Sri Lanka President urgently needs to repair fractured international credibility
by Col R Hariharan
Though Sri Lanka finished the Eelam War in triumph a year back, its battle with the international community does not appear to be over.
It was joined in right earnest last week when the maverick Sri Lankan minister and ‘revolutionary’ turned politician Wimal Weerawansa spearheaded a siege of the UN office in Colombo. He was demanding the withdrawal of the UN expert panel appointed to advise the U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Sri Lanka’s human rights and humanitarian record during the war.
But Weerawansa added more spice to the protest when he went on “fast unto death.” The National Freedom Front leader being no Mahatma Gandhi nobody expected him to die a martyr. Though theatricals of the protest were overdone, it was more than a publicity gimmick or a photo opportunity for Weerawansa because it had official blessing. President Mahinda Rajapaksa showed his solidarity with the minister’s action by visiting the fasting minister and ‘persuaded’ him to break his fast on the second day.
If paralysing work at the UN office was the objective of the protest, the minister’s mission was eminently successful. Work at the UN office was paralysed and the UN asked its staffers not to come out. The UNDP Regional Centre in Colombo was shut down. The UN Resident Coordinator in Colombo, Neil Buhne was called back to New York.
Buhne is going back now after the UN clearly articulated its expectations from Colombo: better treatment of the U.N. family in Sri Lanka, progress of commitments covered in the Joint Statement of May 2009 including resettlement of internally displaced persons, political reconciliation and accountability. So the minister’s protest has not only failed, but also appears to have firmed up the UN Secretary General’s resolve to go ahead with the work of UN experts’ panel.
As Sri Lanka considers the action of the UN Secretary General an infringement of national sovereignty, its ire is understandable. But the way it is being handled as a populist ploy than through diplomatic moves makes one suspect the intentions. Is it part of President’s strategy to milk the issue for internal political gains? Although, his overwhelming public support was confirmed in the recent presidential and parliamentary polls, the protests focusing on outsider interference does put opposition on the defensive to temper their criticism of the government.
Ban Ki-moon was well within his powers to appoint a panel of experts to advise him on the issue. The Secretary General’s action would have provided a safe option to Sri Lanka to defer the issue from adverse limelight. It would also have given inkling on the follow up action likely at the UN Security Council or the UN Human Rights Commission.
But why Sri Lanka has chosen to do have a confrontation with the UN? Obviously it does not want any external body to investigate allegations of human rights violations. The second explanation is the fear that allowing experts’ panel would lead to probe into war crimes allegations against Sri Lanka army during the last phase of war. Sri Lanka’s prickly reaction only strengthens suspicions of its conduct. The relentless efforts of influential international NGOs and diehard Tamil Diaspora Eelam lobby to bring Sri Lanka to the dock on this count are likely to continue regardless of Sri Lanka stand on UN panel.
Sri Lanka’s objection should be viewed in the backdrop of its long term skirmish with “foreign interference.” It
started with its bitter experience of the way the Monitoring Mission of the peace process 2002 functioned. And international role in Sri Lanka’s conflict became a contentious issue in the presidential poll 2005. Its attitude hardened in 2006 after a disastrous experience with an international panel of eminent persons’ inquiry into alleged killings carried out by security men which was given up midway due to lack of cooperation from Sri Lankan side.
And its international reputation had been on the down slide even before the war started when scores of people ‘disappeared' and media men were hounded.
The common thread running in the UN action as well as the European Union’s suspension of the GSP+ export tariff concessions is the trust deficit in Sri Lanka’s words. And to dismiss as international prejudice or conspiracy to belittle Sri Lanka’s triumph against terrorism would be foolhardy. More situations of a similar kind are in the making.
Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M. Karunanidhi has suggested to the Indian government to assess the situation in the affected areas in Sri Lanka and the progress of rehabilitation measures undertaken by the Sri Lankan government for internally displaced Tamils. Though he has left the option of who will carry out this task to Dr Manmohan Singh, unless a special envoy is sent the issue would hang fire in Tamil Nadu. And both the leaders cannot afford it as the state is getting ready for assembly poll. The chief minister was only reflecting public opinion and what the Indian government had been asking Colombo in private. How Sri Lanka is going to handle this ‘foreign interference’ is the moot question?
This time around nobody can accuse the TN chief minister of being anti-Sinhalese. Around the same time, he had arrested Seeman, the Kollywood director turned leader of the pro-LTTE Naam Tamilar party, under the National Security Act for ‘inciting the public’ against Sinhalese in Chennai.
Whatever be the President’s internal agenda, he urgently needs to repair fractured international credibility. And regardless of Sri Lanka’s own opinion, its waning credibility will expose it to more and more international criticism. The NAM (non aligned movement) lobby at the UN has already shown to be an unreliable forum to plead for Sri Lanka. China, Russia and India – considered as friends of Sri Lanka – cannot be expected repeatedly to bale out Sri Lanka in the face of strong international line up.
The reason is not merely the demand for greater international accountability of nations, but also greater global awareness of rights of people and citizens. So the issue cannot be wished away; the President is bound to be questioned locally and internationally till their credibility gap is bridged with reasoning.
Sri Lanka’s credibility is directly related to three issues: its human rights record and accountability, rehabilitation issues of displaced Tamils, and vintage grievances of Tamil population. Actions like holding the cabinet meeting in Kilinochi, or providing better connectivity from North do not convince the public when people in villages around are destitute and there is lack of security and trust in government.
