Implementation of LLRC recommendations:
No need for external intervention - SL'S envoy to USA
Sri Lankan Ambassador outlines extensive reconciliation measures
already under way in his speech to the diplomatic fraternity.

Ambassador Jaliya Wickramasuriya (L), flanked by Donald Camp,
former U.S. diplomat, speaks to the Serendipity Group in
Washington, D.C. The group is made up of diplomats who once
worked in Sri Lanka. |
Sri Lanka has progressively already adopted a broad range of measures
to facilitate reconciliation after the May 2009 end of its conflict
against terrorism, Sri Lankan Ambassador Jaliya Wickramasuriya told a
gathering of the Serendipity Group of retired U.S. diplomats, and said
that international pressure might make it difficult to enact the LLRC's
recent recommendations.
Ambassador Wickramasuriya stated that Sri Lanka stood strongly
against a resolution in the United Nations Human Rights Council that
calls for Sri Lanka to adopt the LLRC's recommendations, noting that Sri
Lanka has already agreed to do so.
"Considering all the changes the country has undergone in the
post-conflict period, it is important that Sri Lanka be given the chance
to overcome its challenges," Ambassador Wickramasuriya said. "It is only
natural, then, that Sri Lanka would not wish to encounter measures that
some countries may bring to the Human Rights Council."
In late November Sri Lanka's Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation
Commission issued its report on an examination of the final phase of the
Government of Sri Lanka's conflict against the terrorist group
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Ealam, or Tigers. The report was made public
in December 2011. It contains a number of recommendations to aid
reconciliation and right past wrongs, including investigations into
alleged war crimes and incidents. Sri Lanka's military has already
announced that it will establish a court of inquiry.
The government of Sri Lanka agreed to adopt the LLRC's
recommendations shortly after they were announced. As Ambassador
Wickramasuriya noted in his remarks, several working committees and Sri
Lanka's Department of Justice have already been asked to tackle the
task.
Nevertheless, the United States has said that it will offer a
resolution in the United Nations Human Rights Council next week, urging
Sri Lanka to adopt the LLRC's recommendations.
"This pressure from some part of the international community is
unacceptable," Ambassador Wickramasuriya said. "It is the firm
conviction of the Government of Sri Lanka that it will not favour any
external intervention to probe into its domestic issues. Further, such
action would not be in keeping with established international procedure,
where the domestic process needs to be exhausted prior to any
international action."
The ambassador laid out a long record of accomplishments by Sri Lanka
since the end of the conflict, measure taken without international
attention.
They included the resettling of 300,000 people displaced by the
conflict, development work that has helped to rebuild areas damaged by
the conflict and revive important livelihoods in northern Sri Lanka,
such as agriculture and fishing, and the rehabilitation of 1,000 former
LTTE child soldiers and about 12,000 adult LTTE terrorists, who have
been given amnesty.
"My point is this: These are home grown solutions," the ambassador
said. "They are already in place, and they work. This is what
democracies do.
"It is the Government of Sri Lanka that is best placed to launch a
home grown solution acceptable to all of the country's citizens.
This will be done, after all, within the framework of democracy."
Many in the audience expressed support for Sri Lanka's
accomplishments, and its ability to implement the LLRC's
recommendations.
Those recommendations include the prosecution of those suspected of
committing war crimes, the resolution of land disputes, the
accommodation of war widows, investigations into those who are still
missing, the issuance of death certificates to those who are confirmed
to be deceased, investigations into armed independent groups and a
number of other measures.
"We have already announced that we will adopt the LLRC's
recommendations," Ambassador Wickramasuriya concluded. "If it is not
quick enough for some of our critics, we can only offer the record of
our recent past accomplishments. As I have just noted for you, a good
deal of positive change has already take place."
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