SL on remarkable recovery track
http://www.dailynews.lk/2012/04/28/fea01.asp
Statement by Ravinatha Aryasinha, ambassador of Sri Lanka to Belgium,
Luxembourg and the EU, at the European Parliament South Asia Delegation’s
discussion on Sri Lanka on April 24, 2012.
Less than three years ago, as Sri Lanka emerged from its 30 year long
struggle against LTTE terrorism, there were many ‘prophets of doom’, including
in this Parliament, who mis-judged both Sri Lanka’s will and capacity.
Pessimistic projections
It was said;
- that the IDP welfare villages set up were a 'humanitarian catastrophe' and
that malnutrition, disease and death would be rampant
- that the government was not interested in de-mining and that the conflict
affected areas will remain unused forever
Ambassador Ravinatha Aryasinha
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- likening the Sri Lankan IDP welfare villages to "concentration camps", it
was said that the IDPs would be "incarcerated" there indefinitely
- the government's intent regards the ex-LTTE combatants was questioned,
claiming that "their lives were in danger
- that the emergency would not be rescinded nor the high security zones
disbanded
- that the government would not be able to undertake the massive investment
that was needed to restore livelihoods and ensure infrastructure development in
the previously conflict affected area, let alone ensure economic growth in the
rest of the country given emerging global trends
- the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) was mocked as
comprising 'government stooges' and the prediction was that their report would
be a 'whitewash'. As you yourself recently reminded me Madam Chair, "many even
doubted whether the LLRC report would ever see the light of day"
Facts on the ground
Given this backdrop, the verifiable facts on the ground prove the 'prophets
of doom' dismally wrong.
- the socio-economic, nutritional and mortality indicators in the IDP
villages housing the displaced,
were deemed commendable by international standards, to that of a normal
population of this magnitude.
- of the estimated 2061.53 Sq. KMs contaminated with land mines and UXOs, as
at the end of March 2012, 1,936.80 Sq. KMs, or 94 percent of the area had been
cleared. Eighty percent of this demining work was carried out by the Sri Lanka
Army, which is a remarkable achievement in any post-conflict situation.
- from a high of 297,000 a little under three years ago, 98 percent of the
IDPs have left and numbers at the only remaining welfare village at 'Manik Farm'
has come down to 6,022 persons (1,800 families), and the government has pledged
to resettle those remaining by the end of June this year.
Here again the government has borne most of the cost, spending 360 Million
USD for the IDP resettlement programme. An initiative aimed at the construction
of over 78,000 new houses in the North has been launched which includes those
built under the North East Housing Construction Programme (NEHRP) with donor
assistance.
- of the 11,995 ex-LTTE combatants who surrendered or were arrested at the
end of the conflict, 90.7 percent, or 10,874 (which includes 595 child
combatants) have been rehabilitated and re-integrated into society. Protective
Accommodation and Rehabilitation Centres (PARC) established in many parts of the
country conducts psycho-social care such as counselling and drama, dance and
music therapy as well as spiritual and religious programmes. Adult cadres have
been provided with extensive vocational training making them employable once
released.
- the High Security Zones have been reduced by 63 percent, from 4098 Sq KM to
2582 Sq KM. The emergency regulations lapsed completely with effect from August
30, 2011. Since then, and with improvement of the security situation in the
former conflict affected areas, civil administration has been fully restored and
the role of the military has been increasingly confined to security related
matters.
- the government has already provided US $ 318 million for the socio-economic
and livelihood development in the Northern and Eastern provinces, and a
substantial portion of this money has been allocated for the self-employment
loan schemes. Moreover, the government has allocated a further sum of US $ 700
million for infrastructure and economic development programmes including
housing, roads, bridges, schools, hospitals and irrigation schemes.
The government has also embarked on 27 donor assisted development projects of
which 23 are implemented in the North and the East. These development projects
are valued at approximately US $ 201 million for the year 2011 alone.
The allocation of infrastructure development in the Jaffna district in the
Northern Province is USD 300 million, while US $ 250 million and US $ 150
million have been invested in development projects in the Killinochchi and
Batticaloa districts, respectively. The results from these efforts have been
tangible, with the Northern Province recording a 22 percent growth rate.
