Core Group on Sri Lanka to present draft resolution at UNHRC session

The Core Group on Sri Lanka is planning to present a draft resolution to the 51st session of the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) seeking the promotion of reconciliation, accountability and human rights on the island nation.

The Core Group consists of the United Kingdom, the United States, Germany, Canada, Malawi, North Macedonia and Montenegro.

In its draft proposal, the Core Group has called upon the government of Sri Lanka to fulfil its commitments on the devolution of political authority, which is integral to reconciliation and the full enjoyment of human rights by all members of its population.

It also encouraged the Sri Lankan government to respect local governance, including through the holding of elections for provincial councils, and to ensure that all provincial councils, including the northern and eastern provincial councils, are able to operate effectively, in accordance with the thirteenth amendment to the Constitution of Sri Lanka.

The Core Group went on to underscore the importance of addressing the underlying governance factors and root causes which have contributed to this crisis including deepening militarization, lack of accountability in governance and impunity for serious human rights violations and abuses.

However, the Core Group expressed concerns at the human rights impacts of the economic crisis, including as result of increased food insecurity, severe shortages in fuel, shortages in essential medicines and reductions in household incomes, while stressing the need to promote and protect the rights of the most marginalized and disadvantaged individuals, including daily wage earners, children, older persons, and persons with disabilities.

It also raised concerns over other human rights developments since April 2022 including violence against and arrests of peaceful protestors, as well as violence against government supporters, resulting in deaths, injuries, destruction and damage to houses of members of Parliament and stresses the importance of independent investigations into all attacks and for those found responsible to be held to account.

The Core Group further noted that it remains concerned at continued militarization of civilian government functions; the erosion of the independence of the judiciary and key institutions responsible for the promotion and protection of human rights; lack of progress in addressing longstanding grievances and demands of Tamil and Muslim populations; surveillance, intimidation and harassment of journalists, human rights defenders, families of the disappeared and persons involved in memorialization initiatives, and sexual and gender-based violence.

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Sri Lanka dreams of dollarized tourism hub in Mannar

Sri Lanka can build Mannar island into a entertainment filled tourism hotspot which will use dollars as its currency like Macau, newly appointed state minister for tourism Diana Gamage has said.

Macau adds to a long list of dream countries with stable single anchor monetary regimes with currency boards of currency board like systems.

Other such countries that Sri Lanka frequently aspires to become economic hubs like Singapore (modified currency board), Dubai (currency board like system) or Hong Kong (orthodox currency board).

“We can make the Mannar Island like entertainment location like Macau island,” Minister Gamage told after assuming duties.

“Business can be done in dollars. No rupees.”

Macau has a currency board with Hong Kong dollar at 1.03 Macau Pataca and also currency competition where foreign currencies like the US dollar can be used.

In Sri Lanka the central bank and police arrest people who try to protect their savings from depreciation using draconian legal tender laws after printing money to create forex shortages. In 2022 a money laundering law was also deployed against the people.

Source: Economy Next

Sri Lanka: Rights Groups Urge Strong UN Resolution

The United Nations Human Rights Council should adopt a strong resolution on Sri Lanka that strengthens current UN mandates on accountability for crimes under international law and monitors the country’s deteriorating human rights situation, four international human rights organizations said in a letter to council member states published today. The resolution should also call upon Sri Lanka to address ongoing abuses, including by ending use of the draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act.

Sri Lanka has been suffering a severe economic, political, and human rights crisis. The former president, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, resigned in July 2022 following massive protests, and his successor, Ranil Wickremesinghe, has used abusive security measures to suppress freedom of expression and peaceful assembly. In a wide-ranging report released on September 6, the former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet said, “Sri Lankans came together … in a mass protest movement to demand greater transparency, accountability for corruption and economic mismanagement and increased participation in democratic life.” She called upon the government to respect the rights of protesters, end impunity for past violations, and address the root causes of the current crisis.

“For many years the victims of past abuses in Sri Lanka have demanded justice, while successive governments have broken promises, blocked accountability, and promoted those implicated in war crimes to high office,” said Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “The UN Human Rights Council should adopt a resolution on Sri Lanka that presses the government to uphold accountability and the rule of law.”

