Indian High Commissioner begins tour of North Sri Lanka

India’s High Commissioner in Sri Lanka, Gopal Baglay commenced his visit to the Northern Province of Sri Lanka by offering prayers at the Ketheeswaram temple. He also attended Shivratri puja at the temple.

Indian High Commissioner Gopal Baglay has undertaken a four-day tour of the northern and eastern provinces to interact with a cross section of society there including political leaders and inspect the projects funded by India which are in various stages of implementation, sources said.

The High Commissioner also would visit the places of religious worship. This is his first such visit to the two provinces after he was appointed Indian High Commissioner in Sri Lanka.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi renewed his country’s call for the implementation of 13th Amendment in full. It was repeated by India even during the ongoing session of the UNHRC.

Moreover, the Jaffna cultural centre and the Palali airport development are the two key projects financed by India.

Maha Sangha stages Satyagraha over April 21 attacks

The Maha Sangha launched a Satyagraha campaign in Colombo today citing several demands including the need to punish the perpetrators of the 2019 April 21st attacks.

The Buddhist clergy from all three sects engaged in the Satyagraha campaign that was launched at the Independence Square today.

The demonstration was aimed at demanding punishment for the perpetrators of the April 21st attacks, serving justice for the victim, and condemning attempts to silence Buddhist organizations and leaders named in the report of the presidential commission that probed the bombings.

A resolution dubbed March 11 was revealed during the Satyagraha campaign.

The Satyagraha campaign is due to be held in other districts of the country in the coming days.

Meanwhile, a group carrying the Pakistan Flag, arrived near Independence Square today, where the Satyagraha was being held.

Those present claimed that the group had arrived to attend an event organized by the Pakistan High Commission.

The group carrying the Pakistan Flag dispersed after discussing the matter with an individual, over a police officer’s phone.

Group carrying Pakistan flags close to satyagraha site in Independence Square

Members of the Maha Sangha commenced a satyagraha campaign at Independence Square on Thursday (11).

The movement was titled ‘Yukthiya Udesa Yathiwara Paramithawa’ (යුක්තිය උදෙසා යතිවර පාරමිතාව)

According to reports, the satyagraha campaign is organized demanding the perpetrators for the 2019 April 21st Attacks mentioned in the report of the Presidential Commission of Inquiry, be prosecuted.

While the Satyagraha was taking place a group carrying Pakistan flags was seen close to Independence Square as well.

The group said they were at Independence Square for a celebration of the Pakistan High Commission in Colombo.

The group only dispersed from the location after a police officer made a phone call and had them speak to the person on the other end of the call.

 

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Basil Rajapaksa – next presidential candidate of SLPP?

Basil Rajapaksa is ideally the next presidential candidate of the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna, ruling party lawmaker Sahan Pradeep has said.

“Basil Rajapaksa is the only intelligent and eligible candidate who is capable of working together with other parties while serving for the country,” Pradeep told reporters on Thursday.

The Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna parliamentarian also said that individuals attempting to destroy the party will not be able to success in their objectives.

“There are no crooks in the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna,” Pradeep insisted dismissing remarks made to that effect by minister Wimal Weerawansa.

He pointed out that certain individuals, who are opposing the president, are claiming credit for the victory of the war under Mahinda Rajapaksa’s presidency.

“…it must be remembered that he (Mahinda Rajapaksa) was able to do so while Gotabhaya Rajapaksa served as his Defence Secretary,” Pradeep said.

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Four Maldivians had met Zahran Hashim in Sri Lanka

Four Maldivians had met the mastermind of the Easter Sunday attacks, Zahran Hashim in Sri Lanka, Minister of Public Security Sarath Weerasekara told Parliament today.

He said that the Maldivians had met Hashim and others linked to the bombings on a number of occassions.

The meetings had reportedly taken place between the year 2016 and before the April 2019 attacks.

Weerasekara said that the four Maldivians have been linked to extremism and terrorism.

He said that they were put in touch with Hashim by two Sri Lankans based in Australia.

Weerasekara revealed the details in Parliament when the report on the Easter Sunday attacks by the Presidential Commission of Inquiry was debated today.

The Minister revealed the status of the investigations into the deadly bombings.

He said that steps are to be taken to ban 11 organisations based in Sri Lanka, linked to the Easter Sunday attacks.

The Minister also said that steps are being taken to strengthen National security in Sri Lanka.

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Eight EU HR Ambassadors raise concern over Hejaaz Hizbullah

In a statement issued today, Eight Human Rights Ambassadors of Europe including the United Kingdom, Germany and Sweden called on the Sri Lankan government to ” respect human rights defenders such as Hizbullah”.

