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“We are receptive to international
cooperation and assistance, however, as the
affected State we have to preserve our right
to decide the modalities and mechanism by
which we would address these issues. They
must be home-grown.
“The UN has recognised over a long period of
time the nature of the assistance to be
rendered to victims and the central role of
the affected State. We have to be supported
by the broad umbrella of international
solidarity which will include member States
and concerned international organizations.,
said Minister of Disaster Management & Human
Rights and Leader of the Sri Lanka
Delegation in his statement at the Special
Session on Sri Lanka of the UN Human Rights
Council, Geneva, Tuesday ( 26).
Minister Samarasinghe said: “Unfortunately,
I did not hear the High Commissioner [for
Human Rights] in her statement referring to
the fact that:
• one of the most ruthless terrorist
organizations that the world has ever known
has been eradicated;
• the fact that the 30 year old conflict has
come to an end and we are in the process of
addressing economic issues, social issues
and political expectations;
• the fact that the biggest hostage crisis
the world has seen in modern times has been
successfully resolved.
This is the context in which we would like
our friends in this room to understand and
appreciate the challenges that we are facing
as a nation who has come out of this 30 year
conflict, he said.
“My Ministry enjoys a mandate on the
protection side of the Government. I have
not heard from any one of the UN Agencies,
any one of these INGOs or NGOs telling us
that there are people dying of
malnourishment, of starvation and there is
lack of food. So I would like Mr. President,
to state for the record that 250,000 of our
citizens are being looked after and cared
for as we speak and we will continue to show
that commitment and we will continue to
offer access and facilitate our partners in
the international community to complement
efforts of the Government within a national
frame work” the Minister added.
He further stated that: “Sri Lanka is a
State which has come out of a 30 year
conflict with its institutional structure in
place. Even at the height of the conflict we
were committed to ensure that the
institutional structure was working in the
conflict areas. This is a commitment we made
on behalf of our people despite being aware
that the LTTE were benefiting from the
services we provided.”
Following is the text of Minister Mahinda
Samarasinghe’s statement:
Excellencies, Friends,
We
are focusing on Sri Lanka at a time when the
30 year conflict which has affected our
country so negatively has come to an end.
Mr. President, I heard a little while ago
from the previous speaker about conflict
zones and been given access to conflict
zones when the conflict has ended. There is
absolutely no issue in terms of giving
access. To our partners we have given access
and we will continue to give access to
complement Government efforts in looking
after the needy.
Mr. President, when terrorism, the most
extremist of its kind has been successfully
eradicated we are once again focusing on Sri
Lanka at a special Session today. Mr.
President when the biggest hostage situation
the world had ever seen in recent times has
been successfully resolved and at a time
when new challenges confront in our quest
for durable and sustainable peace, we are
meeting in this room and focusing on Sri
Lanka in order to agree on a way forward.
Unfortunately Mr. President I did not hear
the High Commissioner in her statement
referring to the fact that one of the most
ruthless terrorist organizations that the
world has ever known has been eradicated;
the fact that the 30 year old conflict has
come to an end and we are in the process of
addressing economic issues, social issues
and political expectations; the fact that
the biggest hostage crisis as I mentioned
earlier the world has seen in modern times
has been successfully resolved. This is the
context in which we would like our friends
in this room to understand and appreciate
the challenges that we are facing as a
nation who has come out of this 30 year
conflict.
Mr. President, over 250,000 of our citizens
who were held hostage by the LTTE in the
north were rescued by our forces and are
being looked after and cared for as we
speak. There was a reference little while
ago about lack of food; there was a
reference little while ago about starvation,
about malnutrition which is furthest from
the truth. Today we have all of the UN
agencies working side by side with
governmental officials in each and every one
of these camps. Today we have given access
to 52 International Non Governmental
Organizations and other non governmental
organizations to work side by side with
government officials in complementing
efforts of the Government. My Ministry Mr.
President enjoys a mandate on the protection
side of the Government. I have not heard
from any one of the UN Agencies, any one of
these INGOs or NGOs telling us that there
are people dying of malnourishment, of
starvation and there is lack of food. So I
would like Mr. President, to state for the
record that 250,000 of our citizens are
being looked after and cared for as we speak
and we will continue to show that commitment
and we will continue to offer access and
facilitate our partners in the international
community to complement efforts of the
Government within a national frame work.
Mr. President, our objective of course is to
resettle all our citizens in their homes in
the shortest possible time. This is a
decision that the people themselves must
take. What we have to do is to ensure that
the environment is created, conducive
conditions created, so that an informed
choice can be made by the people themselves
whether they want to go back to their homes
or not. And until such time that that
informed decision is made we are committed
to looking after our people, ensuring their
wellbeing and ensuring that we facilitate
our friends in the international community
to complement efforts of the Government.
