|
"Multilateralism
is not
about
the UN
agenda
responding
only to
the
demands
of a
minority
of
powerful
States,
but also
defending
the
interest
of the
powerless
majority.
It is
also
imperative
that the
prohibition
reflected
in the
Article
2 (7) of
the
Charter
that the
UN
should
not
interfere
in the
internal
affairs
of
States
be
respected,"
said
Prime
Minister
Ratnasiri
Wickremanayake
addressing
the 64th
Session
of the
United
Nations
General
Assembly
in New
York
(Sept.
26).
Prime
Minister
Ratnasiri
Wickremanayake
said:
"Today,
we have
entered
a
forward-looking,
post-conflict
phase,
recognizing
at the
same
time the
urgent
need to
deal
with the
scars
and
unresolved
challenges
of the
past. In
our
unique
victory
in
defeating
terrorism,
we are
grateful
for the
assistance,
encouragement
and
co-operation
extended
to us by
friendly
countries;
and we
seek
similar
understanding
in
making a
steady
and
stable
transition
from
ending
conflict
to
ensuring
lasting
peace
and
security".
Sri
Lanka is
committed
to
complying
with its
international
obligations
in the
field of
human
rights
and
humanitarian
standards.
Sri
Lanka
will
undertake
further
domestic
measures
aimed at
reconciliation
and in
the
light of
lessons
learnt.
In less
than
three
months
after
the
conflict,
in
August
2009, we
have
made
significant
progress,
he said.
Address
by Prime
Minister
Ratnasiri
Wickremanayake
at the
64th
Session
of the
United
Nations
General
Assembly,
New York
on
September
26, 2009
Mr.
President,
I have
great
pleasure
in
congratulating
you, Dr.
Ali
Abdussalam
Treki,
on your
assumption
of the
Chair of
the 64th
Session
of the
General
Assembly.
Sri
Lanka
will
extend
its
fullest
co-operation
to you
in
effectively
concluding
the work
before
us.
Mr.
President,
Significant
developments
have
taken
place in
Sri
Lanka
since my
President
Mahinda
Rajapaksa
addressed
the 63rd
Session
of the
General
Assembly
last
year.
This
year I
take the
floor
with
renewed
hope and
optimism
for my
country.
In May
this
year,
Sri
Lanka
was
successful
in
defeating
the
scourge
of
brutal
terrorism
after
almost
three
decades
of
conflict
inflicted
on us by
the LTTE,
one of
the most
ruthless
terrorist
organizations
known to
the
international
community.
Our
recent
anti
terrorist
operations
cost us
only 2.8
Billion
Dollars
in all,
compared
with
other
anti-terrorist
operations
elsewhere
which
are
costing
much
more.
In an
age when
the
international
community
has
collectively
acknowledged
that
terrorism
threatens
the very
foundations
of
global
and
national
security,
our
success
in
defeating
terrorism
will
benefit
not only
the
people
of Sri
Lanka,
but all
our
peace-loving
partners
in the
international
community.
Mr.
President,
Today,
we have
entered
a
forward-looking,
post-conflict
phase,
recognizing
at the
same
time the
urgent
need to
deal
with the
scars
and
unresolved
challenges
of the
past. In
our
unique
victory
in
defeating
terrorism,
we are
grateful
for the
assistance,
encouragement
and
co-operation
extended
to us by
friendly
countries;
and we
seek
similar
understanding
in
making a
steady
and
stable
transition
from
ending
conflict
to
ensuring
lasting
peace
and
security.
We have
shared
our
hopes
and
concerns
with the
United
Nations.
At the
end of
the
conflict
and at
the
invitation
of my
President
-
Mahinda
Rajapaksa,
Secretary
General
Ban Ki-moon
was the
first,
high-level
dignitary
to visit
Sri
Lanka.
Mr.
President,
With the
defeat
of the
LTTE in
May this
year,
approximately
290,000
civilians
in the
Vanni
region
were
liberated
from the
decades
- long
hold of
the LTTE.
