Australian Prof. named in PCoI report on Easter carnage denies accusations, vows legal action

Australian Prof. Lukman Thalib, 58, mentioned in the Presidential Commission of Inquiry (PCoI) report that dealt with the 2019 Easter Sunday attacks, says that he will initiate legal proceedings against the Sri Lankan government over what he calls unsubstantiated allegations against him.

Thalib is believed to be in Turkey. His son, Ismail Thalib, 24, too, is mentioned in the PCoI report.

UK-based advocacy organization CAGE yesterday (29) in a statement sent to The Island quoted Prof. Thalib as having said: “Recent discussions on the Easter Sunday bombings in Sri Lanka which brought my name into public disrepute out of the blue, have shocked me and my family. I have had no contact from Sri Lankan authorities – they’ve not questioned me about any allegations. Instead I read about them in the press, which is a violation of my due process rights. It is absolutely reprehensible and disgusts me to my very core. I have spent all my life, as a Professor of Public Health and a scientific researcher, working for the protection and preservation of human life.

“I have instructed my lawyers to take legal action against the government of Sri Lanka for these defamatory allegations. It is unacceptable that my extended family faced harassment over the months preceding the release of the PCoI report. The government has shown that it lacks the credibility and impartiality for such a sensitive investigation, especially as it stands accused of war crimes by the United Nations.

“Not only have I been arbitrarily removed from my role as a senior Professor at Qatar University, but I have endured six months of torture, which has been widely publicized internationally. It’s becoming increasingly clear that the country where I was born has played a role in my suffering. They must be held accountable for this.”

Prof. Thalib alleged that they were tortured during the near six-month long detention in Qatar before being released. Qatar authorities took them into custody on July 27, 2020. Prof Thalib said that his relatives living in Sri Lanka, too, were questioned as regards their involvement.

Naila Ahmed, CAGE Casework Manager said: “Our client, Professor Lukman, has not been offered any opportunity to reject the allegations prior to them being unethically leaked to the press. This flies in the face of any semblance of due process and is a flagrant violation of the right to a fair hearing.”

According to international media, another son of Prof Thalib, identified as Ahmed Luqman Thalib, has been named by the US as an Al Quida operative allegedly involved in moving funds. The US named him several months after the arrest of his father and brother.

According to the Attorney General’s Department, AG Dappula de Livera, PC, on March 10 instructed IGP C.D. Wickremaratne to investigate several persons referred to in the PCoI report. Prof. Thalib and Katuwapitiya National Thowheed Jamaat bomber Hastun’s wife Sarah were among those named by the AG.

SLPP Chairman Prof. G.L. Peiris recently briefed the media regarding their alleged involvement in the Easter Sunday attacks. (SF)

Source:The Island

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Government factions undecided on PC elections

The key factions in the government are yet to reach an understanding over the Provincial Council Elections, especially about how the election will be held.

General Secretary of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party Dayasiri Jayasekera speaking to reporters said the SLFP wishes to contest the polls as per the Mixed-Member electoral system.

However, the SLPP says the method of holding the election will be decided by the Cabinet of Ministers.

Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna General Secretary Attorney-at-Law Sagara Kariyawasam speaking to reporters said the cabinet would analyze the requests made on the method of holding the elections and then reach a decision.

However, many factions that assisted in bringing the incumbent government to power believe the Provincial Councils must be abolished.

In 2020, Venerable Medagoda Abhayatissa Thero said Provincial Councils pave the way for separatism in the country while it is also a waste of money.

Yet, Sri Lanka’s neighbor India, continues to call for the implementation of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution and to call for Provincial Council Elections.

At the recent UN Human Rights Council session, India supported the call by the international community for the Government of Sri Lanka to fulfill its commitments on the devolution of political authority, including through the early holding of elections for Provincial Councils and to ensure that all Provincial Councils are able to operate effectively, in accordance with the 13th Amendment to the Sri Lankan Constitution.

During the weekend, Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa said the recent UNHRC resolution against Sri Lanka was the doing of “local and foreign forces” which do not want the country to progress and vowed that his government would not succumb to such pressures.

In his first public comments since the UNHRC resolution, Rajapaksa said: “We will never succumb to (such) pressures (UNHRC resolution); we are a free nation. We will not be a victim of big power rivalry in the Indian Ocean.”