Now Mr. President, nearly 9,000 surrendees
and other identified recruits of the LTTE
will be put through a comprehensive
rehabilitation programme addressing their
special needs including increasing their
employability so that reintegration into
society is made much easier. Mr. President
we work very closely with several UN
Organisations such as UNDP, UNICEF and ILO
as well as international organisations such
as the International Organisation for
Migration, IOM in this endeavour. My
Ministry has taken the initiative of
preparing a national frame work for the
reintegration of ex-combatants and this is
not an initiative that we started after the
war was over, after the conflict was over,
we were preparing for the post conflict era
even before the LTTE was completely
eliminated. So this is the type of
commitment Mr. President, that we have shown
as a Government and we will continue to show
that commitment on behalf of our people.
Mr. President with the eradication of
terrorism as we have known it to be we are
conscious of new challenges before us. The
task of de-mining, infrastructure
rehabilitation, and restoration of basic
services need to be put in place before
resettlement can commence and then
livelihood strategies to ensure that post
re-settlement sustainability is ensured.
There is no question of taking short cuts
and subjecting ourselves to pressures from
certain quarters and saying that we are sick
and tired of these pressures; we are going
to take these people back to their homes. It
is not so easy, these are once again our
people, these are Sri Lankan citizens and I
dare say that we care for them more than
anyone else and we are not going to take
short cuts, we are going to ensure that the
de-mining is done, we are going to ensure
that the infrastructure is put into place ,
we are going to ensure that the basic
services are provided and then all this
information will be placed at the disposal
of the people themselves who can then take a
decision whether they want to go back or
not. And once they go back Mr. President,
their livelihood challenges will be also
met, ensuring that they get back on their
own two feet.
Mr. President the government has right
through out this difficult phase of
liberating our people from terrorism never
subscribed to the concept of a military
solution as a final solution. We have always
said that the only durable and lasting
solution is a political process which
addresses the socio, economic and political
grievances and expectations of our citizens
through a home grown process acceptable to
all sections of our multicultural society.
The efforts in this direction Mr. President
have already commenced.
Mr. President we see another important
challenge and that is, to reach out to the
Tamil Diaspora living in counties of some of
our friends in this room. So that by way of
a process of dialogue and confidence
building we can embark on our own
reunification process and reconciliation
process vital to ensuring never a repetition
of what we as a nation had to go through Mr.
President.
Mr. President we will continue to work with
all our friends in the international
community. We will continue to engage as we
have done in the past consistently with all
regional and cross regional groups in this
council. I am sure that the Ambassadors,
Permanent Representatives in this room will
bare testimony to the fact that I have
personally every occasion when I have been
in Geneva taken the initiative of coming and
addressing the regional groups and cross
regional groups, so that I can make myself
available for any clarifications or
questions that they might like to post to me
as a member of the Government. And Mr.
President, we will continue in our efforts
to facilitate our bilateral and multilateral
partners in complementing the efforts of the
Government in the multi-pronged strategies
that we will put into place in the post
conflict era. This is why we must not engage
in the naming and shaming game.
Mr. President it is also in this spirit that
a broad based draft resolution has been co
sponsored by many countries including Sri
Lanka which we believe has even taken into
account some of the constructive and
practical suggestions made by some of our
friends who were supportive of another
resolution.
Mr. President I would also like to make the
point that this is an implementable
resolution which will in turn ensure a
constructive outcome at the end of
deliberations. We express the hope that it
will be supported by everyone.
Mr. President Sri Lanka is a State which has
come out of a 30 year conflict with its
institutional structure in place. Even at
the height of the conflict we were committed
to ensure that the institutional structure
was working in the conflict areas. This is a
commitment we made on behalf of our people
despite being aware that the LTTE were
benefiting from the services we provided.
Sri Lanka Mr. President is a democracy where
regular free and fair elections are held and
a independent judiciary function. We are in
the process of putting into place the
recommendations and voluntary pledges we
took on board as part of a UPR exercise and
with the end of the conflict we believe that
we are now in a better position to implement
our plans for the promotion and protection
of Human Rights in every nook and corner of
our country.
Finally Mr. President, we are receptive to
international cooperation and assistance,
however as the affected State we have to
preserve our right to decide the modalities
and mechanism by which we would address
these issues. They must be home-grown. The
UN has recognised over a long period of time
the nature of the assistance to be rendered
to victims and the central role of the
affected State. We have to be supported by
the broad umbrella of international
solidarity which will include member States
and concerned international organizations.
We have engaged with the international
community in a constructive and consistent
basis and always cooperated as far back as
the 1980s by subscribing to 13 core
international human rights conventions and
several optional protocols. We have put in
place 11 pieces of domestic legislation
which has given effect to the ICCPR and has
effectively put in motion the implementation
of these rights. We have put in place
mechanisms to protect children in armed
conflict to prevent recruitment of child
soldiers.
Mr. President what I would like to leave
behind in this room is our commitment as a
government, as a nation to the fact that Sri
Lanka is a multi cultural multi lingual
multi ethnic and multi religious society.
This is the great diversity and the strength
of Sri Lanka. And we are committed and we
believe in the fact that it is only through
the protection and nurturing of this
diversity that we can build the unity that
we need to overcome the challenges that are
before us in the national, reconstruction
and development efforts that our country
needs to put in place towards our goal of
sustainable peace and development.
Thank you Mr. President.
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