At the 51st session of the Human Rights Council, which began on September 12, member states will review and update a March 2021 resolution that established a UN accountability project to collect and prepare evidence of international crimes committed in Sri Lanka for use in future prosecutions, and mandated the UN to monitor and report on the current situation in the country. It is essential to renew and strengthen those mandates, including with additional resources, Amnesty International, FORUM ASIA, Human Rights Watch, and the International Commission of Jurists said in their letter.

In her report, the UN High Commissioner described how “deepening militarization and lack of transparency and accountability in governance … have embedded impunity for serious human rights violations and created an environment for corruption and the abuse of power.” In the absence of accountability within Sri Lanka, she said that UN member states should prosecute Sri Lankans accused of committing international crimes in foreign courts under the principle of universal jurisdiction, and support efforts to trace and freeze stolen assets held abroad. The high commissioner also called for an international role in investigations into the 2019 Easter Sunday bombings, which killed over 250 people, noting that there remain unanswered questions over the role of the Sri Lankan security forces.

“The high commissioner has presented clear findings that require urgent international action to end impunity and provide for justice to Sri Lankans,” said Massimo Frigo, UN representative and senior legal adviser at the International Commission of Jurists. “A decade of Human Rights Council engagement on Sri Lanka has been a source of hope for victims and resulted in sporadic and unfulfilled pledges to reform, the council needs to give the issue sustained attention.”

Since becoming president on July 21, President Wickremesinghe has sent the military to violently disperse protesters and arrest scores of people accused of participating in protests. He has ordered the use of the notorious Prevention of Terrorism Act to detain three student leaders without charge. The previous foreign minister, G.L. Pieris, told the Human Rights Council in June that the government would observe a moratorium on the use of that law, while the current foreign minister, Ali Sabry, then justice minister, gave the same assurances to Sri Lanka’s parliament in March.

On September 8, President Wickremesinghe appointed three people implicated in human rights abuses as government ministers. Sivanesathurai Chandrakanthan, known as Pillayan, is a former member of a separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) unit who later joined a pro-government armed group, both of which committed abductions and recruiting of child soldiers. In 2001, the attorney general dropped charges against him in connection with the 2005 murder of a parliamentarian. Another newly appointed minister, Lohan Ratwatte, resigned as prisons minister in September 2021 after threatening prisoners at gunpoint. A third, Sanath Nishantha, is currently under police investigation in connection with a violent attack on anti-government protesters on May 9.

“These ministerial appointments show that the Wickremesinghe administration cannot be expected to credibly pursue accountability for human rights violations or uphold the rule of law,” said Ahmed Adam, UN advocacy programme manager at FORUM-ASIA. “The alarming situation in the country today calls for robust and clear-eyed resolution from the Human Rights Council to protect the rights of people in Sri Lanka.”

In their letter to member states, the groups said that the new Human Rights Council resolution should address threats to human rights in Sri Lanka and violations connected to the country’s present crisis. The resolution should call on the government to:

Respect the rights of people to freely and peacefully protest and express their views without fear of reprisal or arrest;
End the harassment, intimidation, and arbitrary arrest of people believed to have participated in or supported recent protests;
Repeal the Prevention of Terrorism Act, issue an immediate moratorium on its use in the interim period, review the detention of those held under the law, immediately release all those not facing internationally recognizable charges, and ensure that everyone detained under the law, including those in pretrial detention, are tried promptly and fairly in a regular court; and
Restore the independence of the judiciary and Human Rights Commission.
“Time and again we have seen successive Sri Lankan governments make commitments to the Human Rights Council that are then broken or disavowed,” said Yamini Mishra, South Asia director at Amnesty International. “Member states should press Sri Lanka on its commitments and call for action now to end the abuses that are taking place, while renewing and enhancing the UN’s mandates to monitor the situation and pursue accountability for past abuses.”

Source: Human Rights Watch

Sandya Ekneligoda highlights Govt. sponsored impunity during address in Geneva

Sandya Ekneligoda, the wife of missing journalist Prageeth Ekneligoda, and human rights activist has accused the Government of adopting impunity as its unofficial policy relating to human rights in Sri Lanka.

“In a country where impunity is the unofficial adopted policy consisting of a slow and lagging legal system, in the midst of poverty, constant pursuit, and intimidation, the only thing the victims can do now is to cry out and lament while engaged in a constant struggle on the country’s streets,” she said, speaking of the struggles faced by families of missing persons.

Ekneligoda made these comments while addressing the 23rd Session of the Committee on Enforced Disappearances in Geneva this week.