One of
our
highest
priorities
thereafter
has been
to meet
the
immediate
humanitarian
needs of
these
displaced
civilians,
and to
ensure
their
long-term
safe,
voluntary
and
dignified
return
to their
homes.
The
welfare
of our
people
at
present
in
temporary
transit
sites
must
keep up
with
standards
that
meet our
own high
expectations
as well
as
accepted
international
norms.
This
task has
been
facilitated
by the
assistance
we
receive
from UN
agencies,
international
and
local
civil
society
partners
and
donors.
A total
in
excess
of 54
agencies
are
actively
engaged
with us
in these
welfare
villages.
In
addition
to
providing
food and
transitional
shelter,
these
welfare
villages
are
equipped
with
facilities
such as
schools,
banks,
post
offices,
and
health-care
centres
to meet
the
needs of
the
displaced
civilians.
In fact,
children
who had
been
denied
their
education
by the
LTTE,
are now
for the
first
time
learning
to read
and
write in
these
sites.
Mr.
President,
The
Government
reiterates
its firm
resolves
to
resettle
the IDPs
expeditiously,
in
co-operation
with our
international
partners.
In this
regard,
we have
learnt
valuable
lessons
from our
own past
experiences.
Both in
the
post-tsunami
context,
and in
the
successful
resettlement
programmes
in the
East of
the
country
completed
in the
last two
years,
we
realized
that the
pace of
resettlement
must not
be
forced
if it is
to be
truly
safe and
sustainable
in the
long
term.
For
example,
against
all
established
humanitarian
norms,
the LTTE
had
indiscriminately
scattered
landmines
and
other
explosives
in all
areas of
civilian
habitation
in the
North.
The
time-consuming
and
meticulous
process
of
demining
is now
underway.
From
another
perspective,
the
stability
and
security
that we
have
restored
at great
human
cost
cannot,
and must
not be
compromised,
particularly,
when a
large
number
of
self-confessed
ex-LTTE
cadres
continue
to mix
with the
IDPs.
Mr.
President,
In the
aftermath
of
conflict,
peace
cannot
last
without
reconciliation.
We have
put in
place a
broad
and
comprehensive
foundation
for long
term
peace
and
security
encompassing
reconstruction,
development,
political
empowerment
and
reconciliation.
Sri
Lanka is
committed
to
complying
with its
international
obligations
in the
field of
human
rights
and
humanitarian
standards.
Sri
Lanka
will
undertake
further
domestic
measures
aimed at
reconciliation
and in
the
light of
lessons
learnt.
In less
than
three
months
after
the
conflict,
in
August
2009, we
have
made
significant
progress.
For the
first
time in
over a
decade,
Local
Government
elections
were
held in
the
North
completely
free of
any
violence
and
intimidation.
In all
areas
where
the LTTE
had
suppressed
all
dissent
in the
past,
democracy
will be
restored
and
electoral
processes
will be
re-established,
encouraging
a local
leadership
to
emerge.
Mr.
President,
We must
enable
those
scarred
by the
conflict
to lead
productive
lives,
and
resume
their
roles as
neighbours
and
productive
citizens.
Children
were
forced
into
combat
by the
LTTE’s
abhorrent
practice
of using
children
as
fighting
cadres.
President
Mahinda
Rajapaksa
has
personally
launched
a
national
campaign
to
“Bring
Back the
Child”
and an
extensive
rehabilitation
programme
is
underway
to
provide
new
beginnings
for
former
child
combatants.
In
co-operation
with UN
agencies
and
donors,
we have
put in
place a
National
Framework
for the
Reintegration
of
Ex-Combatants.
Mr.
President,
With the
end of
conflict,
and for
the
first
time in
many
decades,
Sri
Lanka is
poised
to
harness
the full
human,
political
and
economic
potential
of the
country
for the
betterment
of our
people.
Donors,
international
organizations
and
financial
institutions
are
expressing
their
confidence
in our
reconstruction
and
development
plans by
making
important
contributions.
After a
lapse of
many
years,
the
Eastern
Province
has
already
begun to
contribute
to the
national
economy,
under
the
Eastern
Re-awakening
Programme.
