US resolution, intrusive and politicised’
http://www.sundayobserver.lk/2013/03/10/new01.asp
Rejecting it as ‘intrusive and politicised,’ Sri Lanka’s
Permanent Representative to UN in Geneva Ravinatha Aryasinha said the US
sponsored draft resolution that is currently being circulated among members,
‘clearly contravenes the accepted principles of conduct in the Human Rights
Council’.
At an informal meeting called by the US on Friday to discuss the draft
resolution on Sri Lanka which is to be tabled towards the end of the session,
Aryasinha warned the member states that this action was ‘precedent setting, and
could in the medium-to-long term have an adverse effect on all developing
countries’.
“I express hope, that the US government and possible co-sponsors of the
resolution, would do nothing to endanger the delicate reconciliation process
ongoing in Sri Lanka, as well as the constructive engagement Sri Lanka is
presently pursuing with the United Nations, the Human Rights Council, the High
Commissioner and the Office of the High Commissioner of Human Rights (OHCHR), as
well as our bilateral partners,” he said in a statement.
He said Sri Lanka took part in the informal meeting since it valued the
interest taken by member states and other stakeholders in the HRC on Sri Lanka,
but what is being perpetrated there is a political process contrary to the
principles of cooperation.
Referring to the report of the OHCHR sanctioned by the US resolution of March
2012, the Ambassador said ‘the High Commissioner has gone beyond her mandate in
making recommendations which are arbitrary, highly intrusive and of a
politicised nature.’
In support of his stance he pointed out that she has not given due
recognition to the ongoing reconciliation process, implementation of the LLRC
action plan, the end of a 30 year long terrorism and averting a human
catastrophe.
He said contrary to what was made to believe by the US the draft was far from
a procedural resolution and did not have nexus to the earlier resolution. He
said it was intent on singling out countries for ‘naming and shaming’.
Earlier Ambassador Aryasinha met the US Ambassador Donahoe and conveyed to
him that Sri Lanka rejected entirely the premise the resolution is based on.
The Lankan PR stressed that his country was open for constructive engagement
with parties seeking ‘respectful dialogue’ on reconciliation.
The US resolution is to be tabled on March 21.
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