During her address, she called on the Committee to intervene in providing Sri Lankan victims of enforced disappearances with a legal mechanism that would not only gain the trust of the victims but would also finally deliver the truth and justice.

Detailing the many obstacles and incidents of harassment she faced at the hands of the Government and its various institutions including the Police and the military since her husband’s abduction on 24 January 2010, Ekneligoda said under these dire circumstances, the main challenge now is if justice will be delivered as the fate of the legal case relating to her husband’s disappearances is now in limbo.

“Can it be expected that the current President while as Prime Minister in 2017 who irresponsibly claimed ‘all disappeared persons should be assumed dead or are abroad’ will deliver justice?” she asked.

Ekneligoda revealed that following Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s election as President, a commission was appointed to look into cases of political revenge. “This commission turned the investigators and witnesses of the case into the accused.

“It violated orders of the High Court and obtained statements from witnesses only to in the end recommend the military suspects of the case be released and acquitted of all charges,” she noted. She also told the session that witnesses number 3 and 4 of the case were intimidated to change their accounts.

Ekneligoda also highlighted the obstacles faced by mothers and other family members of missing persons to find answers while engaging in a continuous struggle. She also pointed out that though nearly four decades have elapsed since 1990 and many commissions have been appointed to date no form of justice has been delivered to victims of enforced disappearances and their families.

She expressed her disappointment at the Office of Missing Persons and said the office was unable to even gain the trust of the families affected.

Source: Daily FT

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As UN General Assembly Convenes, Leading Senators Unveil Resolution Urging International Cooperation To Address Sri Lanka’s Political And Economic Crisis

As the United Nations General Assembly convenes in New York this week, U.S. Senator Bob Menendez (D-N.J.), Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, was joined by Senators Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), and Cory Booker (D-N.J.) in introducing a Senate resolution calling for a comprehensive international approach to address Sri Lanka’s current political and economic crisis, including challenges related to poor governance and economic policy under the Rajapaksa family’s rule.

“I am proud to be joined by my colleagues in introducing our resolution that necessarily calls attention to the devastating political and economic turmoil plaguing the people of Sri Lanka,” Chairman Menendez said. “As the country grapples with its worst domestic crisis since the end of its civil war, the international community must continue to provide robust support and ensure that accountability for war crimes and respect for human rights in Sri Lanka remain top priorities. I applaud efforts by the Biden administration, our Quad partners, and the IMF in providing critical humanitarian and economic assistance, and affirm my commitment to continue to work with my colleagues to advance stability and prosperity in Sri Lanka and the broader region.”

“After decades of conflict, political mismanagement, and unaddressed inequalities, the Sri Lankan people have made it clear they aspire for something better,” Senator Durbin said. “Introduction of today’s resolution shows that the U.S. Senate stands with peaceful democratic efforts to address these long neglected challenges.”

“The Rajapaksa family enriched themselves at the expense of the Sri Lankan people, ruthlessly silencing their opponents, inciting ethnic tensions, and leaving the country an economic shambles,” Senator Leahy said. “After years of civil war and government mismanagement and abuse, Sri Lanka needs a government that is committed to ethnic tolerance, equitable economic development, human rights, and justice. That should also be the focus of U.S. policy.”

“The Sri Lankan people have sent a firm message that they want their government to address the dire economic and humanitarian crises that are afflicting their country,” Senator Booker said. “I stand with the Sri Lankan people and support their peaceful efforts to address their needs. Furthermore, the international community must continue to push for justice, transparency, and accountability for human rights violations committed during the civil war to help the people of Sri Lanka move forward.”

While commending the Biden administration and other Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad) members’ support for Sri Lanka, the resolution calls on the UN Human Rights Council to extend its war crimes accountability resolution; urges Sri Lankan security forces to respect Sri Lankans’ rights to protest peacefully; and presses President Ranil Wickremesinghe to work with opposition parties and ethnic minority groups in efforts to address the crisis.

Source: Patrick Leahy

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India’s stringent call in Geneva for 13A – What is the 13th Amendment?

India has called for full implementation of the 13th Amendment to Sri Lanka’s Constitution, the controversial 1987 amendment that has never been completely implemented for 35 years due to vehement opposition from many of the country’s Sinhala-dominated political parties.

