|
Sri
Lanka’s
priority
now is
reconstruction,
reintegration
and
rehabilitation
in the
post-conflict
phase
which we
propose
to
approach
in a
spirit
of true
reconciliation.
What is
therefore
required
is the
constructive
engagement
by the
international
community
in our
efforts
to
achieve
these
objectives
which
are
already
underway.
We are
tirelessly
working
towards
a
comprehensive
solution
to the
problems
of our
internally
displaced
inclusive
of a
political
process.
We have
already
re-settled
more
than
10,000
persons
who have
been
re-united
with
their
families.
We have
permitted
the host
families
to
receive
persons
over 60
years
and
children
wherever
the host
families
have the
economic
capacity
to
accommodate
such
persons,
said
Attorney
General
Mohan
Peiris,
at the
General
debate
of the
Un Human
Rights
Council
in
Geneva,
June 08,
09.
The
UNHCR
and the
ICRC
have
been
given
ample
access
and more
to the
IDP
camps
together
with
over 50
NGOs. We
will
continue
to
ensure
that the
Tamil
community
will
live
side by
side in
dignity
with
others
and
enjoy
the
freedoms
as
guaranteed
by our
constitution.
It is
regrettable
that
these
same
concerns
were not
directed
to the
LTTE
with the
same
vigor at
the
appropriate
time, he
added.
Here
is the
text of
the
response
in the
Right of
Reply
exercised
by the
Attorney
General
during
the
general
debate
under
agenda
item 4
of the
UN Human
Rights
Council.
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Hon. Mohan Peiris, President’s Counsel, and Attorney-General of Sri Lanka |
agenda
item 4
of the
UN Human
Rights
Council
Mr.
President,
Sri
Lanka
has
taken
serious
note of
the
observations
made
during
the
debate
on Item
4. We
are
encouraged
by the
fact
that the
majority
of the
members
have
commended
our
commitment
to
post-conflict
nation-building,
instead
of being
unfairly
castigated
repeatedly
by a few
States
hell-bent
on
pursuing
their
agendas,
and
their
agendas
alone,
at all
cost. We
are
however
more
than
conscious
that
there is
no room
for
triumphalism.
Mr.
President,
We have
seen in
some
States a
whole
license
of
interference
by way
of a
plethora
of
powerful
pressurizing
tactics
at which
even the
hardest
of
critics
might
want to
blush.
We want
those
States
to know
that we
will
continue
our
engagement
with
them
nonetheless
and
welcome
working
together
in a
spirit
of true
partnership
as our
equal
and
friend.
Mr.
President,
You may
note and
appreciate
that the
deliberate
targeting
of
civilians
never
formed
part of
the
military
strategy
of our
forces.
This is
not to
deny
civilian
casualties
which
may have
occurred
as
collateral
damage.
This is
not
peculiar
only to
Sri
Lanka.
Such
casualties
do occur
particularly
when one
party
uses the
civilians
and
civilian
centers
and
establishments
as a
central
part of
its
combat
strategy.
You will
appreciate
that in
such
situations
the
contours
of the
traditional
battlefields
recedes
into the
background
with
unfortunate
consequences
to
civilians.
However,
the
principles
of
distinction
and
proportionality
which
form the
cornerstone
of the
principles
of IHL
were
observed
by our
security
forces.
Our
military
strategies
ensured
that
civilian
population
and
civilian
establishments
were
never
made the
target
of
deliberate
attack.
The
commanders
on the
ground
have
been
thoroughly
trained
in the
requirements
of
international
humanitarian
law and
its
governing
principles.
The
strict
observance
of these
principles
and the
law as
developed
in the
context
of an
inter-State
conflict
and
clearly
demarcated
battle
lines is
not, you
will
appreciate,
an easy
task
when
engaging
a
terrorist
group.
However,
the
conduct
of our
security
forces
to
ensure
minimum
casualties
was
better
than any
in the
world,
and
should
be
commended.
Mr.
President,
Sri
Lanka’s
priority
now is
reconstruction,
reintegration
and
rehabilitation
in the
post-conflict
phase
which we
propose
to
approach
in a
spirit
of true
reconciliation.
What is
therefore
required
is the
constructive
engagement
by the
international
community
in our
efforts
to
achieve
these
objectives
which
are
already
underway.
We are
tirelessly
working
towards
a
comprehensive
solution
to the
problems
of our
internally
displaced
inclusive
of a
political
process.
We have
already
re-settled
more
than
10,000
persons
who have
been
re-united
with
their
families.
We have
permitted
the host
families
to
receive
persons
over 60
years
and
children
wherever
the host
families
have the
economic
capacity
to
accommodate
such
persons.
The
UNHCR
and the
ICRC
have
been
given
ample
access
and more
to the
IDP
camps
together
with
over 50
NGOs. We
will
continue
to
ensure
that the
Tamil
community
will
live
side by
side in
dignity
with
others
and
enjoy
the
freedoms
as
guaranteed
by our
constitution.
It is
regrettable
that
these
same
concerns
were not
directed
to the
LTTE
with the
same
vigor at
the
appropriate
time.
We are
approaching
the
political
process
with
equally
great
care.
You will
appreciate
that
elections
alone do
not make
a true
democracy.
It is
therefore
necessary
to
insist
that
those
who seek
the
benefits
of
democratic
process
accept
its
underlying
principles
as well.
Mr.
President,
We are
currently
engaged
in a
programme
to
restore
our
displaced
population
to their
original
habitats
and
livelihoods
with the
assistance
of the
international
community.
Isn’t it
then of
paramount
importance
that we
unconditionally
support
that
process
and not
distract
ourselves
by
indulging
in
counter-productive
rhetoric,
undue
pressure
and the
posturing
of other
multifarious
measures?
To
indulge
in the
latter
would
only
make the
domestic
situation
in Sri
Lanka
more
difficult.
It is
therefore
regrettable
that the
principle
of
majority
intergovernmental
decisions
making
process
does not
appear
to be
fully
appreciated
by the
EU. Are
we then
to pay
lip
service
to these
procedures
that
would be
rendered
useless
and
academic?
To give
into
this
unsavory
practice
would be
only
opening
the
window
to a
serious
departure
from the
procedures
established
in the
inter-governmental
decision-making
process.
It is
therefore
our
humble
plea
that Sri
Lanka be
given
space to
continue
with the
on-going
reconciliation
process
and not
allow
ourselves
to be
overcome
by the
agenda
of some
States.
Thank
you.
www.lankamission.org
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