China calls on Sri Lanka to jointly advance Belt and Road cooperation

Chinese President Xi Jinping on Monday said China is willing to work with Sri Lanka to enhance Belt and Road cooperation and contribute to the economic revival of Sri Lanka in post-pandemic era.

Xi made the remarks during a phone call with Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa.

Xi said China will continue to provide necessary assistance to Sri Lanka, conduct cooperation in areas including aviation and education and explore other potential cooperation areas.

Xi said China will never forget Sri Lanka’s support for the restoration of China’s lawful seat in the UN, and is willing to continue working with Sri Lanka to support each other on issues of mutual concern, safeguard each other’s legitimate rights and promote global justice and fairness.

Rajapaksa congratulated China on the 100th founding anniversary of the Communist Party of China and spoke highly of China’s achievements in fighting the pandemic and its economic recovery.

Rajapaksa said Sri Lanka hopes to learn from China’s experience in poverty reduction and rural revitalization and is willing to expand cooperation in infrastructure construction, tourism and so on, so as to benefit Sri Lanka’s economic development and its people.(CGTN)

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Will not allow other countries to push for ‘separatism in the guise of power devolution’, says Gotabaya Rajapaksa

The Sri Lankan President said ‘the government does not wish to be associated with the power struggles in the Indian Ocean region by the global giants’.

Sri Lanka will not allow other countries to achieve their geopolitical needs by introducing “separatism under the guise of power devolution” in the island nation, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has said.

“The government does not wish to be associated with the power struggles in the Indian Ocean region by the global giants,” Mr. Rajapaksa said, adding that the sovereignty of Sri Lanka would not be betrayed, a front-page report in the state-run Daily News said on Monday.

Speaking at a ‘Discussion with the Village’ event in the southern Matara district on Saturday, he appeared to be responding to India’s intervention at the United Nations Human Rights Council last week. Although India abstained from voting, it supported the international community’s call in the resolution for devolving political authority, holding of elections to provincial councils and implementation of the 13th Amendment that guarantees a measure of power devolution to the provinces.

The Council adopted the resolution — with 22 countries backing it — that called for greater scrutiny of human rights in the country, including through an international evidence gathering mechanism, while flagging possible recurrence of human rights violations, citing recent policy decisions impacting Sri Lanka’s Tamil and Muslim minorities.

In addition to pegging the international call for devolution, to the geopolitical needs of “other countries”, Mr. Rajapaksa’s remarks also linked the demand for greater power devolution to separatism, although Sri Lanka’s Tamil political leadership has repeatedly underscored the need for enhanced powers for provinces within a “united, undivided and indivisible” Sri Lanka.

The President said: “We will face the Geneva challenge without fear. We will never succumb to pressures. We are a free nation. We will not be a victim of big power rivalry in the Indian Ocean,” a week after the U.N. Human Rights Council adopted a resolution.

The statement assumes significance in the wake of persisting calls from some within his government, including senior Ministers, for the abolition of the provincial council system and the 13th Amendment.

Provincial council elections

Less than a fornight before the vote on the Sri Lanka resolution in Geneva, amid Colombo’s hectic diplomatic outreach seeking support from members, Mr. Rajapaksa “instructed the relevant parties to take steps to expedite the provincial council elections by either withdrawing the Provincial Council Amendment bill or rectifying its anomalies,” a statement issued by the Presidential Media division said on March 13.

According to local media reports, the holding of provincial council elections is likely to be discussed in Monday’s [March 29] weekly Cabinet meeting.

After being elected President in November 2019, Mr. Rajapaksa stated that he would focus more on development rather than devolution. In an interview to The Hindu on November 30, 2019, during his first visit to New Delhi after assuming office, Mr. Rajapaksa said the previous push for “devolution, devolution, devolution” had not changed the situation in Sri Lanka.

Full devolution of powers as promised by the 13th Amendment to the Constitution in 1987 could not be implemented “against the wishes and feeling of the majority [Sinhala] community,” he noted, while the legislation envisages power devolution to all provinces in the country, including those with a Sinhala-majority.

Source: The Hindu

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Sri Lanka’s COVID-19 death toll increases to 566

Five more COVID-19 fatalities have been recorded in Sri Lanka, raising the death toll to 566.

The Director General of Health Services in a statement said all five deaths were confirmed from the Western Province.