But what is the 13th Amendment that India’s representative to the United Nations Human Rights Council highlighted, something that was drafted long before most Sri Lankans and Indians of today were even born? Here’s a look.

13A:

Up to 1987, Sri Lanka was ruled from Colombo by a central government, which resulted in areas far from the capital being virtually ignored in development programs and day to day governance. The 13A, as it became known, required devolution of powers to nine Provincial Councils – Northern, Southern, Eastern, Western, Central, Northcentral, Uva, Sabaragamuwa and Wayamba (Northwestern). It mandated the holding of Provincial Council elections. Perhaps most controversially, it required a referendum in the Northern and Eastern Provinces to place the question of merging these two provinces in the hands of the population in these regions. With the North and East having a majority Tamil population, the merger was expected to be approved. But the referendum was never held.

The 13th Amendment was passed after the singing of the India-Sri Lanka Peace Accord, as a direct result of Indian intervention in Sri Lanka’s civil war,. Signed in July 1987 between then Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi and then Sri Lankan President J.R. Jayewardene, the accord was aimed at resolving the country’s ethnic conflict between the armed forces and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), which demanded a separate state in the Northeast.

The 13th Amendment led to the passing of the Provincial Councils Act, the creation of nine Provincial Councils and the Sri Lankan government committing to a power-sharing arrangement to enable self-govern for all nine provinces in the country, including the seven Sinhala majority provinces. If implemented fully, the provincial councils would have the right to self-govern over key areas such as education, health, agriculture, housing, land and police. The amendment was vehemently opposed by both the Sinhala nationalist parties and the LTTE.

13A also required Tamil to be made a National Language of Sri Lanka in addition to Sinhala in an attempt to roll back the controversial ‘Sinhala Only Act’ of 1959.

Why it was never fully implemented:

The amendment has never been fully implemented because of opposition by political parties that rely on Sinhala vote bases, who view 13A as an imposition by India in Sri Lanka’s internal affairs. Only a few subjects such as education and health have been partially devolved. However, the ethnic Tamil political parties have repeatedly called for its full implementation.

India has since 1987 been urging Sri Lanka to implement 13A the amendment. Ironically, the LTTE also opposed 13A and the Indian government in 1987 sent a large military contingent, the Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF), to enforce the Indo-Lanka Accord and pave the way for the implementation of 13A. This led to a bitter war in the North and East between the LTTE and IPKF, with the Indian military being withdrawn in 1990 after suffering over 1,100 soldiers killed, often referred to as ‘India’s Vietnam’.

The Indo-Lanka Accord and 13A also sparked the rise of the bloody 1989/90 insurrection by the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) which led to an even more violent government crackdown that left over 50,000 people dead.

An issue that never died:

In November 2019, when then Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa visited India for the first time after taking office, the sticky issue of !3A was sidestepped, as both sides attempted to reset ties.

Subsequently, India’s External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar and Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla also urged the Sri Lankan government to adhere to the commitments made on the reconciliation process by way of meaningful devolution under the 13th Amendment during their visits to Sri Lanka. India has also raised the issue at many multilateral fora.

Last February, while New Delhi abstained from voting on a UNHRC resolution in Geneva that called for punitive actions against Sri Lanka for alleged war crimes committed during its decades-long civil war, India’s Permanent Representative to the UN Indra Mani Pandey stressed that Tamil rights must be respected by Colombo in the form of the implementation of 13A.

Report filed with inputs from Zulfick Farzan, Senitha Senanayake, Ruhaza Irfan

Ali Sabry meets China’s Rep at UNHRC; discusses support & Human Rights

Ambassador Chen Xu, Permanent Representative of China to the United Nations Office at Geneva and other international organizations in Switzerland, met with Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Sabri, who was in Geneva to attend the 51st Session of the Human Rights Council.

Ambassador Chen Xu said that China and Sri Lanka have a long-standing tradition of friendship, and the Chinese side sympathizes with the difficulties that Sri Lanka is currently facing.

China firmly supports Sri Lanka in choosing a development path that suits its national conditions, positively evaluates Sri Lanka’s achievements in human rights, and firmly opposes relevant countries’ pressure on Sri Lanka under the pretext of human rights.

Foreign Minister Ali Sabry said that Sri Lanka and China have traditionally been friendly, the strategic cooperative partnership has been continuously consolidated, and they have firmly supported each other on issues concerning the core interests and major concerns of both sides.