The
Waddakin
Wasantham
Programme
was
initiated
by
President
Rajapaksa
this
year to
establish
a strong
and
modern
economy
in the
Northern
Province.
Civilian
lives
are
being
normalized
with the
restoration
of
former
livelihoods
such as
farming
and
fisheries.
Already
people
and
produce
from the
North
and the
East of
the
country
are
being
transported
along
previously
inaccessible
road and
rail
networks
facilitating
people-to-people
contacts,
and
integrating
the
economy
of the
north
with the
rest of
the
country.
Police
stations,
courts,
schools
and
infrastructure
are
being
re-established.
Mr.
President,
The end
of
conflict
provides
us with
a
historic
opportunity
to
address
the
grievances
and
aspirations
of all
communities,
in
expediting
a
long-term
political
solution.
Under
the All
Party
Representative
Committee
process,
the
Government
is
looking
forward
with a
great
degree
of
confidence
to
obtaining
consensus
among
all
sections
of the
political
spectrum
on the
proposals
envisaged
in this
regard.
The
solution
that
evolves
through
this
process,
and
which we
will
offer to
all
communities
must be
a
home-grown
product.
Complimentary
to the
long-term
political
solution
envisaged
through
the APRC
process,
an All
Party
Committee
of
Development
and
Reconciliation
has been
initiated
by
President
Rajapaksa.
The
forum
reflects
the
Government’s
commitment
to a
pluralistic
and
inclusive
approach
in
addressing
post-conflict
challenges.
Mr.
President,
The
theme of
this
year’s
debate
is
“effective
responses
to
global
crises –
strengthening
multilateralism
and
dialogue
among
civilizations
for
international
peace,
security
and
development”.
The
multilateral
architecture
of the
United
Nations
was
created
64 years
ago to
provide
a
collective
response
to
global
issues
to
achieve
the
objective
of
peace,
security
and
development.
As a
result
of a
multitude
of
factors,
including
the
accelerated
globalization
of
recent
decades,
the
challenges
we are
confronted
with
today
are
complex
and
inter-twined,
and
require
a
holistic,
concerted
and
collective
approach.
An
individual
State
alone
cannot
meet
these
challenges.
Thus,
multilateralism
must be
strengthened
to meet
contemporary
global
crises,
such as
terrorism,
the
global
financial
crisis,
the
adverse
consequences
of
climate
change,
food and
energy
security
as well
as the
achievement
of the
Millennium
Development
Goals (MDGs).
We need
to take
necessary
measures
to
ensure
that the
impact
of
globalization
is fair,
inclusive
and
sustainable.
Multilateralism
is not
about
the UN
agenda
responding
only to
the
demands
of a
minority
of
powerful
States,
but also
defending
the
interest
of the
powerless
majority.
It is
also
imperative
that the
prohibition
reflected
in the
Article
2 (7) of
the
Charter
that the
UN
should
not
interfere
in the
internal
affairs
of
States
be
respected.
The
Charter
must be
our
guiding
norm
since it
is the
Charter
that
keeps us
together.
Non
interference
in the
Internal
affairs
of
states
must be
respected
at all
times.
Mr.
President,
In our
own
region,
the
South
Asian
Association
for
Regional
Cooperation,
SAARC,
which
Sri
Lanka
chairs
at
present,
has lent
its
voice to
several
issues
of
global
importance
affecting
our
region.
Among
them,
terrorism,
the
impact
of the
global
economic
crisis,
climate
change
as well
as food
security
are of
prime
concern
to the
one-fifth
of
humanity
living
in SAARC
nations.
We in
the
SAARC
region
will
continue
to work
in every
international
forum,
including
the UN,
to find
regional
as well
as
global
solutions
that can
deal
with
these
issues
in an
equitable
manner.
Mr.
President,
A global
problem
such as
terrorism
with its
transnational
linkages
requires
an
effective
and
compelling
global
response.