Further, in terms of investment promotion, the Atchchuveli Industrial Zone is
being developed in a 25 acre land area and is expected to attract approximately
40 local and foreign investors. This project is expected to generate 6,000
employment opportunities.
As a transport facility, Palaly airport and the Kankesanthurai (KKS) harbour,
which is situated only 10 Km from the Zone, has been upgraded. The government
expects that this project will enable small and medium enterprises to better tap
into advantages to investors.
Notwithstanding the worsening global economic
environment, Sri Lanka has also shown considerable economic resilience;
*Sri Lanka's economy grew by 8.3 percent in 2011, the highest in Sri Lanka's
post independence history, sustaining a momentum of over 8 percent for the first
time in two consecutive years.
*Improved consumer and investor confidence arising from the peace dividend,
favourable macro-economic conditions, increased capacity utilization, expansion
of infrastructure facilities and renewed economic activity in the Northern and
Eastern provinces has underpinned this growth.
*Inflation remained at single digit levels for the third consecutive year.
*Unemployment declined to its lowest level of 4.2 percent in 2011, from 4.9
percent in 2010.
*In 2011 Sri Lanka's international trade has also performed commendably, with
export income growing by 22 percent. Closer home, according to the Sri Lanka
Central Bank statistics, it is noteworthy that in 2011 Sri Lanka's exports to
the EU (US $ 3,576 million) grew by 24.4 percent , compared to the corresponding
period of 2010 (US $ 2,875 million).
*With respect to Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), including loans, grew by
107 percent to US dollars 1,066 million in 2011 over US dollars 516 million in
2010. European investment in Sri Lanka in 2011 amounted to US $ 197 Million,
which was 18.4 percent of the total FDI attracted by the country.
*Tourist arrivals to Sri Lanka grew by 30.8 percent in 2011, with visitors
from Europe recording a 42 percent increase.
- as for the LLRC, the domestic mechanism based on the principle of
restorative justice established by the President of Sri Lanka on May15, 2010 to
make recommendations aimed at ensuring that there is no recurrence of the
unfortunate situation of the past and to promote national unity and
reconciliation amongst all communities in Sri Lanka, we now have a clear
document with which to engage and consolidate peace.
a) Notwithstanding the magnitude of the task of dealing with a 30 year long
conflict, that the LLRC completed its comprehensive report in 20 months, and the
government in turn made the full report public shortly after, speaks volumes
about the openness and transparency shown in this regard.
This is in contrast to similar endeavours such as the UK Chilcott Commission
of Inquiry, where the Commission appointed in 2009 to inquire into matters
spanning for only a period of less than nine years, is yet to produce a report.
SL on remarkable recovery track - Part II:
LLRC critics and ‘goal post-shifting’
http://www.dailynews.lk/2012/04/30/fea01.asp
Continued from Saturday (28)
Statement by
Ravinatha Aryasinha,
ambassador of Sri Lanka to Belgium,
Luxembourg and
the EU, at the European Parliament South Asia Delegation’s
discussion on Sri
Lanka on April 24, 2012
b)The multitude of voices that earlier questioned the credibility of the LLRC
and expressed doubts as to whether the report would ever see the light of day,
who are ironically now asking that the LLRC report be implemented, are only
exposing their previous poor judgement and re-affirming their practice of
constantly shifting goal posts.
C)The suggestion made in some quarters, that the LLRC report does not address
accountability issues in the last phase of the conflict is without basis. What
those who make this charge seem to be really saying is simply that the authors
of the LLRC report have not arrived at the same conclusions that these elements
who obsessively wish to see Sri Lanka being made a scapegoat had wanted them to.
On the contrary, the LLRC report offers us detailed observations and
recommendations on International Humanitarian Law issues relating to the final
phase of the conflict.
* It clearly accepts the position that the protection of civilian life was a
key factor in the formulation of policy for carrying out military operations and
that the deliberate targeting of civilians formed no part of this policy.
An LLRC sitting. File
photo
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* The report notes that military operations were conducted professionally,
but if there is evidence of transgression by individuals, this of course should
be examined.
* On the basis of evidence placed before them, the LLRC also points to
several specific episodes which, in their view, warrant further investigation.
These episodes are referred to in the report, in a variety of settings.
