As
Sri Lanka Bans
Commemoration
of Tamils It
Killed, UN
Silent As on
Rapes
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
May 12 -- With
the approach
of the fifth
anniversary in
Sri Lanka of
what even the
UN called the
"Bloodbath on
the Beach,"
Inner City
Press on May
12 asked UN
spokesman
Stephane Dujarric
about the Mahinda
Rajapaksa
government
banning commemorations
of those deaths
in the North:
Inner
City Press: I
want to ask
you on Sri
Lanka, this
coming Sunday
is
viewed as the
fifth
anniversary as
the end of the
conflict and
the
Government is
going to
celebrate its
victory, but
they’ve
basically
outlawed any
memorial of
those killed
in the
Northern
Province. And
since this is
seen as kind
of a
reconciliation
issue and I
know that,
in fact, the
Human Rights
Council has
called for an
inquiry of the
killing of
those people
in the
Northern
Province. Does
the UN have
any comment on
the banning of
commemoration
of several
tens of
thousands of
people killed?
Spokesman:
I haven’t seen
the reports of
that banning;
we’ll look
into it.
If I have
something to
add, I will.
Thank you very
much. And I
will
look into the
Wi-Fi
technical
issues.
But nine hours
later there
was no answer
-- despite a
report being
easily
available here,
for example --
just as there
has been no
answer by
Ban's
spokesperson's
office to
Inner City
Press' May 8
question about
any UN
follow-through
on rapes by
Sri Lanka's
army about
which the UN's
Zainab
Bangura,
Special
Representative
of the
Secretary-General
on Sexual
Violence in
Conflict, publicly expressed concern on April
24, and
which where
were the
subject of a
session at
Canada's
Mission to the
UN on May 6.
Multiple
sources tell
Inner City
Press that at
the meeting,
controversial
Sri Lankan
military
figure, now
Deputy
Permanent
Representative
Shavendra
Silva sought
to deny the
reports of
rape by the
Army. He
said for
example that
"certain
organizations
are
propagating
false
allegations,
they are
repeated by
different
organizations
and form an
opinion."
Soldiers under
Silva's
command were
depicted
engaged in war
crimes in the
UN's own Sri
Lanka report;
here
is a story of
Silva spinning
at the UN, and
some aftermath.
At the May 6
session, Inner
City Press is
informed,
Canadian
Permanent
Representative
Guillermo
Rishchynski
spoke of a
risk of
further
violence in
Sri Lanka as
none of
underlying
causes of
conflict have
been dealt
with. He
particularly
regretted the
harassment of
civil society
in wake of
Navi Pillay's
visit. (The
Canadian
Mission's
spokesperson
declined to
comment when
asked before
the meeting by
Inner City
Press, saying
the meeting
was
closed.
More
has since been
published here.)
Also in
attendance
were
representatives
of Norway, the
United States
and United
Kingdom,
Nigeria,
Japan,
Pakistan,
Montenegro and
South Africa.
The last of
these said
they would
refer the
concerns back
to their
capital to
determine next
steps. An
attendee noted
that the
French Mission
to the UN,
which talks
much about
sexual
violence in
conflict, was
not in
attendance.
It is a
doubly-timely
topic at the
UN, the day
after the 130
rapes at
Minova by two
Congolese
army
units which
still receive
support from
the UN's
MONUSCO
mission resulted
in a mere two
convictions
and three
dozen
exhonerations.
Inner City
Press
questions on
how this
relates to the
UN stated
Human Rights
Due Diligence
Policy, like
its questions
about the
rapes for
month to UN
Peacekeeping
chief Herve
Ladsous,
were met May 6
by UN
stonewalling,
video
here.
The
rapists in Sri
Lanka have not
even been
prosecuted, or
are being
facilely
cleared, as
were the Sri
Lankan
"peacekeepers"
repatriated
from Haiti.
On May
8, Inner
City Press
asked Ban's
deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq:
Inner
City Press:
when Zainab
Bangura was
here speaking
about sexual
violence and
conflict in
April, and she
said that she
was going to
meet with this
Yasmin Sooka
who had done a
report for the
Secretary-General
about Sri
Lanka and a
more recent
report on
rapes
there. I guess
I wanted to
ask because
this week,
she, Ms. Sooka
presented at
the Canadian
Mission her
report and the
[Deputy
Permanent
Representative]
of Sri Lanka,
Shavendra
Silva,
basically
denied the
whole thing,
said there’s
not a problem
at all. So, I
wanted to
know, since
she’s been
here and said
she’s speaking
with the
Mission and
they want to
have a focal
point, who did
Ms.
Sooka meet
with while she
was here in
New York? And
what steps to
follow-up on
what Ms.
Bangura said
are being
taken to
pursue this,
these
documented
cases of
post-conflict
rape in Sri
Lanka?
Deputy
Spokesman
Farhan Haq:
Well, I don’t
know here
entire
schedule but
you’re right.
Ms. Bangura
herself said
that she did
intend to meet
with her and I
believe that
happened. If
there’s any
details of
that meeting
to share, I’ll
let you know.
And
in the four
days since,
nothing.
Back on
April 24 Inner
City Press
asked Bangura
about the
rapes in Sri
Lanka and what
if anything
the UN is
doing about
it. UN
video here
from Minute
15:15, Inner
City Press video here and embedded below.
Bangura
replied
that she is
"concerned,
worried" and
has spoken
with Sri
Lanka's
Permanent
Representative,
Palitha
Kohona, about
it, urging him
that Sri Lanka
designate a
"focal person"
on the issue.
It is not
Kohona slated
to attend on
May 5, but his
deputy
Shavendra
Silva.
Inner
City Press
asked about
the report
authored by
Yasmin Sooka,
who previously
served on one
of the UN's
panels looking
at war crimes
in Sri Lanka
and who will
give a
briefing at
the May 5
meeting, along
with Kirsty
Brimmelow. Here
is a link to
the report.
Earlier
in April,
Inner City
Press asked
yet another
former UN
panelist on
Sri Lanka,
Marzuki
Darusman,
if he thought
the UN's
response to
his report had
been
successful.
Darusman cited
the example of
Cambodia, for
the
proposition
that justice
can take a
long time.
But how long?
The UN
can't even
keep track of
its own
statements. On
alleged rapes
by UN
peacekeepers
in Mali, the
UN told Inner
City Press in
January that
the
investigation
was finished.
Then on April
23, the UN's
Mali envoy Bert
Koenders said
it won't be
finished for
two or three
weeks, but
predicted or
pretold that
the UN
peacekeepers
will be
cleared.
Bangura, when
Inner City
Press asked,
didn't know
which was
true, or any
update on the
rape charges
against UN
peacekeepers
themselves.
Combined
with
the UN's
refusal to be
accountable
for, or even
acknowledge
service of
legal papers
on Ban Ki-moon
about,
bringing
cholera to
Haiti, how
can the UN
effectively
push for
accountability
by anyone
else? We'll
see. Watch
this site.
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