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Sri
Lanka
has
urged
that the
Internally
Displaced
Persons
in the
North of
the
country
should
not be
used as
a
political
tool and
asked
those
who are
being
critical
of Sri
Lanka on
the
issue to
help the
Government
overcome
the
difficulties
faced in
looking
after
them and
re-settling
them.
Sri
Lanka’s
Ambassador
to
Belgium,
Luxembourg
and the
EU,
Ravinatha
Aryasinha,
said
this
when he
addressed
a
hearing
held on
Sri
Lanka by
the
Human
Rights
Sub
Committee
of the
European
Parliament,
chaired
by MEP
Heidi
Hautala
of the
Finnish
Green
Party,
Thursday
-1
October
2009.
Ambassador
Aryasinha
said:
“These
are our
people,
successive
governments
fed
them,
provided
medicines,
ensured
education
through
the 30
years
when the
LTTE
dominated
their
lives.
We will
ensure
that
they get
back to
their
homes in
safety,
not
because
anybody
tells us
to do
so, but
because
we want
them to
do so”.
He
explained
in
detail
the work
being
done on
de-mining
and
reconstruction
to
expedite
the
re-settlement
process
and
informed
the
panelists
of the
Euro
Parliament
sub
committee
that
around
1/6 of
the
displaced
who were
originally
from the
Jaffna
district
and the
Eastern
province
had been
sent
back to
these
areas,
while
the
displaced
from the
Mannar
district
are at
present
being
resettled.
Additionally
advertisements
have
been
placed,
informing
the
public
that
they
could
host any
relations
who
might be
in the
Welfare
Villages.
Refuting
a
suggestion
that
“demining
has been
used as
a
political
tool to
confine
the IDPs
to the
camps”,
and that
they
“would
be held
indefinitely”,
the
Ambassador
showed
on a map
of the
main
population
centers
of the
Northern
Province
with
adjacent
farm
land
that had
been
de-mined
or ear
marked
for
de-mining
on a
priority
basis.
He said
GOSL had
imported
the most
sophisticated
technology
for this
purpose,
which
was
evidence
of its
commitment
to
re-settle
the
people
as fast
as
possible.
The
Ambassador
also
said he
was
shocked
at the
suggestion
made by
one MEP
that the
IDPs
should
be
“allowed
to go
and take
the risk
of
landmines”,
and
remarked
that
GOSL had
not
rescued
them
from
being
held as
human
shields
by the
LTTE, to
have
them
knowingly
risk
their
lives
due to
left
over
LTTE
mines.
Ambassador
Aryasinha
also
responded
to
questions
about
the GSP
+, issue
and the
sentence
imposed
by the
High
Court,
Colombo
on
journalist
J.
Tissainayagam.
Here
is the
text of
the
Media
Release
issued
by the
Sri
Lanka’s
Embassy
in
Brussels
on the
interaction
with the
Human
Rights
Sub
Committee
of the
European
Parliament.
“Sri
Lanka’s
Ambassador
to
Belgium,
Luxembourg
and the
EU,
Ravinatha
Aryasinha
has
urged
that the
displaced
persons
in Sri
Lanka be
not used
as a
political
tool,
but
instead
that
those
being
critical,
step up
and help
the
Government
to
overcome
the
difficulties
faced in
looking
after
them and
re-settling
them. He
said
“these
are our
people,
successive
governments
fed
them,
provided
medicines,
ensured
education
through
the 30
years
when the
LTTE
dominated
their
lives.
We will
ensure
that
they get
back to
their
homes in
safety,
not
because
anybody
tells us
to do
so, but
because
we want
them to
do so”.
The
Ambassador
made
these
observations
when he
addressed
a
hearing
held on
Sri
Lanka by
the
Human
Rights
Sub
Committee
of the
European
Parliament,
chaired
by MEP
Heidi
Hautala
of the
Finnish
Green
Party on
Thursday
(1
October
2009).
Responding
to the
comments
made by
panelists
about
the
situation
in the
IDP
camps
Ambassador
Aryasinha
outlined
the
procedures
that the
government
had
presently
undertaken
to
streamline
the
resettlement
process.
He said
that
around
1/6 of
the
displaced
who were
originally
from the
Jaffna
district
and the
Eastern
province
had been
sent
back to
these
areas,
while
the
displaced
from the
Mannar
district
are
presently
being
resettled.
