It is
quite
inaccurate
to state
that
internally
displaced
persons
in Sri
Lanka
are
detained
under
conditions
of
internment.
These
are the
people
wrongfully
confined
and
restrained
by the
LTTE,
who
voluntarily
sought
the
solace
and
safety
of the
government
relief
villages
and
welfare
centres
in the
aftermath
of the
liberation
of the
people
from the
LTTE.
"They
are our
people
and the
government
has a
constitutional
and
moral
duty to
sustain
them in
safety
till
they are
resettled
in
proper
conditions
fit for
peaceful
human
habitation".
So said
the
Attorney
General
Mohan
Peiris,
PC in
his
address
to the
12th
Session
of the
United
Nations
Human
Rights
Council
held
yesterday
(Sep.
15) in
Geneva.
Referring
to the
trial,
verdict
and
sentence
imposed
on
journalist
Mr. J.
Tissanayagam,
the
Attorney
General
said
that the
UN High
Commissioner
for
Human
Rights (Navanethem
Pillay)
had
failed
to make
reference
to the
third
and most
serious
of the
charges,
that is
the
receipt
of LTTE
funds by
Mr.
Tissanayagam
and the
application
of those
funds to
propagate
the LTTE
cause of
terrorism.
These
facts
have
never
been
denied
by Mr.
Tissanayagam
at his
trail.
It is
therefore
unfair
and
misleading
to
insinuate
that Mr.
Tissanayagam
was
convicted
merely
for
criticizing
Sri
Lanka’s
army in
two
publications
and
should
not
have, if
properly
appreciated,
given
rise to
any
dismay
as
observed
by the
High
Commissioner.
He also
said
that Mr.
Tissanayagam
was
accorded
a fair
trail in
respect
of the
offences
for
which he
was
indicted.
He was
represented
by a
senior
defense
attorney
of his
choice
and
afforded
all
guarantees
that an
accused
is
entitled
to under
Article
14 of
the
ICCPR.
Mr.
Tissanayagam
made use
of the
facilities
available
under
the law,
faced
his
trial,
called
evidence
on his
behalf
and was
given
panoply
of
rights
in
rebuttal
of the
prosecution
case.
Here is
the text
of the
Attorney
General's
speech
Mr.
President
and the
distinguished
members
of the
Human
Rights
Council,
Excellencies,
ladies
and
gentlemen,
may I
congratulate
Madam
High
Commissioner
on your
1st
anniversary
of
office,
and
thank
the
Council
and the
High
Commissioner
for the
valuable
guidance
and
support
in the
last
year
which
has been
a
difficult
one for
Sri
Lanka in
which a
fine and
difficult
balance
had to
be
achieved
between
the
maintenance
of civil
and
political
rights
in the
context
of the
maintenance
of
national
security.
Mr.
President,
I must
and have
to
respond
to some
of the
observations
made by
Madam
High
commissioner.
It is
respectfully
highlighted
that
with the
dismantling
of the
LTTE in
May
2009,
there is
not even
a
semblance
of a
conflict
in Sri
Lanka.
Sri
Lanka
has
restored
normalcy
in all
parts of
the
country
and is
looking
forward
with
renewed
hope and
optimism
for a
brighter
future
for our
people.
It is
quite
inaccurate
to state
that
internally
displaced
persons
are
detained
under
conditions
of
internment.
During
the
conflict
and
afterwards
the
people
of the
north
who were
wrongfully
confined
and
restrained
by the
LTTE,
voluntarily
sought
the
solace
and
safety
of the
government
relief
villages
and
welfare
centres
and in
the
aftermath
of the
liberation
of the
people
from the
LTTE.
They are
our
people
and the
government
has a
constitutional
and
moral
duty to
sustain
in
safety
till
they are
resettled
in
proper
conditions
fit for
peaceful
human
habitation.
The
government
has
launched
numerous
programs
including
disarmament,
demobilization,
and
reintegration
that
has, as
one of
its key
components,
transitional
justice.
We have
put in
place a
national
framework
on
reintegration
with the
objective
of
safeguarding
their
human
rights
to
ensure
sustainable
peace,
reconciliation
and
social
cohesion
also to
enhance
their
capacity
to
employability
and in
the case
of ex-
combatants
to
minimize
the risk
of
marginalization
in the
post
conflict
phase.
As at
10th
September
2009
approximately
40, 000
IDPs of
different
categories
have
been
resettled.
The
resettlement
programs
have
been
speeded
up and
we are
confident
that by
end of
January
2010 a
bulk of
those
displaced
would be
resettled
in
keeping
with our
pledges
to this
Council.
This
objective
is made
possible
with the
de-mining
program
being
put in
high
gear
with the
procurement
of a
large
number
of state
of the
art
de-mining
vehicles
that
have
been
rapidly
deployed
in the
former
conflict
areas.