I might add here, that the government of Sri Lanka has not contested the
conclusions of the LLRC, unlike NATO, which is strongly contesting the position
taken by Judge Philippe Kirsch in the COI report on Libya with regard to the
need to further investigate NATO operations in Libya. We have yet to see Western
countries critiquing NATO's position on this matter, which is a clear
application of double standards on their part, when compared to the strident
calls being made in relation to alleged events in Sri Lanka based on the
flimsiest of evidence.
In fact the Leader of the House Nimal Siripala de Silva was to observe in
tabling the LLRC report in Parliament on December 16, 2011 "It is a matter of
the greatest importance to the government to have the truth relating to each of
these matters established in a manner that puts controversy to rest for all
time. The government has asserted clearly on many occasions that, if reliable
evidence is available in respect of any contravention of the law, the law of the
land will be set in motion". The Leader of the House was also to note that "the
government, of its own accord, has already carried out a series of measures
including a comprehensive census in the Northern Province, which will enable
firm and verifiable conclusions to be arrived at on issues involving
accountability, without any element of conjecture or speculation".
Channel 4 video footage
Following up on this pledge, already two Courts of Inquiry and a Board of
Inquiry have been established by the Sri Lanka Army and Navy respectively and
have commenced investigations into specific incidents identified by the LLRC.
The mandate of the Court of Inquiry is to investigate, inter alia, civilian
casualties and the Channel 4 video footage; including whether any deliberate and
international attacks were made by the Army on civilians, with a view to causing
them harm or damage, or on any hospitals or no-fire zones.
If so, the persons responsible for any such activity and to make
recommendations with regard to the measures that should be taken with regard to
such persons. In respect to the controversial Channel 4 footage, the Court of
Inquiry has been specifically mandated to ascertain whether any member of the
armed forces was involved in the events depicted, authentic or otherwise and to
recommend the measures to be taken.
d) On the implementation of the LLRC report, sound prioritization no doubt is
an essential aspect of a practical strategy for implementation of these
recommendations, where it is important to distinguish between measures
addressing humanitarian needs as a matter of urgency, and longer term
initiatives. As External Affairs Minister Prof. G. L. Peiris was to observe
recently, "We will move forward at our own pace and our policy will be
determined by the interests of the people in this country. The LLRC is our own
Commission, so to implement the LLRC recommendations we do not need any external
pressure. We will do it anyway and of course we will keep the international
community informed".
e) We must remember that there are many issues on which recommendations have
been made in the LLRC report - such as demining, IDP re-settlement, ex-LTTE
combatants, de-militarization, socio-economic and livelihood development - which
as I have already observed is at an advanced stage of implementation.
f) Additionally,
* GOSL has also taken steps to disarm the so-called 'paramilitary groups'. In
order to bring about an end to the possession of unauthorized weapons, an
institutionalized process with legislative oversight has been set up to record
specific details on weapons recovered, and also setting a deadline for
surrendering of illegal weapons, as was done in the Eastern Province.
* The National Human Rights Action Plan for the Promotion and Protection of
Human Rights developed through a participatory process between government and
civil society and approved by the Cabinet in September 2011, is presently being
implemented. The Action Plan presents a structured framework to monitor the
implementation of existing laws, policies and practices and to enhance a better
understanding and respect of human rights.
* GOSL has also taken steps to establish normalcy and re-democratise the
Northern and the Eastern provinces, including through the full participation in
Presidential and Parliamentary election, the holding of Provincial Elections in
the Eastern Province, and Local Government elections. Local Government elections
have been held in all areas of the North with the exception of two local
authorities in the Mullaitivu district, namely Puthukudiruppu and Maritimepattu.
LG elections in these two local authorities which were scheduled for March 24,
2012 were postponed due to an Interim Order issued, as two petitions are pending
before the Court of Appeal.
* In order to evolve a multi-party consensus with respect to constitutional
changes, the government has sought the appointment of a Parliamentary Select
Committee (PSC), while being also engaged in bilateral discussions with Tamil
political parties, as well as Muslim representation in furtherance of this
objective.
The government has already nominated its members to the PSC and is awaiting
the nomination of members representing the Opposition, especially from the Tamil
National Alliance (TNA), after which sittings can commence.
* Development related work in the Northern and Eastern Provinces, which
during the conflict situation and immediately thereafter came under the purview
of the Presidential Task Force for Resettlement, is now carried out under the
supervision of the relevant line ministries, in coordination and consultation
with the provincial and local government representatives.