For its own good Sri Lanka should seriously look at human rights record and improve it. It is not India or the international community, but almost all opposition parties, media, and President Rajapaksa’s erstwhile chief of defence staff have complained of serious human rights violations. And many of them continue to do so. The emergency regulations are still haunting the public; even now Tamils in Wellawatte are asked to register with the police as pointed out by the National Peace Council.
The strategy to ward off international intrusion in what governments do is simple: be proactive and develop systems to be so. This helps the nation to look beyond playing sleight of hand competition in international forums as Sri Lanka is doing now. And it also enables the nation build its value systems, a great asset in forging ethnic amity. But this is more easily said than done, particularly if those in power want to make political capital out of problems.
Even in such an agenda improving leader’s credibility is never a liability.
(Col R Hariharan, a retired Military Intelligence specialist on South Asia, served with the Indian Peace Keeping Force in Sri Lanka as Head of Intelligence. He is associated with the Chennai Centre for China Studies and the South Asia Analysis Group. E-Mail: colhari@yahoo.com Blog: www.colhariharan.org)
11 Comments
As pointed out by the writer the international climate is not static and is changeing. The oncoming state elections in TN may be a moot point and influence future Sri Lanka / Indian relations. If we think that we can exist in splendid isolation that is wishful thinking. The quicker we realise and get our home in order the better.
Thank you Col Hariharan for this meaningful and timely article. Will MR listen? I doubt it because he has become the Sinhala version of VP. His grandiose delusion has no limits****************
The GOSL is also responsible for loss in credibility of the country in the eyes of the International community. The acts by GOSL and that foolish Minister ,ochestrated, by Top people in the Government should take the blame for loss of GSP + and also War Crimes Panel, appointed by the SG
how far mahinda and co stay and support with like Iran, Russia and China and un human rights record countries nothing going to change.ideot they not friends of sri lanka, all try to sell theirs arms and ammuniation to us. even saying war finish. modayo sinhalees and mahinda and bro never get learn wait and see the day all sinhalees come to road.
"This helps the nation to look beyond playing sleight of hand competition in international forums as Sri Lanka is doing now.." But
Asian Tribune Mr. Rajasingham has a different
opinion. He is in the process of doing an on-line
Petition to the UN-SG. If
there are jornalist who
cannot see the woods from trees, what can be expected for the Village
idiotic Voters?
Col. Hariharan,
Remember the UN resolution about plebiscite in Kashmir? Go get it done and then advise us. We know to mange our internal affairs and how to tackle UN.
Dear Colonel,
Arresting the VP twin, Seeman, Karunanidhi is doing your Government a bigger favor including himself.
Seeman not only adores VP,but he is modelling himself as the next VP and guess who will be his targets first?
It will take a long time for him to reach Srilanka if the Rajapaksa are around.
Everyone knows how Mr Karunanidhi operates,
Doesn't he hold the Guiness record for the attempt to fastest fast to death, to save the LTTE leaders?
Mr Rajapaksa will do anything Dr Manmohan Singh requests. They are two leaders who operate on a different level.
Both will ensure that the IDPs are not only resettled in a manner that they have better living standards that were denied to them for three decades.
They will have total freedom to plough the lands,run their corner shop or earn a living which rver way they wish in a peaceful environment and educate their children which is the fundamental aim of the Tamil people.
Let Mr Karunanidhi kick proper goals instead of trying to get free kicks.
Hariharan: You said; “Ban Ki-moon was well within his powers to appoint a panel of experts to advise him on the issue.” It’s surprising though you didn’t go the whole hog to tell us under which clause UNSG is had appointed his 3-man commission.
Then, we are aware that the power of this world was bi-polar after WW11 and then uni-polar and now becoming multi-polar. In this new world, we are managing our options diplomatically at last. Our previous leaders hadn’t understood this for they were brain dead.
At last we’ve got the right leader with a right goal. We the people of this country have accepted it. So long as he is driving us to that goal he will be our leader. I personally think we are getting in to the mood that was in Malaysia. We shall back our leader to the hilt. You have seen it for real by the results of the last elections. I am sure; your kind of ‘specialist’ writing would help our leader foresee events to come. So, keep it up.
We have NOTHING to REPAIR. Forget EUROPE and AMERICA. They will eventually come back to us, our focus should be on ASIA. The Western HEGEMONY of the PLANET is coming to an End and to worry what EUROPE and AMERICA's (the WHITE WORLD) crybaby Human Rights WHINERS think of us is a waste of time.
Hi Col.
I can understand you are biased - fast unto death ; you compare with Mahadma kandi. I have no objction to it. But, you have to remember to mention Thileepan who died for eelam Tamils.
I am not teaching you journalism but you have to be neutral. If you are anti-something then it does not work at all.
You have clearly stated the current situation of SL Tamils then why there is a need for a special envoy to visit and find out the situation as Karunanithi suggested? - I think Indian PM and Tamil nadu CM are trying play a game. This is enough, we Tamil need solution and our right to live peacefully with self-determination. If they can help on this - it would be greately appreciated.
I think this not in their agenda (including MR Rajapasksa or any Sinhala leaders) - this is the real situation.
Nava
Posted by: Leela | July 19, 2010 08:42 PM
Leela
The VP-followers had been worshiping VP exactly the same way you are now doing so about MR.
I see a great deal of chemistry between VP-followers and MR-followers !!