The statement issued by the Ambassadors of the United Kingsdom, Germany, Sweden, Finland, Lithuania, Estonia and the Netherlands said that after ten months of Detention, Hejaaz Hizbullah was being accused of speech related offences.

Prominent Attorney-at-Law Hejaaz Hizbullah was arrested by the Criminal Investigations Department on the 14th of April 2020.

He was thereafter accused in the media of various activities related to terrorism. He was thereafter produced on the 18th of February 2021 where the Attorney General informed court that the entire case against Hizbullah was to be based on purported statements made by children.

Hizbullah and his Lawyers have maintained that the entire case is a fabrication by sleuths.

The statement further said ” Mr. Hizbullah is a leading advocate if the rights of people from minority communities including Muslims in Sri Lana and a vocal critic of discriminatory policies” .

The statement called on the government to respect persons such as Hizbullah.

” We join the UN High COmmissioner for Human Rights, special procedures mandate holders, in urging the Government of Sri LAnka to respect Human Rights defenders such as Hizbullah” it said.

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China Approves $1.5 Billion Currency Swap With Sri Lanka

China has approved a 10 billion yuan ($1.54 billion) currency swap with Sri Lanka, a government spokesman in Colombo said on Wednesday, giving some respite from concerns about public finances.

The deal will allow the island to weather “present difficulties”, State Minister of Money & Capital Market and State Enterprise Reforms Ajith Nivard Cabraal said in an interview with the Daily Mirror earlier on Wednesday.

Sri Lanka’s government bonds surged after the announcement, with Sri Lanka’s dollar-denominated bond due in July 2021 climbing 3.5 cents to 96.3 cents and its highest level since March 2020. The January 2022 issue jumped 4.8 cents, Tradeweb data showed.

Dwindling foreign reserves, a tumbling currency and rising debt levels have dogged Sri Lanka over the last year, leading to increasing fears of a default.

The government of Prime Minister Gotabaya Rajapaksa – which has drawn the country closer to China to the frustration of neighbour India – says this will not happen. It has called downgrades by credit rating agencies and negative comments from investment banks in recent months politically motivated.

“(The swap deal) buys time given FX reserves are at multi-year lows and there are still significant FX payments into year end,” said Raza Agha, head of emerging markets credit strategy at Legal & General Investment Management.

“But the question remains – buy time for what? The need of the hour is an IMF program to anchor fiscal consolidation given government debt was projected at just shy 100% of GDP at the end of last year,” said Agha.

Sri Lanka had previously sought a fresh currency swap deal with India.

But that prospect diminished after India said any further extension of existing funding was contingent on Sri Lanka having a staff-level agreement for an IMF program, Patrick Curran, senior economist at Tellimer, wrote in a recent report, noting the government’s position of “continuing to resist an IMF program.”

Sri Lanka’s central bank governor W.D. Lakshman said last month the country was in talks with foreign governments and multilateral partners regarding financing options.

($1 = 6.5108 Chinese yuan renminbi)

(Reporting by Waruna Karunatilake in Colombo and Alasdair Pal in New Delhi; Additional reporting by Tom Arnold in London; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama, John Stonestreet and Toby Chopra)

Source:Thomson Reuters.

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Easter attacks: AG directs probes into 5 suspects including Sara Jasmine

The Attorney General (AG) has directed the Inspector-General of Police to investigate five suspects whose names were disclosed by the report of the Presidential Commission of Inquiry (PCoI) which looked into the Easter Sunday terror attacks.

Accordingly, probes will be carried out into Abu Hind, Lukman Thalib, Lukman Thalib Ahmed alias Abu Abdulla, Rimzan and Mahendran Pulasthini alias Sara Jasmine who were named in the 17th chapter in the report.

In a statement issued today (March 10), AG’s Coordinating Officer State Counsel Nishara Jayaratne said a special team of 12 legal officers of the Attorney General’s Department has been assigned to study the recordings of evidence in the PCoI report.

The Attorney General, on March 08, has called on His Eminence Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith to brief him about the progress of the legal matters and investigations pertaining to the carnage.

During the meeting, the Attorney General has stressed the importance and the need to study all evidence recorded by the Presidential Commission during its proceedings.

Pointing out that the PCoI’s final report was focused on the individuals who failed to prevent the attacks, the Attorney General has noted that it is paramount to study all recordings of evidence as the report does not reveal concrete information about the real ‘masterminds’, conspirators and individuals who directly and indirectly aided and abetted the blasts, the coordinating officer said further.

She assured that all individuals who are accountable for the attacks will be brought to book.