He also thanked the Chinese government and people for helping Sri Lanka in difficult times as always, and expressed he is willing to strengthen communication and coordination with China at the Human Rights Council and further deepen bilateral cooperation.

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Japan calls for meaningful reconciliation

Japan has called for meaningful reconciliation in Sri Lanka and a better human rights situation.

The Japanese Government said that it is concerned by the devastating economic crisis and emphasizes the need for Sri Lanka to urgently take all necessary measures to guarantee all people’s rights.

“Japan also believes it is vital for Sri Lanka to take further voluntary actions and provide remedies to achieve a meaningful reconciliation and a better human rights situation,” the Japan told the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.

Japan said that it also acknowledges the amendments to the Prevention of Terrorism Act as an important initial step, and encourages Sri Lanka’s further efforts to impose a moratorium on the PTA, enact comprehensive counterterrorism legislation, and establish transitional justice mechanisms, including a truth and reconciliation committee.

Japan also encourages Sri Lanka to continue its efforts to improve its human rights situation through dialogue with all domestic and international stakeholders, including OHCHR.

Japan said that it stands ready to support Sri Lanka on both the human rights and economic fronts, including through its ongoing humanitarian assistance for medicine and food.

US calls for accountability for protest-related violence in Sri Lanka

The United States says it is committed to supporting the Sri Lankan people and welcomed UN Human Rights Council’s efforts to advance accountability, reconciliation, and respect for human rights in Sri Lanka.

Delivering a statement during the Interactive Dialogue on Sri Lanka at the 51st Session of the UNHRC in Geneva on Monday, U.S. Ambassador Michèle Taylor urged respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms, including rights to peaceful assembly and expression

“The United States is committed to supporting the Sri Lankan people in their efforts to strengthen their democracy. We recognize the profound economic and political challenges the country is facing, and we welcome the government’s efforts at reform,” she said.

The rule of law, equal access to justice, independent institutions, transparency, and accountability are pillars of democratic systems, Ambassador Michèle Taylor said.

She said the U.S. values the UNHRC’s attention to and engagement on Sri Lanka, including the OHCHR’s recent report and its efforts to help survivors and the families of missing persons.

“We urge respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms, including rights to peaceful assembly and expression. We call for accountability for protest-related violence in line with rule of law and equal access to justice.”

The U.S. Permanent Representative to the UNHRC said it is essential that the Prevention of Terrorism Act align with international human rights obligations and commitments, to protect fair trial guarantees and other applicable legal protections.

As a key step toward improved human rights, it is also important to address longstanding impunity and corruption in Sri Lanka, she said.

“We will continue to support justice, accountability, and reconciliation in Sri Lanka.”

GR, BR, and MR: From heroes to the Zero Draft in Geneva -FT.LK

The Sunday papers in Colombo gave a heads-up on the new resolution (currently at the stage of the ‘Zero Draft’) on Sri Lanka reportedly being negotiated at the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva, revealing that “the Zero Draft resolution seeks to recommend action against political leaders and state officials responsible for economic crimes that have adversely impacted on human rights in Sri Lanka.”

The news reports indicate that “…The names of ex-President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and his brother, former Finance Minister, Basil Rajapaksa, have figured in these consultations…reference is to be made to then President Mahinda Rajapaksa…”

Evidently, two of the Rajapaksa brothers, former President Gotabaya and former Finance Minister Basil have come up in discussions in relation to economic crimes, while the third, former President Mahinda, President during the last stages of Sri Lanka’s war against the Tigers, is to be mentioned “for not fulfilling ‘assurances’ given to Ban Ki-moon, then UN Secretary General, during his visit to Sri Lanka on May 26, 2009”. This covers between them, transgressions of pretty much most of the social, economic, civil and political rights guaranteed under the Universal Declaration.

President Ranil Wickremesinghe needn’t feel left out because he will find that his own recent ‘see-if-I-care’ violations of the rights of protesters, more in-your-face than any since the war, hardly went unnoticed by the OHCHR fact-finding mission recently in Colombo, which included them in the Human Rights High Commissioner’s Report. Together, these personalities comprise the larger part of the top rank of the ruling elite in Sri Lanka over the last decades. No one should be surprised that Sri Lanka is in unprecedentedly deep crisis.

