The
vote on the resolution against Sri Lanka was adopted on Tuesdays at the
46th Session of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva. That slant was
reflected in the vote as well. The resolution was passed 22-11 with 14
abstentions.
First let us examine the
story told by the numbers. There were 40 co-sponsors, 12 of whom had
voting rights. The vast majority of the co-sponsors were from Europe and
North America. In essence, then, it was a WHITE Move (note: the history
of white people when it comes to plunder, cultural erasure, genocide
etc is known and it is NOT a thing of the past).
The
move was by rich, powerful and armed nations. It was a country-specific
resolution. If it was a matter of principle that was being voted on,
the result can be interpreted as a defeat for the architects. With all
the bucks and guns at their disposal which can be and often are used as
bait or threat, they ought to have secured near unanimous support. They
did not. Here’s another number that’s gone under the radar: 42 of 46
nations in the Human Rights Council were plundered and victims of
massive human rights violations by the 47th, the United Kingdom.
Now
it can be argued that the majority (36) did not stand with Sri Lanka.
The Samagi Jana Balavegaya (SJB) has put it down to a foreign policy
failure by the current government: ‘The incumbent government has managed
its foreign relations extremely irrationally. Instead of embarking on a
careful and thoughtful process of diplomatically convincing the world
that Sri Lanka is willing to take its human rights obligations
seriously, it embarked on an obnoxious and intransigent campaign. The
government lacks coherence, competence, and good faith in dealing with
the international community.’
Interesting, considering that
Sri Lanka was forced to do a back-to-the-wall battle principally on
account of the foreign policy of the yahapalana government, in which the
SJB’s previous avatar, the United National Party, was the key player.
What the SJB stalwarts supported between 2015 and 2019 was anything but
rational. If there was care and thoughtfulness it was about how best to
capitulate. A government can tell the truth and if it is not to the
liking of its detractors, home and abroad, that exercise can be called
‘obnoxious’ and ‘intransigent.’
The SJB’s
boys and girls played ‘good boy and good girl’ (meaning, ‘yes, we will
submit to your version of our reality, good lords and ladies’). They
weren’t called intransigent for obvious reasons. They toed the line.
They were coherent in genuflection. They were competent slaves. They
purchased happily the good-faith rhetoric of the bad-faith bosses.
One
cannot expect anything from the SJB other than this kind of crude and
obnoxious salivation. If they truly believe the UNHRC narrative then
they should take issue with Sarath Fonseka, the Commander of the very
Army that is accused of wrongdoing. The very same individual who
received the vast majority of votes cast by the so-called victims, the
Tamils in the North and East, in the 2010 Presidential Election.
It
is part of a carefully designed, thoughtful vexatious persecution
exercise with a clear end-point: a Sri Lanka that cheers and supports
US-led strategic interests in the region. This is why the US Ambassador
pleaded with the likes of the former Northern Province Chief Minister to
go easy on the previous government (yes, ‘human rights’ is a political
tool and that’s its principal function in Geneva, especially with
respect to Sri Lanka).
Let’s move to the
implications. The US Government, which called the Council ‘A cesspool of
bias’ not too long ago has immediately moved to capitalize on the
resolution. US State Department Principal Deputy Spokesperson Jalina
Porter has said a mouthful: ‘The United States co-sponsored this
resolution and together with the international community calls on Sri
Lanka to safeguard the rights of ethnic and religious minorities, human
rights defenders, and civil society actors, and to take credible and
meaningful steps to address its past, promote reconciliation, and
guarantee equal access to justice for all its people.’
This
statement can be rubbished on account of absolute absence of morality,
coming from a country with a long and sordid past and and equally
horrible present with regard to safeguarding rights of ethnic and
religious minorities, civil society acts and equal access to justice for
all its people. She has said that the long-term security and prosperity
of Sri Lanka depends on respecting human rights today and committing to
peace and reconciliation for the future. Clearly, security and
prosperity in the USA, by the same token, calls for utmost pessimism.
Jalina Porter should know. She’s from Louisiana and she’s African
American.
Porter has, not unexpectedly, saluted the
resolution’s requirement for the OHCHR to ‘collect and preserve evidence
for future accountability.’ This, after all, was a key element of the
resolution.
Now, let’s backtrack a bit. The
resolution was built on a long and vexatious process of mal-intent
beginning with the Darusman Report. The principal sources quoted
extensively in that report will not be released into the public domain
until 2031. In other words it was essentially a trial in absentia or
rather a trial in anonymity. Reliability cannot even be questioned until
then! On the other hand, the Darusman Panel as well as all other groups
which have since ‘reported’ to the Council have deliberately and
vexatiously REFUSED to take into account the missives of the ICRC and
the military attaches of the US and UK missions in Colombo.Rest assured,
Sri Lanka’s version of matters will not be heard. So much for those who
say ‘Sri Lanka did not do enough to convince the member states.’ Sri
Lanka could get god him/herself (if such an entity exists as believed by
and constitutionally affirmed by some of the nations that stood and
continues to stand against Sri Lanka) to tell the truth, to no avail.
There
will be more to come, not that this resolution (non-binding though it
is) has been passed. There will be oodles of bucks to collect, collate and
creatively present all manner of lies. Individuals will be targeted by
individual countries. Matters will be moved to the General Assembly. The
circus will go on.
What can Sri Lanka do? Two things.
First,
the government has to realize one important truism: Only a government
that has the full backing of the people can resist these kinds of
vexatious prosecutions. Such backing can only be obtained if the
government trusts the people, listens to the people and takes care of
the people AND the land. In other words only a government that affirms
in word and deed notions of sustainable livelihoods and the security of
all the natural resources of the land can protect such a people and
indeed itself.
Second, the government should realize that one
way of winning over other countries similarly persecuted or are
potential victims of similarly pernicious moves is to take a strong and
principled stand against vexatious persecution. In other words is the
cesspool of bias wants to compile lies, then Sri Lanka could compile all
the truths that have not even been footnoted in Geneva, not just in
relation to this country, but all the countries in the world. A vast
repository can be developed.
And therefore, a proposal to set up an
International Center on Vexatious Prosecution headquartered in Sri
Lanka, should be seriously considered.
malindasenevi@gmail.com.
0 comments:
Post a Comment