* Following its launch in January 2012, the government is also effectively
implementing the Trilingual Policy aimed at enabling Sinhala, Tamil and English
competence to Sri Lankans. The 10 Year National Plan for a Trilingual Sri Lanka
provides the blueprint for the first determined effort by any administration
since 1987 when Tamil was made an official language, to seriously implement the
provisions for a Trilingual Sri Lanka already available in the law with the
passing of the 13th amendment to the constitution. Already more than 1,600 Tamil
speaking Police officers have been recruited and the Civil Service in the North
and East is largely composed of members of the Tamil and Muslim communities.
* GoSL has established a specialized institution for Rehabilitation of
Persons, Properties and Industries Authority (REPPIA), responsible for providing
compensation for the persons who have suffered loss/damage due to terrorist
violence.
* A Land Task Force has been established at provincial and district level to
deal with land issues. The government has also begun a process to revise laws to
enable considering claims for immovable property including land of the displaced
or disadvantaged persons. To any objective observer, the steps I have outlined
above would have constituted a sufficient body of evidence of both the GOSL's
intent and the commitment to deliver in just under three years since the ending
of the terrorist conflict to ensure that Sri Lankans
* cutting across ethnicity, religion, regional and class differences, could
move forward towards peace, reconciliation and development, in a spirit of
inclusivity.
HRC resolution on Sri Lanka
It is in such context that GOSL believes that the resort to action on Sri
Lanka through a resolution within the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva last
month was unnecessary and unwarranted, and could in effect negatively impact the
ongoing reconciliation process. First, the resolution ignored the significant
steps taken and results shown by GOSL over the past near three years since the
ending of LTTE terrorism in Sri Lanka - action which has few precedents and
which will be hard to replicate in comparable situations.
Second, it prejudged Sri Lanka’s intention to implement the recommendations
of the LLRC, less than three months since this domestic mechanism put in place
by GOSL was made public, and the time-bound National Human Rights Action Plan,
which has many synergies with the LLRC, has commenced implementation in a
structured manner. In doing so, it also undermined the well-entrenched rule of
international law, that domestic remedies must first be exhausted, and amounts
to an undue interference in an internal process.
Third, given that Sri Lanka would in any case come up for comprehensive
discussion during the HRC’s second cycle of the Universal Periodic Review (UPR)
in October this year, the haste with which this resolution was sought to be
imposed, brings into serious question the motivations of its proponents, who
seem to disregard the principles upon which the HRC was founded, as a forum to
address developments concerning human rights of all countries, in a cooperative,
non-selective, and impartial manner.
Fourth, it also underlined the continuing prejudice against Sri Lanka
prevalent among sections of the international community, who regrettably
continue to be manipulated by INGOs and particularly the rump elements of the
LTTE living abroad and their sympathizers, which are intent on vilifying Sri
Lanka. It is this self-seeking vociferous minority living in greener pastures
overseas, and continue to advocate mono-ethnic separatism in Sri Lanka while
espousing the ideology of the LTTE, using its resources and being manipulated by
its surviving military leaders, who would prefer to see Sri Lanka remain locked
in the past. With 15 countries voting with Sri Lanka, and eight countries
abstaining, the final result in Geneva was that 23 countries, out of a total of
47 members of the Human Rights Council did not support the Resolution, while 24
supported it. Many countries which voted with Sri Lanka were acutely conscious
of the danger of setting a precedent which enables ad hoc intervention by
powerful countries in the internal affairs of other nations. The eight
abstentions also reflected clear resistance of pressure by powerful countries to
support the resolution by less powerful developing countries on a matter of
principle. The resolution therefore finally became an example of a highly
selective and arbitrary process within the Council not governed by objective
norms or criteria of any kind, the implications of which were not lost on many
countries.
As far as Sri Lanka is concerned, our policy in respect of all matters will
continue to be guided by the vital interests and well being of the people of our
country, in keeping with accepted legal norms. Sri Lanka remains confident, that
as we have done in the past, over time, we will be able to prove to all,
including the present day ‘prophets of doom’ who continue to shift goal posts
and apply double standards when it comes to Sri Lanka, that they were
wrong.
Concluded