Accordingly, a 45-year-old male from Colombo 15, a 55-year-old male from Kalutara South, a 63-year-old male from Kandana, a 67-year-old male from Colombo 13 and a 70-year-old male from Ethul Kotte have passed away after contracting the novel coronavirus.

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Catholic Church wants Islamic preachers who promote extremism banished

The Catholic Church in Sri Lanka wants Islamic preachers who promote religious extremism to be banished from Sri Lanka.

Issuing a statement, the Archdiocese of Colombo emphasized it is the responsibility of those in power and authority to protect peace and the Rule of Law in the country.

The Catholic Church in Sri Lanka further urged all citizens of the country to pressure those in power to act on this urgently and to mete out justice to all the victims of the 2019 Easter Sunday attacks.

It further called on all politicians of the Government and the Opposition to refrain from any action that might hamper the independent and free implementation of the judicial process in this case.

Thereby, the Archdiocese of Colombo urged all concerned that they should look out for all those who are connected to this crime directly or indirectly, such as planning, financial help, political patronage, etc., expedite further investigations on the matter and bring those responsible before the law without delay, and speed up action and the prosecution against those who have been arrested in connection with the Easter Sunday attacks.

“We wish to draw attention to the need to investigate thoroughly on all those who during the latter years of the North and East conflict had contacts or dealings with Zahran Hashim, who is alleged to have been the leader of the suicide bombers,” the statement said.

The Archdiocese of Colombo further categorically affirmed that it is absolutely necessary to prosecute without hesitation and further delays all those political leaders and officials, irrespective of the position they held, who have been seconded for prosecution in the report of the Presidential Commission of Inquiry on the Easter Sunday attacks, and that for shirking their duty so callously and doing absolutely nothing to prevent the massacre having known sufficiently ahead of time through the reports of intelligence that such an attack would really take place.

“We wish to also urge that all those extremist Islamic groups, which are a threat to national security must be proscribed with immediate effect and their foreign sponsors and local agents, as well as those Islamic preachers who promote religious extremism through hate speech should be banished from the country. The offensive weaponry which they have imported should be searched for and all financial sources as well as liquid and non-liquid assets that sustain such extremist terrorism activities should be confiscated’, it said.

The Archdiocese of Colombo underscored that every effort should be made to implement or at least initiate the first steps in order to implement the foregoing demands before the 21st of April 2021, which is also the second anniversary of the attacks.

“When we look at the way the criminal investigations Department and all the other relevant State Institutions handle intelligence and find out the culprits who commit other crimes in the country taking action against them speedily, it baffles us as to why, after well-nigh two years, they cannot do so in this case, getting the culprits who murdered 269 innocent human beings and injured seriously over 300 others, some of whom remain maimed and made to go from hospital to hospital for the rest of their lives,” the statement read.

The Archdiocese of Colombo questioned if there were any external interferences that hamper the efficiency of these institutions in finding out who the real culprits are and in prosecuting those responsible for the attacks.

The Catholic Church in Sri Lanka further warned that if the demands are not met, they will be left with no other option but to further intensify their protest action and to extend it to the whole country.

Sri Lanka bans Tamil diaspora groups and several individuals

The Government has banned a number of Tamil diaspora groups, including some influential organizations based in the UK.

Some of the groups were banned in 2014 but were de-listed by the Government in 2015.

The Global Tamil Forum (GTF), British Tamil Forum (BTF), Canadian Tamil Congress (CTC), Australian Tamil Congress (ATC), National Council of Canadian Tamil, Tamil Youth Organisation and the World Tamil Coordinating Committee have been proscribed by the Ministry of Defence.

The have been banned under Regulation 4(7) of the United Nations Regulations No. 1 of 2012.

The gazette notice issued to ban the organizations has been signed by Defence Secretary Kamal Gunaratne.

The Government has also banned a number of individuals based in the UK, Germany, Italy, Malaysia and several other countries.

Among those banned are GTF spokesman Suren Surendiran, who had been engaged in talks with then Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera and the Tamil National Alliance after the former Government lifted the ban on some of the diaspora groups.

The former Government had de-listed most groups considered as being moderate in their views, in an attempt to seek their support for the reconciliation process and development of the North.

However, the current administration considers these groups as still being linked to terrorism and a threat to national security.

The latest ban had been enforced just before the UN Human Rights Council began to meet in Geneva.

The Tamil diaspora have been critical of the current administration on the human rights issue and had been lobbying for support for the resolution against Sri Lanka in Geneva.