Early elections

Twice elected president of Chile, UN Human Rights High Commissioner Michele Bachelet recently completed her tenure and has left office, but not before she did right by Sri Lanka and ensured that her report presented to the Human Rights Council on Sri Lanka was comprehensive and up-to-date.

She concludes that the current administration “appear[s] to reflect a continuity with the past.”

Actually, it has been getting progressively worse and her report acknowledges it: “Following the installation of the new administration, there has been a notable hardening of approach, with increasing public rhetoric characterising the protesters as violent extremists.”

It is probably in this context that her report includes an unambiguous reference to and tacit endorsement of calls for an early election: “There remains a significant deficit in confidence and trust between the Government, protest movement and broader civil society and calls have continued for early elections for a renewed democratic mandate.”

In addition to introducing the new category of “economic crimes” perpetrated against the people, the Report of the outgoing High Commissioner itemises the recent spate of state violence against the protesters impacted by those economic crimes, in some detail:

“On 31 March 2022, police dispersed protesters…injuring 50 people and arresting over 20; some were allegedly ill-treated including by men in civilian clothing reportedly belonging to presidential security.

On 19 April 2022, police opened fire at a spontaneous protest in Rambukkana … One person was killed by live ammunition and 24 others were injured. An investigation by the HRCSL found that police had used excessive use of force.

On 9 May 2022, widespread violence erupted after supporters of then Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa attacked peaceful protestors in Colombo…and destroyed their makeshift tents.

Instances of beatings and use of live ammunitions by police or military have been captured and circulated on social media.

On 18 June 2022, the military confronted protestors at a fuel station in Mullaitivu … Two people were injured by the soldiers who allegedly also opened fire into the air.

On 3 July 2022, a video of an army officer assaulting a civilian in a fuel station in Kurunegala was widely circulated on social media. A similar incident involving a police officer assaulting a motorist and handling a handgun irresponsibly occurred on 17 June also in Kurunegala. On 13 July 2022, a protestor died after police fired tear gas.

On 22 July 2022, security personnel, including police and military, stormed at a protest camp near the presidential offices in Colombo, injuring at least 48 people; nine others were arrested. The evacuation and medical treatment of injured protestors was obstructed. Since then, a number of leaders and members of the protest movement and trade unions have been arrested, some in an irregular manner by plain-clothes personnel using unmarked vehicles.

Excessive force was most recently used in breaking up a peaceful student protest in Colombo on 18 August 2022 with 20 arrests.”

This clearly tells a less than savoury story about the new administration to the entire world, including to the people of Sri Lanka.

Economic crimes, international accountability

Referring to economic crimes, the Report says, “The High Commissioner hopes that the new administration will respond to the popular demand for accountability for economic crimes, including corruption, and abuse of power with a renewed commitment to end impunity.”

The Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) is also developing “possible strategies for future accountability processes at international level”. They have talked to victims and civil society organisations and national authorities. It has declared that it “supports judicial and non-judicial proceedings with competent jurisdictions through the sharing of relevant information …”

It has evidently got requests to provide evidence against 8 named individuals with a “number of alleged violations”.

It is interesting to note that a couple of foreign missions in Colombo felt they couldn’t leave anything to chance and decided to head over to Geneva themselves. It is reported that UK High Commissioner in Sri Lanka “was in Geneva this week helping to promote the resolution”. The Chief Political/Economic Officer of the US Embassy in Colombo is to join “a delegation from the US State Department’s Global Criminal Justice Division” apparently to assist with “the same task”. The Resolution on Sri Lanka is being taken very seriously indeed.

It is reported that the focus of these teams in Geneva is “to help provide legal and other guidelines to countries that want to exercise universal jurisdiction permissible under their laws and try those against whom there is ‘credible’ evidence for a period of two years (September 2022 to September 2024)”.

The Sunday paper quotes diplomats in Geneva disclosing that “seven countries had agreed to enforce provisions of universal jurisdiction under their laws to deal with matters relating to Sri Lanka”. So that’s seven countries which could initiate proceedings in their own territories against human rights violators in Sri Lanka.

Sri Lankan Govt. responds

The Government of Sri Lanka (GoSL) has responded to the High Commissioner’s Report in writing, insisting at length that this reply be given equal prominence to that of the Report. GoSL may regret this given some of its content.

