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An address by Sri Lanka’s Permanent
Representative to the United Nations,
Geneva, Dr. Dayan Jayatilleka where he
criticized the sponsors of the Special
Session on the humanitarian situation in Sri
Lanka as “Western Colonizers” who refused to
consult with the Asian bloc, brought strong
support from Asian, African and Middle
Eastern countries for Sri Lanka.
The special sessions sponsored by 17
countries of the UN Human Rights Commission
will be held tomorrow (26) in Geneva.
Ambassador Jayatilleka asked how “distant
states could know better than Sri Lanka’s
neighboring states, who agreed with its
positions?”
Observers noted that the Sri Lanka
Ambassador was able to rally considerable
Afro- Asian support against the move by
Switzerland and other sponsors of the
resolution to hold Sri Lanka accountable for
alleged violations of human rights and
reported humanitarian crisis in the battle
to defeat the terrorism of the LTTE.
He began by insisting that he considered the
Western-led consultation on the draft
resolution as one organized by "friends",
even if they some may be "misguided". The
"only enemy of Sri Lanka was the one within
its borders", now defeated, he said.
Sri Lanka "put an end to that problem" after
several attempts at negotiation failed and
that all civilians caught in the conflict
were hostages to the Tamil Tigers. The
ambassador argued that it made no sense to
hold a special session now that the 30-year
war is over and "no one is dying", and
considering that the regular human rights
council session is only a week away.
He complained that Tiger sympathizers are
planning a demonstration on Monday, saying
they should not be allowed to "hold the
Human Rights Council hostage".
He complained that states “in the region”
were “bypassed”, “their advice and views
completely ignored”, and not even sought. He
decried the Swiss text, complaining that
“those who are former colonizers somehow
know more about how to handle Sri Lanka than
our immediate neighborhood”. Sri Lanka can
only take on the Swiss proposal if it is
“de-minded and removed of booby traps”,
something, he said, his country knew how to
do very well military.
Long List
Next were a long list of speakers who
opposed holding a special session - Egypt,
Cuba, the Philippines, India, China,
Malaysia, Syria, Thailand, Indonesia, and
Lebanon.
Egypt took the floor first and spoke with a
sense of anger. The only reason they
attended this consultation was because they
respect the positions of some of the
session's sponsors - those that had
supported a special session to condemn
Israel for its actions in Gaza. There were
"double standards" at the council, for
addressing Sri Lanka this time instead of
Palestine, Afghanistan, or Iraq, the
Egyptian Representative said.
Cuba agreed and protested that many
countries were not consulted prior to the
announcement of a special session. The only
way to work in a cooperative manner was on
the basis of Sri Lanka's own text.
China echoed Cuba and said Sri Lanka should
be commended for its "transparency" and
"inclusiveness".
Syria said that "the country concerned [Sri
Lanka] has better knowledge of what needs to
be done".
Thailand said that it was against the
convening of country-specific special
sessions or resolutions in principle.
These interventions were followed by South
Africa, Japan, and Senegal who stressed the
need for "constructive engagement" and
"cooperation" with Sri Lanka to bring about
"consensus". Japan also called for
international assistance to Sri Lanka,
noting its own provision of aid.
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