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Cabinet to decide on PC polls tomorrow

A final decision regarding the amendment of the laws pertaining to the Provincial Council elections will be taken at the Cabinet meeting to be held tomorrow (March 29).

Janaka Bandara Tennakoon, Minister of Public Services, Provincial Councils, and Local Government presented two alternative proposals to the Cabinet last week regarding the holding of the Provincial Council Elections.

The proposals were to hold the PC elections either under the old system or to amend the new Act and hold elections under the mixed system.

The final decision in this regard will be taken at the Cabinet meeting tomorrow (29).

Meanwhile, the Provincial Councilors of the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) requested the government to hold the Provincial Council elections expeditiously by any means.

Schools in Jaffna will be closed for a week from tomorrow

All schools in the Jaffna Education Zone will be closed for a week from tomorrow, Jaffna District Secretary Kanapathipillai Maheshan said.

The decision has been taken considering the spread of the COVID-19 virus in Jaffna.

Jaffna Public Health Inspectors say that the Jaffna District Covid Suppression Committee held today (28) has decided to temporarily close all the schools under the Jaffna Education Zonal Office for the next one week.

Jaffna Public Health Inspectors said that only schools within the Jaffna Zonal Education Office limits will be temporarily closed for the safety of children due to the high incidence of Covid cases reported across the Jaffna Municipal Council boundary and the Tirunelveli area in Jaffna.

According to the Public Health Inspectors, the District Covid Suppression Committee has decided to inform the decision to the Northern Province Education Secretary on the recommendation of the Governor of the Northern Province.

Several areas within the Jaffna Municipal Council city limits were placed under isolation last week due to the high number of patients reported from the Jaffna District during the past week.

The Public Health Inspectors said that due to the prevailing health hazard, travel restrictions have been imposed on a part of Jaffna city and a village in the Tirunelveli area in Jaffna.

Govt. to focus on the ‘doables’ before 48th UNHRC Session

The United Nations (UN) resolution on Sri Lanka “promoting reconciliation, accountability, and human rights”, presented by the UN Core Group led by the UK, Canada, and other allies, was adopted at the 46th Session of the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) on 23 March.

What will happen next, now that the resolution – which was strongly rejected by the Government of Sri Lanka (GoSL) for being politically motivated and unwarranted – has been passed?

The Sunday Morning sat down with Foreign Secretary Prof. Jayanath Colombage to get insights into what lies ahead for Sri Lanka post-resolution and what action Sri Lanka is planning to take in order to address the issues highlighted in the resolution, among many other topics.

“Sri Lanka, being a responsible country, will follow the rules and principles. At the moment, we are deciding and debating how to move forward through this resolution,” he said.

The Foreign Secretary said the Government needs to identify the doable measures to address residual issues in the country, as an oral update on the human rights situation is due in the 48th Session of the UNHRC.

Following are excerpts of the interview;

The UN resolution on Sri Lanka was adopted with a majority of votes at the UNHRC, with 22 member states supporting it and 11 voting against. What does this mean for Sri Lanka and what will change?

The resolution was basically moved by the EU (European Union) countries together with Canada and backed by the US. Almost all countries that moved this resolution against Sri Lanka are European countries – the white-dominated countries.

We felt that it was highly unwarranted and unnecessary, and it is against the principles of the UN Charter and the HRC. Therefore, we don’t want to be guided by that resolution, but in a real sense, they have adopted a resolution.

Now, Sri Lanka being a responsible country in the international system, we have to follow the rules and principles and we are at the moment deciding, debating, and discussing as to how we should move forward through this resolution that was adopted.

Some are concerned that there could be sanctions against Sri Lanka as a result of the resolution. Is there such a possibility?

There cannot be UN sanctions against Sri Lanka unless it is passed and ratified through the UN Security Council. This resolution does not talk about sanctions. However, individual countries could take a lead and decide on certain measures economically.

If there are sanctions against Sri Lanka, it is not against a particular community but against the entire Sri Lankan community. So, if somebody is talking about sanctions, they have to remember that this is targeting an entire population, and not necessarily a single community.

There are certain things we have to do in this country because there are certain residual issues coming out of the conflict. We need to find answers and solutions as much as we can in spheres like accountability, missing persons, resettlement, and releasing of lands; of course, we have done quite a lot. But if we can find answers to all these questions, then we will not be as vulnerable to be intruded on by the so-called international community.

