the
situation in Sri Lanka
The European Parliament,
� having regard to the armed conflict which has torn Sri
Lanka since 1983, taking over 60,000 lives and causing the
displacement of more than 800,000 people,
� having regard to its previous resolutions of 18 May 2000,
14 March 2002 and 20 November 2003 on Sri Lanka, and of 13
January 2005 on EU aid after the tsunami disaster,
� having regard to the Oslo Declaration of December 2002, in
which the Sri Lankan Government and the Liberation Tigers of
Tamil Eelam (LTTE) agreed to try to find a federal solution
within a united Sri Lanka,
� having regard to the Tokyo Declaration on Reconstruction
and Development of 10 June 2003, which linked donor support
to progress in the peace process, insisting on compliance
with the Ceasefire Agreement, participation of the Muslim
minority in the talks, promotion and protection of human
rights, gender equality and progress towards a final
political settlement,
� having regard to the support given by the EU and the wider
international community in reply to the devastating tsunami
of 26 December 2004,
� having regard to Rule 115(5) of its Rules of Procedure,
A. whereas the conflict in Sri Lanka has
killed over 60 000 people, displaced one million and
held back the island's growth and economic development,
resulting in a miserable situation for so many people
across Sri Lanka, whose lives have been devastated by
the tsunami and who now have to suffer from renewed
violence,
B. whereas there have been countless attacks in the
Jaffna peninsula, Trincomalee and Batticaloa and the
officially registered ceasefire breaches run into
thousands, most of them committed by the LTTE,
C. whereas tensions have been deliberately exacerbated
by the attempted assassination of Lieutenant General
Sarath Fonseka, the Sri Lankan Army Commander, on 25
April 2006, the assassinations of Sri Lankan Foreign
Minister Lakshman Kadirgamar last August and Joseph
Pararajasingha, MP, in December, and the attack on the
Batticaloa district office of the SLMM on 13 January
2006in a deliberate attempt to undermine the Ceasefire
Agreement,
D. whereas on 11 May the LTTE attacked a vessel carrying
710 unarmed members of the security forces on their way
back after home leave, with members of the Sri Lanka
Monitoring Mission (SLMM) on board and flying the SLMM
flag, which was escorted by navy gun boats, sinking one
of them and killing 18 of the crew members,
E. whereas over 300 people have died in attacks and
violence this year in Sri Lanka,
F. whereas international monitors say that the recent
violence is the most serious threat to the 2002
ceasefire brokered by Norwegian mediators, previously
weakened by a large number of reported ceasefire
breaches, including armed ambushes, abductions,
intimidation, killings, torture and recruitment of
children as soldiers,
G. whereas after the first round held in Geneva in
February, the peace talks have been suspended
indefinitely after the LTTE pulled out again of a second
round in April, jeopardising the opportunity for
political progress,
H. whereas any restoration of the peace process should
seek the involvement of a wide range of communities and
political organisations in Sri Lanka, including Northern
Muslim representatives, I. whereas human
rights organisations have not been able to effectively
investigate human rights abuses, and the SLMM does not
have the mandate independently to investigate these
breaches,
1. Strongly welcomed the move by the Government of Sri Lanka
and the LTTE to return to the negotiating table in February,
and condemns, therefore, the LTTE's unilateral refusal to
participate in the second round of negotiations in Geneva
that were scheduled for April 2006;
2. Urgently calls on the LTTE to resume peace negotiations
with the Government of Sri Lanka without delay, to be
prepared to decommission its weapons and to set the stage
for a final political settlement of the conflict;
3. Severely condemns the renewed campaign of attacks by the
LTTE, the high level of human rights violations committed by
both sides and the constant breaches of the ceasefire
agreement;
4. Deplores the gross violations of the Ceasefire Agreement
by the LTTE through actions at sea, in particular the attack
of 11 May on the Sri Lankan naval force, which resulted in
many casualties and put SLMM monitors in grave danger;
5. Calls on the parties to the Ceasefire Agreement to ensure
the security of the SLMM which is an unarmed body invited by
both the Government and the LTTE to monitor the Ceasefire
Agreement, in order to allow the mission to fulfil its
