Restoring Sri Lanka’s Commonwealth identity
In Sri Lanka, the Commonwealth has a unique opportunity to restore
its place on the global stage. But will it work?:
by Trinanjan Radhakrishnan
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President Maithripala
Sirisena during the official opening of CHOGM 2015 in Malta (telegraph.co.uk). |
The 2015 edition of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM),
which was held in Malta from November 27-29, marked the 50th anniversary
of the Commonwealth’s reincarnation as an intergovernmental association.
In the five decades since the modern Commonwealth, the association
has displayed its fortitude in times of crises; its firm opposition to
apartheid in South Africa and the refusal to be complicit in the
political oppression in Zimbabwe are some shining examples of its moral
courage.
However, in recent years, the Commonwealth’s credibility has been
bruised and its influence has diminished.
Credibility crisis
One of the recent issues damaging Commonwealth credibility was the
humanitarian crisis in Sri Lanka after the cessation of armed conflict
in 2009.
In the following years, deafening silence in the wake of the
country’s sharp turn towards authoritarianism, and its disregard for
rule of law, further eroded confidence in the Commonwealth. Against the
backdrop of mounting international criticism for gross violations of
human rights, CHOGM 2013 was held in Colombo amid protests,
non-attendance and even boycott by some member states.
While then President Mahinda Rajapaksa tried to paint a picture of
paradise in Sri Lanka, his government had already placed severe
restrictions on the media, including on foreign news agencies, and had
banned all forms of protests in the country for the duration of the
CHOGM.
Fast-forward to 2015 and the political landscape is markedly
different.
Rajapaksa has been soundly defeated, first in the presidential
election in January, and then during his bid for Prime Minister in the
August parliamentary elections. The most significant factor defeating
Rajapaksa in the presidential election was the en masse Tamil and Muslim
voters who cast their ballots for the common presidential candidate,
Maithripala Sirisena.
The newly formed government, led by President Sirisena and Prime
Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, has made conciliatory public
pronouncements on the need for national reconciliation. In comparison to
the previous decade under Rajapaksa, the current administration’s
admittedly symbolic gestures have rekindled hope and optimism,
especially within the minority communities, the Tamils and Muslims of
the North and East.
Another issue that has occupied the public and political discourse
since the inception of the national government is the Office of the High
Commissioner for Human Rights’ Investigation of Sri Lanka (OISL). The
OISL was established in March 2014, in pursuance of Human Rights Council
(HRC) resolution 25/1, to undertake a comprehensive investigation into
allegations of gross violations of human rights by the Government of Sri
Lanka and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
Rajapaksa and his administration had repeatedly attempted to scuttle
UN efforts, including the intimidation of witnesses, visa denial to UN
investigators and lashing out at the OHCHR.
Opportunity for peace
In stark contrast, Sirisena’s presidency has been accommodating—or at
the very least engaged—with the UNHRC. As a result of the government’s
assurances to the world human rights body and Foreign Minister Mangala
Samaraweera’s frenetic international diplomacy, the release of the
report was deferred by six months in order to give the new
administration time to politically secure itself.
The OISL report was released during the recently concluded 30th
session of the UN HRC and brought to the fore horrific levels of
violations and abuses that have occurred in Sri Lanka, including
“indiscriminate shelling, extrajudicial killings, enforced
disappearances, harrowing accounts of torture and sexual violence,
recruitment of children and other grave crimes.”
But the crux of the report lay in the recommendations set out for the
Government of Sri Lanka, in order to establish accountability, justice
and non-recurrence.
Foremost amongst the recommendations was the establishment of a
hybrid court, integrating international judges, prosecutors, lawyers and
investigators to account for war crimes and crimes against humanity
committed since the end of the ceasefire in 2002. Sri Lanka’s domestic
legal framework is inadequate to deal with international crimes of this
magnitude—in the past, conflict-related crimes were prosecuted under
regular criminal law, and past governments’ have had appalling track
records in terms of impartial and independent investigations. Indeed,
most if not all of the previously commissioned inquiries since the end
of the war have either not been made public or have completely ignored
or acquitted crimes committed by government forces.
What emerged in the aftermath of the report was a draft resolution
co-sponsored by Sri Lanka which, albeit milder in language than desired,
did manage to incorporate much of the OISL recommendations.
By and large, the Sinhalese south has perceived the proposal for the
establishment of ‘Sri Lankan judicial mechanism’ as a victory of the
country’s sovereignty. The ambitious agenda for transitional justice has
found resonance amongst moderate Tamils and human rights defenders in
Sri Lanka.
With all vectors pointing towards the genuine possibility for
bringing about accountability, justice and reconciliation, the
Government of Sri Lanka must seize this opportunity and redress victims
of human rights abuses, roll back decades of impunity and work towards a
political settlement to ensure non-recurrence.
During the CHOGM in Malta, the Commonwealth had a golden opportunity
to start meaningfully contributing to the process and mechanism of
transitional justice in Sri Lanka.
This is especially true after the Government of Sri Lanka played
hard-ball at the negotiating table in Geneva to change the language of
“international” judges, prosecutors and investigators to “Commonwealth
and other foreign judges.”
Since the Sinhalese public discourse viewed the notion of an
‘international court” as an affront to the nation’s sovereignty, the
idea of the Commonwealth seems more acceptable to the populace. Yet, in
the final communique of the CHOGM 2015, under ‘country situations,’ Sri
Lanka was not mentioned at all.
Recommendations
At best, the Heads made broad statements on the need to implement the
recommendations of the Commonwealth’s report of 2007, Civil Paths to
Peace, without any articulation of its specificities or the roadmap. Yet
the Commonwealth’s member states have dealt with transitions from armed
conflict and political violence into peaceful and democratic societies.
By rekindling efforts such as the 2013 Commonwealth Roundtable on
Reconciliation and bringing together the experiences and good practices
of transitional justice, the Commonwealth and its Human Rights Unit
could contribute by addressing Sri Lanka’s past, including truth,
justice, reparations and guarantees of non-recurrence.
The opportunity to assist Sri Lanka could revitalize the Commonwealth
from its slumber of earlier years. With the appointment of the first
woman Secretary-General and Malta as the Chair-in-Office for the next
two years, the Commonwealth now has a unique opening to restore its
place on the global stage.
-Open Democracy
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