As our
own
experience
in Sri
Lanka
has
shown,
the
transnational
character
of
criminal
activities
of
terrorist
groups
such as
the LTTE,
required
that
counter-terrorism
operations
meticulously
carried
out in
the
battle
field,
be
supported
by
concerted
and
well-coordinated
measures
of
international
cooperation
directed
against
the
multifaceted
criminal
networks
of the
terrorist
organizations.
We are
aware
that
much of
the
financial
sustenance
for the
destruction
caused
in Sri
Lanka by
the LTTE
came
from
sources
overseas,
particularly
deep
rooted
networks
in
developed
countries.
The
so-called
overseas
representatives
of the
LTTE and
their
front
organizations,
procured
funds
and arms
through
a
complex
range of
criminal
activities
ranging
from
terrorist
financing,
money
laundering,
arms
procurement,
illicit
trade
and
other
organized
criminal
activities
such as
drug
trafficking
and
human
trafficking,
all of
which
are
inter-related.
The
remnants
of the
fast-diminishing
LTTE
networks
overseas
continue
these
efforts
to date.
Although
we have
been
successful
in
defeating
terrorism
in Sri
Lanka,
we
continue
to urge
our
friends
and
partners
in the
international
community
to be
vigilant,
and to
continue
to take
action
against
the
illegal
acts of
the LTTE
in their
soil.
We are
well
aware
that
some of
these
front
organizations
exploit
noble
humanitarian
sentiments
and
masquerade
in the
guise of
humanitarian
NGO's or
even
infiltrate
them. We
thank
our
partners
in the
international
community
who have
taken
action
to
expose
these.
The
threat
posed to
maritime
security
through
the
transportation
of large
consignments
of
sophisticated
equipment
and
lethal
cargo to
provide
logistical
support
to
terrorist
groups
requires
our
urgent
attention.
In
recent
years
Sri
Lanka
has
experienced
the most
unprecedented
and
dangerous
forms of
maritime
terrorism.
Our Navy
has
successfully
confronted
and
interdicted
the
movement
of
virtual
floating
warehouses
of arms
and
ammunition,
which
posed a
grave
threat
to the
security
and
stability
of our
nation
and to
our
region.
At the
global
level,
this
phenomenon
calls
for a
revision
of
existing
laws
pertaining
to
boarding
and
search
of
vessels
in the
high
seas.
We need
a
comprehensive
legal
framework
to
address
all
aspects
of
safety
and
security
of
maritime
navigation,
going
beyond
the
current
concerns
on
Weapons
of Mass
Destruction
(WMD).
This
would
make a
distinct
contribution
to
securing
global
peace
and
security.
The
comprehensive
range of
these
terrorist
activities
and
their
disastrous
impact
on the
security
and
stability
of
States
should
awaken
all
States
to
consider,
very
seriously
and as a
matter
of
urgency,
the
importance
of
forging
a global
consensus
on a
comprehensive
normative
framework
for
international
cooperation
and
solidarity
in
combating
terrorism,
within
the
parameters
of
international
law.
It is in
this
context
that I
wish to
emphasize
the
urgent
need to
finalize
the
ongoing
negotiations
on the
Draft
Comprehensive
Convention
on
Terrorism.
The time
has come
to reach
finality
on the
outstanding
issues
and
through
the
exertion
of the
necessary
political
will, to
adopt
this
Convention
without
further
delay.
Sri
Lanka as
Chairman
of the
UN
Ad-Hoc
Committee
on
Measures
to
Eliminate
International
Terrorism
remains
committed
to do
its
utmost
to reach
consensus
on the
Draft
Comprehensive
Convention
and Sri
Lanka
looks
forward
to the
fullest
support
of all
Member
States
in this
important
task.
Mr.
President,
Today,
we face
the
greatest
challenge
to the
world
economy
in
modern
times.
The
global
financial
and
economic
crisis,
which
had its
roots in
the
developed
countries,
will
have a
long-term
impact
on human
lives in
developing
countries.
Through
the
pursuit
of
prudent
policies,
Sri
Lanka
has been
able to
minimize
the
impact
of the
crisis
on the
domestic
financial
system,
and
maintain
an
overall
positive
rate of
growth
through
the
midst of
the
crisis.