We have a responsibility to do many things for the betterment of our people. I have to tell you, no other country is more interested in Sri Lanka than Sri Lanka to find a peaceful reconciliation mechanism in the country.

What are the immediate changes that could take place owing to the adoption of the resolution?

The Government has appointed a (Presidential) Commission of Inquiry (PCoI) with a clear mandate to study all previous reports including those of the LLRC (Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission) as well as Paranagama and Udalagama Commissions, and also to study all HRC resolutions and give us a way forward in addressing these issues raised in various reports up to now.

This is the mechanism we should really work for, work through, and achieve results to find answers to all residual incidents. We need to move on. Also, like the Office on Missing Persons (OMP), the Office of Reparation, the Office of National Unity and Reconciliation, and the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka (HRCSL) too need to be empowered. We now need to request them for an action plan that has to be tangible, achievable, and measurable. We need to achieve progress substantially through these independent mechanisms.

Will there be a new mechanism to address human rights concerns and other issues following the adoption of the resolution?

At the moment, I don’t see any other mechanism coming. We will have our hope and focus on the PCoI appointed by the President. This PCoI is basically to find burning issues, if there are any, and the residual issues, if there are any, coming out of the conflict we were engaged in until 2009.

When we look at the voting at the UNHRC for the resolution, 14 countries abstained from voting, including neighbours like India and Nepal. What should Sri Lanka do to change this?

The voting is finally what matters in this HRC and the voting does not take place based on merit, argument, or principles. It is merely a bloc. It is clearly evident in this case. The Western European and Eastern European members all got together. Only Russia from the eastern bloc voted against the resolution. These are not decided even by individual countries. These are decided as a group.

Now in that sense, I think it is a real achievement that 14 countries abstained from voting, because they did not support the vote by the powerful western group and they did not want to be taking a position against it for whatever the reason. If you look at the countries that abstained from voting, I’m sure they have different reasons for doing it.

Some countries told us that they are under tremendous pressure from western countries to vote for the resolution and against Sri Lanka. They said that “Sri Lanka is our friend but we need these countries because we are not developed”. These powerful countries use these human rights as a political weapon, economic aid as a political weapon, and whatever development aid as a political weapon. Then these countries told us that the best they can do is abstain from voting.

If you look at Japan, which depends on the US for its security in that region since they have issues with China, South Korea, and North Korea, they took a very calculated decision to abstain. We need to appreciate that.

Will Sri Lanka be making any changes to its foreign policy in the aftermath of the UN resolution?

I don’t see a major shift in our foreign policy. Towards the latter part of 2020, Sri Lanka launched its first-ever written, documented foreign policy directives for 2020 and beyond. This 20-point foreign policy is there and I don’t think it needs major changes because of the resolution.

The 20-point foreign policy directives were designed to economically develop Sri Lanka and maintain social harmony. We need to continue that rather than responding unnecessarily to the UN resolution. We need to move on for the sake of Sri Lanka.

Several issues in Sri Lanka, such as the Covid burial issue, were highlighted by the resolution, prompting some countries to vote against Sri Lanka. What will Sri Lanka do moving forward?

The burial issue would have been a real factor in those Islamic countries deciding on abstaining, like Bahrain and Indonesia. But we should remember that Bangladesh and Pakistan are also Muslim countries, but they voted against the resolution. The international community also saw this as something the Government did. But unfortunately, it was the health sector that decided on the burial issue. Now, we have found a solution, but it did damage our posture in international relations because we took some time, based on technical or scientific evidence, to come to a conclusion.

We are an island in this global system and very well connected. Our country’s foreign policy and economy are not totally dependent on us. There are outside players and we need to live with that. We have to learn lessons and move on.

The Human Rights High Commissioner is to give an oral update at the 48th UNHRC Session on the human rights situation in Sri Lanka. What are the plans of Sri Lanka to be prepared for this?

We need to identify the doables: What the things are that we can do quickly within a short timeframe because, as you said, an oral update is due next September. So we need to find answers to whatever questions we have during the next six months. The PCoI, OMP, and other offices will have to work and give some measurable and tangible results, so that we can tell the HRC that these issues are addressed satisfactorily for the people of Sri Lanka.