mandate, and commends the contributing countries, Denmark,
Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden, for their invaluable
work;
6. Calls on both the LTTE and the Government of Sri Lankato
refrain from further actions liable to jeopardise the peace
process, and in particular attacks on civilians;
7. Expresses its condemnation of the appalling abuse of
children through the recruitment of child soldiers, which is
a war crime, and calls on all rebel groups and notably the
LTTE to stop this practice, to release those it holds and to
make a declaration of principle not to recruit any children
in the future; urges the Government of Sri Lanka to put into
place legal measures to prevent and criminalise the
practice;
8. Recognises that the LTTE does not represent all the Tamil
peoples of Sri Lanka and calls on the LTTE to allow for
political pluralism and alternate democratic voices in the
northern and eastern parts of Sri Lanka which would secure
the interests of all peoples and communities;
9. Strongly condemns the particular repression against Tamil
language press and Tamil organisations, and calls for a
thorough investigation into the murders of Mayilvaganam
Nimalarajan and Dharmeratnam Sivaram, as well as the two
employees of the newspaper 'Uthayan';
10. Recognises that Sri Lanka's recent election as a member
of the UN Human Rights Council places an obligation on the
government to manifest its commitment to uphold the highest
standards in the promotion and protection of human rights;
11. Calls on the Commission and the Government of Sri Lanka
to ensure the reactivation of Sri Lanka's Human Rights
Commission and stresses the need for an effective
independent investigation into all alleged human rights
violations by security forces or armed groups, bringing the
perpetrators to justice in accordance with international
fair trial standards, and insists that all parties should
subscribe to comprehensive human rights agreements as a key
element of future peace negotiations;
12. Urges both sides, as an immediate gesture of goodwill,
to cease the use of anti-personnel landmines and to assist
in their removal, and considers that, to this end, the
Government of Sri Lanka should set an example by signing the
Ottawa Convention and the LTTE should sign the Geneva Call
'Deed of Commitment';
13. Is worried at the fact that a deal to share
international aid has still not been implemented, and
believes that aid sent to Sri Lanka by the EU, and other
international donors, in response to the tsunami must
benefit the victims of that disaster without regard for
their ethnic or religious denomination; but is concerned
about the distribution and use of tsunami funds, which have
not had the expected impact on the everyday lives of the
victims or on Sri Lanka's recovery; notes that the political
gridlock on the 'Post-Tsunami Operations Management
Structure' has already delayed the release of a further � 50
million in aid, hindering reconstruction work in the North
and East of Sri Lanka;
14. Deplores the fact that the demands of heavy defence
costs have for many years diverted resources away from
urgently needed investments in economic and social
infrastructure in Sri Lanka;
15. Calls on the EU Member States to do everything in their
capacity in order to stop all illegal attempts by the LTTE
to uphold a system of forced taxation among sections of the
Tamil community living in the European Union;
16. Calls on the Commission and the Member States, as part
of this process, to follow the example of other countries
and to freeze the assets of the LTTE-associated bank
accounts, holdings, companies or undertakings in Member
States of the European Union;
17. Recognises that the EU has declared that delegations
from the LTTE will no longer be received in any of the EU
Member States until further notice, and that the EU is
actively considering the formal listing of the LTTE as a
terrorist organisation;
18. Calls on the Council, the Commission and the Member
States to remain committed to a fair and sustainable
solution to the Sri Lankan conflict and reiterates its
support for all the people of Sri Lanka and their President,
Mr Mahinda Rajapakse, as they address together the
challenges that lie ahead;
19. Instructs its President to forward this resolution to
the Council, the Commission, the governments of the other
members of the Co-Chairs Group (Norway, the USA and Japan),
the UN Secretary-General, the governments of Switzerland,
Sri Lanka and the other SAARC countries, and the LTTE.
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