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Sri
Lanka
must be
the only
country
in the
world
that
conducted
a public
examination,
the ‘O’
Levels,
having
provided
teaching
for this
in
preceding
months
even in
the
midst of
conflict,
and
parents
made
sure
that
many
children
took the
exam
despite
efforts
by the
LTTE to
promote
a
boycott,
said
Secretary
to the
Ministry
of
Disaster
Management
and
Human
Rights
Prof
Rajiva
Wijesinha.
Responding
to the
Special
Representative
for
Children
and
Armed
Conflict,
he said
that
happily
senior
UN
officials
in Sri
Lanka
now are
working
positively
with the
Sri
Lankan
government
to
overcome
this
scourge
of child
soldiers:
UNICEF
has been
promoting
the
release
and
rehabilitation
of all
child
soldiers,
while
ILO is
working
with our
Ministry
to
produce
a
framework
for the
rehabilitation
of
ex-combatants.
Rehabilitation
programmes
will be
implemented
by the
new
Commissioner
General
for
Rehabilitation,
who will
work
under
the
Ministry
of
Justice,
he
added.
"With
regard
to the
Special
Representative’s
statement,
we share
her
hopes
for
rapid
improvement
in the
situation,
and
trust we
will be
able to
complete
without
impediment
the
programmes
planned
in this
regard.
We also
believe
it
necessary
to draw
attention
to
positive
aspects
of the
situation,
as has
been
noted
with
regard
to
conditions
elsewhere.
We are
pleased
that
health
facilities
have
been
provided
satisfactorily
to
children
as well
as
others,
and that
we were
able to
reduce
the
appalling
malnutrition
rates
suffered
by those
who were
under
the
control
of the
LTTE. It
is sad
that
these
our
fellow
citizens
were
deprived
even of
the high
energy
biscuits
that we
enabled
UNICEF
to take
to those
regions,
which
were
grabbed
instead
by the
LTTE to
sustain
armed
cadres",
Prof
Wijesinha
further
stated.
Here is
the full
text of
Prof
Rajiva
Wijesinha's
statement
Sri
Lanka
welcomes
the
statement
of the
Special
Representative
for
Children
and
Armed
Conflict,
and
registers
again
its
gratitude
that Ms
Coomaraswamy
made
crystal
clear,
when
other
branches
of the
UN
seemed
to
condone
this,
her
condemnation
of the
LTTE for
breaching
national
and
international
law in
its
recruitment
of child
soldiers.
Now that
the
conflict
is over,
and
clearer
information
is
emerging
of the
appalling
behaviour
of the
LTTE in
the area
they
controlled,
we trust
the
United
Nations
will
call to
account
the
UNICEF
officials
who
condoned
recruitment
of 17
year
olds on
the
grounds
that
terrorist
legislation
permitted
this. We
call on
the UN
too to
ensure
accountability
of those
who
failed
to
disclose
the fact
that the
LTTE
were
recruiting
first
one
member,
and then
two,
from
each
family
in their
thrall.
Happily
senior
UN
officials
in Sri
Lanka
now are
working
positively
with the
Sri
Lankan
government
to
overcome
this
scourge
of child
soldiers:
UNICEF
has been
promoting
the
release
and
rehabilitation
of all
child
soldiers,
while
ILO is
working
with our
Ministry
to
produce
a
framework
for the
rehabilitation
of
ex-combatants.
Rehabilitation
programmes
will be
implemented
by the
new
Commissioner
General
for
Rehabilitation,
who will
work
under
the
Ministry
of
Justice.
With
regard
to the
Special
Representative’s
statement,
we share
her
hopes
for
rapid
improvement
in the
situation,
and
trust we
will be
able to
complete
without
impediment
the
programmes
planned
in this
regard.
We also
believe
it
necessary
to draw
attention
to
positive
aspects
of the
situation,
as has
been
noted
with
regard
to
conditions
elsewhere.
We are
pleased
that
health
facilities
have
been
provided
satisfactorily
to
children
as well
as
others,
and that
we were
able to
reduce
the
appalling
malnutrition
rates
suffered
by those
who were
under
the
control
of the
LTTE. It
is sad
that
these
our
fellow
citizens
were
deprived
even of
the high
energy
biscuits
that we
enabled
UNICEF
to take
to those
regions,
which
were
grabbed
instead
by the
LTTE to
sustain
armed
cadres.
We
should
also
stress
the
continuation
of
education
at high
levels,
though I
am sorry
the
inferior
technology
this
Council
now uses
will not
allow me
to share
the
photographs
from the
welfare
centres
that I
am
holding
up. Sri
Lanka
must be
the only
country
in the
world
that
conducted
a public
examination,
the ‘O’
Levels,
even in
the
midst of
conflict,
and
parents
made
sure
that
many
children
took the
exam
despite
efforts
by the
LTTE to
promote
a
boycott.
Last
month we
held the
‘A’
Level
Examination
in the
Centres,
having
provided
teaching
for this
in
preceding
months.
We hope
therefore
that, as
is shown
in these
pictures,
we will
soon be
able to
ensure
that
these
children
enjoy
the
fruits
of the
solid
educational
system
we have
in
place,
and
which we
extended
even to
areas
temporarily
under
terrorist
control.
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