In the meantime, investigations of the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) must be completed and all evidence recorded by the PCoI must be studied by the Attorney General before serving indictments against all those who were responsible for the dastardly act, State Counsel Jayaratne added.

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Sri Lanka invites foreign minister of Myanmar junta -Daily Mail UK

Sri Lanka has invited the new foreign minister of Myanmar’s junta to a regional meeting next month, sparking accusations on social media that Colombo is tacitly endorsing the military coup.

There has been no formal international recognition of the regime which toppled Aung San Suu Kyi on February 1 although Wunna Maung Lwin, the junta’s newly appointed foreign minister, has met virtually and physically with some regional counterparts.

Myanmar’s junta and the envoy sent by its toppled civilian government have also launched contradictory claims over who represents the country at the United Nations.

Sri Lanka’s invitation, seen by AFP, is for an April 1 virtual meeting of the foreign ministers of Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Myanmar and Thailand under the Bay of Bengal Initiative for Multi-Sectoral Technical and Economic Cooperation (BIMSTEC).

“The 17th ministerial meeting will greatly benefit from your Excellency’s valued participation, and I look forward to our close engagement over the course of the meeting,” Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Dinesh Gunawardena says in the letter.

Several Myanmar activists bombarded the Sri Lankan foreign ministry’s social media platforms to slam the decision.

“Shame on you!!!,” said Twitter user SweZtun.”You invited a member of the Burmese Military Terrorist group to your BIMSTEC meeting…You are shamelessly legitimising Terrorist group…”

“Sri Lanka supporting to terrorist group is the worst shameless behaviour after China,” said another Twitter user identifying as Hein Min Htay.

There was no immediate comment from Sri Lanka’s foreign ministry. The two countries have close religious ties, both following the same branch of Buddhism.

Dozens of Sri Lankan activists meanwhile staged a demonstration outside the Myanmar embassy in Colombo Wednesday denouncing the military coup, in a protest planned before the announcement of the invitation.

“No to the terrorist junta!,” said a banner carried by them. “Prosecute the junta for crimes against humanity and genocide.”

Myanmar has been in turmoil since the military ousted the civilian government last month triggering daily protests demanding a return to democracy.

Close to 2,000 people have been arrested and the death toll has climbed to more than 60, as Myanmar security forces attempt to quash the resistance.

Eight myths about Sri Lanka at the UN Human Rights Council – AI

Eight myths about Sri Lanka at the UN Human Rights Council

Since the beginning of the current session of the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in February 2021, and in the lead up to it, there has been a lot of anxiety and misinformation among the public around what the outcome of the UNHRC sessions would mean for Sri Lanka. This is no doubt the product of years of misinformation deliberately spread domestically by pro-government actors around the consequences of international investigations and accountability for war crimes and crimes against humanity. Eternal bogeymen were made of these processes. Then President Mahinda Rajapaksa who oversaw the end of the war in 2009 even claimed that he would be taken before a war crimes court and executed on an electric chair.[1]It speaks to the astonishing capacity and success of these misinformation campaigns and machinations to be able to continue to spread misinformation in 2021. This is despite significant technological advancement, increased internet penetration in the country and a generation that is far more digitally savvy than the last to be in a better position to do simple fact-checks. Over the past few weeks, I’ve heard the most creative takes on the UNHRC process that are misleading, and sometimes, downright mythical. Allow me to allay some of these fears by busting some common myths around the UNHRC.

Myth 1: Western countries make up the membership of the UNHRC

False. The UNHRC consists of 47 member states elected by the UN General Assembly for a term of three years and are not eligible for immediate re-election after being in the Council for two consecutive terms. The Council’s membership is based on equitable geographic distribution, which means that African States are allocated 13 seats, Asia-Pacific States are also allocated 13 seats, Latin American and Caribbean States have 8 seats, Western Europe and other States have 7 seats and the Eastern European States have 6 seats. Moreover, the group of states leading the resolution is composed of states from Africa (Malawi), Western and Eastern Europe (Germany, the UK, Montenegro and North Macedonia) and North America (Canada).

Myth 2: Trade sanctions will be imposed on Sri Lanka

False. The report of the UN High Commissioner of Human Rights recommended for Member States to explore possible “targeted sanctions such as asset freezes and travel bans against credibly alleged perpetrators of grave human rights violations and abuses.” The recommendation is a far cry from trade sanctions, which are generally accepted as having negative impacts on national economies while disproportionately affecting the livelihoods of some of the most vulnerable people in society.