That is something we have to do. But the thing we have observed is that when we achieve certain things, they change the goal post. They bring something totally different. That, we can’t help. The HRC report was not much about the war that took place 12 years ago – it was all about this year. Sri Lanka was battling Covid-19. We had economic issues and restrictions on travel. We didn’t have any human rights violations.

The UN is seeking funds to implement the resolution and the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) is to recruit new employees to work on Sri Lanka, including the monitoring of the human rights situation. These employees are also scheduled to visit Sri Lanka for fact-finding. What would be the response of the Government?

Where is this money coming from? The HRC, in the beginning, said that there is a huge financial crisis for the maintenance of the HRC. They said they don’t have money. Now, on top of that, they have allocated $ 2.8 million. Where can this money come from? Is it coming from the same countries that moved the resolution? Then the next question is: Who is going to be appointed for this monitoring mechanism? Are they from the same countries that provide the money and moved the resolution?

In that sense, you know in Sri Lanka we have a saying that goes “naduth hamuduruwange, baduth hamuduruwange”. Can we expect justice through a mechanism funded, staffed, and moved by a certain group of European countries? We can’t expect any justice through that. So that is the predicament.

The funds sought for are $ 2.8 million. That’s a lot of money. We did a quick calculation. With such an amount of money, two doses of vaccines can be given to all the people in our entire northern peninsula, plus build 20,000 houses. Also, a drinking water project can be completed in Jaffna.

So, this is what we can do with this kind of money, rather than wasting it on an office they want with a staff they want to target the small countries.

Can Sri Lanka not intervene with respect to utilising these funds and nominating staff members in this mechanism?

We need to try many things and it’s only been a couple of days since the resolution was adopted. At the moment, we are exploring each and every avenue technically, legally, and procedurally to find how best we can handle these issues and also to identify what we should do. It will take a few days. It is too early for me to say what we are going to do exactly. Once we get the policy directives, then, of course, the Ministry can translate that into action.

I really don’t know whether we can have one of our people in that group. That’s why I said I don’t know the mechanism, where the funds are coming from, and who’s going to sit on that board. It is very unlikely that they would open the door for Sri Lankans to be a part of it because then, of course, it will have some balanced views.

Coming back to India’s abstention, you were quoted earlier as saying that India will support Sri Lanka at the vote. However, like it has done previously as well, India abstained. What happened?

Well, to begin with, I never said that India will support us. I think I was misquoted. I was echoing the words of the honourable Prime Minister of India. He said India will not do any injustice to Sri Lanka. These are the exact words that I used. But in the Sinhala translation, unfortunately, one of our journalist friends took it as me saying that India will support us. Then it was headline news in Sri Lanka, and Indian news also picked it up and said that the Sri Lankan Foreign Secretary said India will support.

No, I never said that. I need to correct this. I’m sure India got upset that although they had not communicated that they will support us, the Foreign Secretary here is saying that India will. I never said that. But in many discussions and in many forums, I expressed our desire for India to support us. Yes, we did that because India is a major power in the region and our immediate neighbour with the largest military.

Since this Government came to power, we did quite a lot to make India comfortable. We did quite a lot to make India strategically comfortable. We have clearly said that we will never do anything to harm India’s strategic security interest. We did that and gave top priority to India’s security concerns in the Indian Ocean region. So, we expected India to take a firm stand, but actually we can’t blame India.

They must have their own reasons for doing what they did. But in the final statement, they initially said that country-specific resolutions are not good. We are quite happy about that because that is a principal position we have always argued. Country-specific resolutions without the consent of the country is not going to work anyway. India also toed the same line.

We are still happy that India abstained from voting. It would have been a very different issue if India voted for the resolution against Sri Lanka, but they didn’t. We are comfortable with it. And, of course, India is our neighbour; we need to work with India and we need to make progress in every sphere.

Any particular countries Sri Lanka is focusing on strengthening relations with?

We need to maintain relations with all countries. Eleven countries wholeheartedly supported Sri Lanka. Some of those countries are those we don’t even have diplomatic relations with. We need to rethink this; they are great friends who actually rose up for Sri Lanka in a moment of need. We need to think about this and maintain focus in Africa, the Middle East, the immediate neighbourhood, the Asian region, and South America. We need to maintain our focus throughout the world.

The HRC is only one event and then there are many other things to come. We need economic diplomacy; we need more investments to come; we need more exports, tourists to come; we need more technology transfers. So, there are a lot of things we need to do. We have to make them work.