From the
date the
conflict
ended,
the
government
has
spent
approximately
150
million
US
dollars
on
infrastructure
facilities
for IDPs
and
connected
activities.
We
have to
balance
the
interests
of all
stakeholders
to the
conflict
namely
victims
and the
families
affected
by the
conflict
as well
as
ex-combatants.
In this
process,
international
humanitarian
agencies
are
extending
their
help and
participating
in all
earnest.
Mr.
President,
Sri
Lanka is
in
substantial
compliance
with its
treaty
obligations
governing
IDPs.
Let
me now
turn to
the
question
of the
conviction
of Mr.
Tissanayagam.
It is
submitted
that he
was
accorded
a fair
trail in
respect
of the
offences
for
which he
was
indicted.
He was
represented
by a
senior
defense
attorney
of his
choice
and
afforded
all
guarantees
that an
accused
is
entitled
to under
Article
14 of
the
ICCPR.
Mr.
Tissanayagam
made use
of the
facilities
available
under
the law,
faced
his
trial,
called
evidence
on his
behalf
and was
given
panoply
of
rights
in
rebuttal
of the
prosecution
case.
The
High
Commissioner
in her
reference
to the
Tissanayagam
case
says
that she
was
dismayed
by the
sentence
of 20
years
handed
to Mr.
Tissanayagam
for
critiquing
Sri
Lanka’s
army in
two
articles
which he
published.
This
observation
I regret
to state
is
inaccurate
and
appears
to be a
result
of a
misappreciation
of the
indictment
against
Mr.
Tissanayagam,
which
contained
three
charges.
It
would
suffice
to say
that
Madam
High
Commissioner
has
failed
to make
reference
to the
third
and most
serious
of the
charges,
that is
the
receipt
of LTTE
funds by
Mr.
Tissanayagam
and the
application
of those
funds to
propagate
the LTTE
cause of
terrorism.
These
facts
have
never
been
denied
by Mr.
Tissanayagam
at his
trail.
It is
therefore
unfair
and
misleading
to
insinuate
that Mr.
Tissanayagam
was
convicted
merely
for
criticizing
Sri
Lanka’s
army in
two
publications
and
should
not
have, if
properly
appreciated,
given
rise to
any
dismay
as
observed
by the
High
Commissioner.
Mr.
President,
at the
end of
the
trial,
the
court
found
him
guilty
and the
minimum
punishment
that
could
have
been
imposed
under
the
provision
of law
for such
crimes
had been
imposed
on him.
Madam
High
Commissioner,
we have
from
colonial
times
recognized
the
doctrine
of
separation
of
powers
and it
is not
in the
common
law
tradition
for
other
branches
of the
government
to
interfere
with the
workings
of the
judiciary.
Madam
High
Commissioner,
like in
any
other
established
jurisdiction,
Mr.
Tissanayagam
is
entitled
to
invoke
as of
right
appellate
procedures
and the
constitutional
rights
in the
review
process.
I
would
like to
observe
that
even the
European
Convention
on Human
Rights (ECHR)
does not
confer
unfettered
freedom
of
expression
which
grants a
license
to
indulge
in
sedition
and
terrorism.
I would
invite
the
attention
of
Council
to the
case of
Brogan v
United
Kingdom
(1998)
11
European
Human
Rights
Reports
(EHRR)
where
the
United
Kingdom
used
derogation
in
relation
to the
Prevention
of
Terrorism
(Temporary
Provisions)
Acts
1974-1989,
permitting
the
detention
of
terrorist
suspects
without
access
to a
court of
law,
which
was
otherwise
in
contravention
of
Article
5 (the
right of
liberty).
Thus,
derogable
rights
are
quite
common
in the
EU and
it is
preposterous
that
double
standard
have to
be
applied
when it
comes to
Sri
Lanka.
Mr.
President,
even the
Inter-American
Commission,
in
October
2002,
had
occasion
to
comment
that
freedom
of
expression
is
qualified
and
derogable
in times
when
terrorism
has to
be
combated.
We see
similar
procedures
used in
ample
measure
in the
treatment
of such
matters
in other
jurisdictions
as well.
Mr.
President,
we ask
the
International
Community
to
cooperate
with us
in a
true
sense of
partnership
and
desist
from
indulging
in a
consistent
and
systematic
scheme
of
criticism
intended
to
tarnish
our
image
which at
this
time
would be
counter
productive
to
achieving
development
in a
country
which
has
emerged
from a
conflict
that has
plagued
our
people
for more
than 25
years.
Mr.
President,
we at
this
juncture
are
entitled
to enjoy
the full
dividends
of peace
and urge
that Sri
Lanka be
supported
unconditionally
in
achieving
this end
by its
home
grown
solutions
within
our
cultural,
religious
and
social
values
that
have a
history
of over
2500
years.
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