Myth 3: The atrocities committed by the LTTE are glossed over by the UN and the UNHRC

False. Every UN report based on human rights investigations in Sri Lanka have probed and found allegations of potential serious violations of international humanitarian law and international human rights law by all sides to the conflict. The report of the UN Secretary-General’s Panel of Experts on Accountability in Sri Lanka (2011)[2], known domestically as the Darusman report, found six core categories of potential serious violations by the LTTE associated with the final stages of the war (i. using civilians as human shields; ii. killing civilians attempting to flee LTTE control; iii. using military equipment in proximity to civilians; iv. forced recruitment of children; v. forced labour; and vi. killing of civilians through suicide attacks). The panel found five core categories of potential serious violations by the Sri Lankan government forces (i. killing of civilians through widespread shelling; ii. shelling of hospitals and humanitarian objects; iii. denial of humanitarian assistance; iv. human rights violations suffered by victims and survivors of the conflict, including both IDPs and suspected LTTE cadre; and v. human rights violations outside the conflict zone, including against the media and other critics of the government). The Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) investigation on Sri Lanka (2015)[3] also found that there are reasonable grounds to believe that gross violations of international human rights law, serious violations of international humanitarian law and international crimes were committed by all parties during the period under investigation, and urged that these allegations should all be promptly, thoroughly and independently investigated, and those responsible, directly or as commanders or superiors, brought to justice. As such, every resolution at the UNHRC on Sri Lanka has called for accountability for perpetrators from both sides of the conflict to be held to account.

Myth 4: It’s only the Tamil diaspora that is calling for accountability at the UNHRC

False. Victims of human rights violations based in Sri Lanka, including from Sinhala, Muslim and Tamil communities, have called for accountability and supported the UNHRC process after consecutive domestic mechanisms have failed to provide them truth, justice, and reparations for what they have experienced. Families of the disappeared from all communities, and in all parts of the country, have resorted to the UNHRC in efforts to seek truth and redress for their loved ones.

Myth 5: The UNHRC process is against Sri Lanka

False. The UNHRC process seeks to promote reconciliation, accountability, and human rights in Sri Lanka. It is the victims of human rights violations and abuse from all sides to the conflict – whether they be Sinhala, Tamil, or Muslim — that stand to benefit from the process. The process is pro-people, pro-human rights, and is therefore actually, pro-Sri Lanka. It’s a shame that consecutive Sri Lankan governments have failed to promote and protect the rights of all Sri Lankans, and sections of society have been left with no option but to raise their concerns with the UNHRC.

Myth 6: The UN Human Rights High Commissioner’s report on Sri Lanka is based on hearsay and open-source investigations

False. The report is based both on publicly available information and on research and consultations with a range of stakeholders, including Government representatives conducted by OHCHR. The report sets out its methodology and makes it clear that in preparation for the report, the OHCHR had sent a detailed list of questions to the Government of Sri Lanka on 23 November 2020 and received written inputs on 28 December 2020. The OHCHR also held a constructive and substantive meeting with Government representatives in virtual format on 7 January 2021. The Government provided comments on the report, some of which were reportedly reflected in the final text. The Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka as the National Human Rights Institution has also raised concerns publicly regarding some human issues, which are also reflected in the report. OHCHR has also received direct communications from victims. For e.g., the report states that as of December 2020, over 40 civil society organizations had approached the OHCHR with reports of harassment, surveillance and repeated scrutiny by a range of security services who questioned them about administrative details and activities of the organization, lists of staff, including their personal contact details, donors and funding sources. The report also builds on the findings and recommendations of UN Special Procedures mandate holders. The Special Procedures mandate holders have sent communications regarding complaints they receive to the Sri Lankan government, although the Government has only responded to two out of eight in the past year. The Government has had ample opportunities to engage and provide substantive feedback, to clarify and/or provide an alternative viewpoint to the complaints or the assertions made in the report itself, as the report was sent to the government before being tabled at the UNHRC.

Myth 7: China will veto the resolution on Sri Lanka

False. China is a member of the UNHRC for its 46th session, however it has no veto powers like in the UN Security Council. There are also no permanent members in the UNHRC like in the Security Council. So, while China can call a vote, and vote against, a resolution brought on Sri Lanka, it will not be able to veto any resolution brought to the Council by another Member State. The adoption of the resolution requires the support of a simple majority of UNHRC member states.

Myth 8: The UNHRC has no mandate to act on impending human rights disasters

False. The UNHRC was created by the General Assembly in 2007 through resolution 60/251, which details its mandate. The resolution clearly mandates the UNHRC not only “to address situations of violations of human rights, including gross and systematic violations, and make recommendations thereon,” but also to contribute to “the prevention of human rights violations and respond promptly to human rights emergencies.”

This article first appeared in The Daily FT
By Thyagi Ruwanpathirana, South Asia Researcher