Additionally
advertisements
have
been
placed,
informing
the
public
that
they
could
host any
relatives
who
might be
in the
Welfare
Villages.
Refuting
a
suggestion
that
“demining
has been
used as
a
political
tool to
confine
the IDPs
to the
camps”,
and that
they
“would
be held
indefinitely”,
the
Ambassador
showed
on a map
of the
main
population
centers
of the
Northern
Province
with
adjacent
farm
land
that had
been
de-mined
or ear
marked
for
de-mining
on a
priority
basis.
He said
GOSL had
imported
the most
sophisticated
technology
for this
purpose,
which
was
evidence
of its
commitment
to
re-settle
the
people
as fast
as
possible.
The
Ambassador
also
said he
was
shocked
at the
suggestion
made by
one MEP
that the
IDPs
should
be
“allowed
to go
and take
the risk
of
landmines”,
and
remarked
that
GOSL had
not
rescued
them
from
being
held as
human
shields
by the
LTTE, to
have
them
knowingly
risk
their
lives
due to
left
over
LTTE
mines.
He said
the
security
concerns
were not
imagined,
but very
real, as
it was
well
known
that
many
LTTE
cadres
had come
into the
camps
mingling
with
civilians,
and GOSL
didn’t
want
them to
go back
and
connect
with
hidden
weapons
and
re-start
terrorist
acts.
About
10,000
ex-LTTE
cadres
had
already
surrendered
and many
others
had been
identified
on the
basis of
information.
So far,
out of
approximately
290,000
people
liberated
from the
LTTE,
over
150,000
had been
registered
and
110,000
issued
with ID
cards.
This
would
help
gradually
ensure
freedom
of
movement.
Responding
to
comments
that
humanitarian
agencies
are not
allowed
into the
camps,
the
Ambassador
pointed
out that
there
are 54
International
agencies,
INGOs
and NGOs
currently
engaged
in
humanitarian
work in
the
welfare
villages.
He said
within
the last
week
alone
two high
level UN
officials
visited
these
areas.
On GSP+,
Ambassador
Aryasinha
said the
Government
had not
accepted
the
process
of GSP+
investigation
and a
request
for
experts
to visit
Sri
Lanka as
a matter
of
principle,
as it
was felt
inappropriate
and
unnecessary
and the
Government
was not
willing
to
compromise
on its
sovereignty.
However
the
Government
has
continued
to
engage
with the
European
Commission
on the
relevant
human
rights
conventions
-
through
meetings
at
senior
officials’
level
both in
Brussels
and
Colombo,
by
providing
material
which
showed
Sri
Lanka’s
compliance
with
these
conventions,
refute
unfounded
allegations,
and
above
all
provided
periodic
reviews
to UN
bodies
which
monitor
these
conventions.
Responding
to a
query
whether
the 4
member
Ministerial
Committee
appointed
recently
by the
President
of Sri
Lanka
would be
providing
a
response
to the
GSP+
investigation
expert’s
report,
the
Ambassador
said
there
would be
no
response
to the
expert’s
report
from
Government.
The
Government
will
continue
to
engage
on the
issues
of
concern
with the
Commission.
Responding
to
comments
made on
the
judgment
in the
Tissainayagam
case,
the
Ambassador
said one
cannot
on the
one hand
demand
separation
of
powers
and an
independent
Judiciary,
and on
the
other
hand
press
for the
executive
to
overrule
the
judicial
system.
He added
that
while
speakers
gave the
impression
that Mr.
Tissainayagam
was
convicted
by the
High
Court
for
writing
two
articles
which in
the view
of the
prosecution
had the
effect
of
inciting
communal
disharmony,
they
forget
the more
serious
charge
proved,
which
was that
he had
accepted
funds
from the
LTTE. He
asked
whether
journalists
in
Europe
accepting
a check
from Al
Qaida,
would be
acceptable.
Mr
Andrew
Stroelheim
of the
International
Crisis
Group,
Mr
Sunanda
Deshapriya,
Journalist,
Mr
Antoine
Gerard
of the
UN/Humanitarian
Affairs
Office
in
Belgium,
Mr David
Tirr and
Mr. Rolf
Timmens,
of the
European
Commission,
and
several
MEPs
addressed
the 2
hour
session.
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