While rejecting the earlier resolution on war crimes investigations (46/1) and the new mechanism in Geneva called the Sri Lanka Accountability Project, the Government has denied all allegations of recent violations in the context of protests:

“The Government’s response to the current political and social challenges has been firmly within a democratic, constitutional framework, respecting the civil and political rights of the people, including their right to peaceful assembly and protest.”

Seriously? There was no fog of war, and cameras were everywhere.

There is more on the subject:

“Those arrested were produced in courts within 24 hours, and a majority were granted bail.”

“…the dispersal of the protestors illegally occupying the Presidential Secretariat and obstructing its entrance, was carried out in accordance with the Criminal Procedure Code.”

“…law enforcement authorities have been instructed to follow due process in the conduct of investigations under the PTA and to use this legislation only in instances of extreme necessity.”

“…when some protestors burned down the private residence of the President (the then Prime Minister) on 9th July 2022, no excessive force was used beyond the maintenance of public order and security.”

“…no excessive nor disproportionate force was used when protestors tried to forcibly enter the Parliament on 13th July 2022 when the Party Leaders were meeting.”

Replying to the High Commissioner’s reference to the 2019 Easter Sunday attacks, the GoSL reminds the Council that despite the “extensive investigations”, since the perpetrators were suicide bombers, they have been unable to “identify their wider connections”.

They also submit that the new President’s policy as outlined in Parliament is to “achieve a more just, fair, inclusive and sustainable society where all Sri Lankans can live longer, healthier and more dignified lives, including human rights and reconciliation.”

In Geneva, the Government will need to show more than just good intentions, which are not patently contradicted by actual practice.

The High Commissioner doesn’t mince her words in her suggestion to the GoSL: “The new Government should immediately reverse the drift towards militarization, end the reliance on draconian security laws and crackdowns on peaceful protest”.

High Commissioner’s recommendations

The most important segment of the High Commissioner’s report is the final section with its recommendations, addressed to the Council. The first one addresses the urgent need to ensure social protection for the most vulnerable groups at this time of economic crisis.

Immediately afterwards, it deals with the related issue of “international finance assistance” (read IMF) and recommends that the Government should “assess any potential human rights impact of international financial assistance programmes and take preventive measures to reduce it to the bare minimum”.

In this context, it is just as well that the Governor of the Central Bank has declared that he has no objections to revealing the contents of the IMF agreement which had it been kept a closely guarded secret, couldn’t have been assessed for its human rights impact.

It’s now down to the President to prove that he meant what he said about a dignified, sustainable and long life, etc., for the citizens by sharing the relevant contents of the IMF agreement in Parliament. No one can be convinced that he should be the sole arbiter in the evaluation that the UN Human Rights High Commissioner recommends.

The President’s current legislation of choice in the arrests of protestors, the infamous PTA, also comes in for criticism. The High Commissioner recommends to the Council that Sri Lanka should “Observe a strict moratorium on the use of PTA and expedite the release of detainees and long-term prisoners under the PTA.”

In a robust set of recommendations on “economic crimes”, the Report assures its support for Sri Lanka “in the investigation of economic crimes that impact on human rights and the tracing and recovery of stolen assets” which will be music to the ears of the people of Sri Lanka who have suffered corruption too long in silence.

It includes monitoring of the “steps to address” economic crimes in the “enhanced monitoring and report regularly to the Council on the human rights situation in Sri Lanka” and also encourages “relevant thematic special procedures to examine and make recommendations on human rights dimensions of the economic crisis”.

Thematic Special Procedures include the Independent Expert on the effects of foreign debt and other related international financial obligations, and the Working Group on the issue of human rights and transnational corporations and other business enterprises, among many others such as the expert on Right to Food (who may have much to say about the fertiliser ban), Freedom of Opinion and Expression, Freedom of Assembly, Arbitrary Arrests to name a few that come to mind.

Sri Lanka’s new Foreign Minister, in Geneva to present the administration’s case, will have little success if the written response of the GoSL forms the basis of his submission, in the face of the evidence gathered by the OHCHR in its monitoring function.

The High Commissioner assures that her office is “ready to provide technical assistance” to implement the Report’s recommendations “through the strengthening of its country presence” in support of the people of Sri Lanka.

It will be of great value if the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka could work closely with a strengthened UN country presence qualitatively enhancing the capacity of the Commission to carry out its work, including perhaps the development of a joint program of Human Rights training and monitoring, including for politicians at all levels of governance, bureaucrats and law enforcement authorities.