Recovery
from the
crisis
should
go well
beyond
restoring
the
stability
of the
economies
of the
developed
countries,
and must
address
the
deeper
development
crisis
which
ensued
in
developing
countries.
The Plan
of
Action
adopted
at the
UN
Conference
on the
World
Financial
and
Economic
Crisis
urgently
needs to
be
implemented
with the
support
of the
International
Financial
Institutions
and
advanced
economies.
The
global
financial
and
economic
crisis
also
highlights
the need
for
transparent
multilateral
regulatory
structures
at the
helm of
the
world
economy.
Mr.
President,
The
Millennium
Declaration
set 2015
as the
target
date for
achieving
the MDGs
and we
are
already
nearing
the
target
date.
Long
before
the MDGs
were
articulated
globally,
Sri
Lanka
was well
on track
to reach
the
related
targets
in
several
areas.
Development
as it is
understood
today
and as
embodied
in the
Internationally
Agreed
Development
Goals (IADGs)
and MDGs
encompass
objectives
related
to human
well-being,
including
freedom,
empowerment,
distribution
patterns
and
environmental
sustainability.
This
broad
dimension
is
aligned
with Sri
Lanka’s
pluralistic
democratic
traditions,
and Sri
Lanka
was
early
among
developing
countries
to
understand
the
importance
of
investing
in human
resources,
gender
equality
and
social
development.
We are
determined
to make
further
progress.
We
welcome
the
High-Level
Meeting
to be
convened
by the
Secretary
General
next
year.
Mr.
President,
As a
developing
island
State,
Sri
Lanka is
highly
vulnerable
to the
adverse
impact
of
Climate
Change
caused
by
unsustainable
production
and
consumption
patterns
of
industrialized
countries.
The
“carbon
debt”
that is
owed to
us by
the
developed
countries
must be
used to
finance
the
financial
and
technological
assistance
that we
need in
order to
adapt
our
industries
to a
sustainable
path. As
a
developing
country,
our
people
naturally
aspire
to
achieve
progress
and
higher
living
standards.
We hope
that we
can
reach an
agreed
outcome
at the
Copenhagen
Conference,
in
accordance
with the
principle
of
common,
but
differentiated
responsibilities.
Mr.
President,
The
reform
of the
United
Nations
and the
UN
Security
Council
must be
a high
priority.
My
delegation
believes
that the
objective
of the
reform
process
should
be to
strengthen
multilateralism
and to
promote
greater
democracy,
transparency,
effectiveness
and
accountability
within a
more
democratic
United
Nations
system.
And in
tandem
we need
to take
measures
to
pursue
the four
pillars
that are
fundamental
to our
future
as
enunciated
by
President
Obama.
Mr.
President,
My
delegation
believes
that the
United
Nations
and
particularly
this
Assembly
has the
primary
responsibility
as set
out in
the
Charter
in the
maintenance
of
international
peace
and
security.
In this
context,
the
numerous
unresolved
conflicts
around
the
world
continue
to
remain a
matter
of
concern.
We are
disappointed
that
little
progress
has been
made in
the
implementation
of
Resolutions
of this
Assembly
regarding
the
inalienable
rights
of the
Palestinian
people
to
Statehood
and the
realization
of the
two-State
solution
whereby
Israel
and
Palestine
could
live
side by
side in
peace
and
harmony.
A just
and
lasting
peace in
the
Middle
East,
including
through
practical
recognition
of the
inalienable
rights
of the
Palestinian
people,
has been
a matter
closely
advocated
by
President
Mahinda
Rajapaksa.
In this
regard,
we are
encouraged
by the
words
spoken
by
President
Obama in
his
address
to this
Forum.
Mr.
President,
You are
presiding
over
this
Assembly
during a
critical
time. As
Member
States,
we must
mobilize
the
political
will to
shed our
differences
and work
in a
spirit
of
co-operation
to
respond
effectively
and
swiftly
to the
challenges
that
confront
us.
I
reiterate
my
delegations
confidence
in your
leadership
in this
endeavour.
Thank
you.
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