By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS, July
9 -- After Sri
Lankan President
Rahinda
Rajapaksa
announced he
will deny visas
to members of
the UN panel
of inquiry
into war crimes,
Inner City
Press asked UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric for
Ban's
response.
Dujarric told
Inner City
Press that Ban
"encourages
Sri Lanka to
cooperate with
the inquiry
led by Office
of the High
Commissioner
for Human
Rights,
established by
the UN Human
Rights Council."
Video
here.
Ban also,
Dujarric told
Inner City
Press,
"re-iterates
importance for
the government
and people of
Sri Lanka to
constructively
engage with
the entire UN
system, it
woul help”
with “constant
progress,
lasting peace
and protection
of human
rights.”
So if visas
and applied
for and
denied, then
what?
This follows
Sri Lanka's
Minister of
"Defense and
Urban
Development"
issuing an order
banning all
non-governmental
organizations
from press
conferences,
workshops,
training for
journalists,
and
dissemination
of press
releases which
is beyond
their
mandate," and
the UN
declined
comment or
passed the
buck, the US
and now the
human rights
group FIDH
have expressed
concern.
The
Observatory
for the
Protection of
Human Rights
Defenders, a
joint program
of the World
Organisation
Against
Torture (OMCT)
and the
International
Federation for
Human Rights
said, "The
Observatory is
concerned by
these attempts
by the Sri
Lankan
Government to
curtail the
freedom of
association,
assembly, and
expression of
human rights
defenders ,
which seem to
be aimed at
undermining
the legitimacy
of their
peaceful
activities.
The
Observatory
calls upon the
authorities of
Sri Lanka to
withdraw the
above-mentioned
notice
immediately
and to put an
immediate end
to the
harassment
against all
human rights
defenders."
US State
Department
spokesperson
on July 8
said, "We
strongly urge
the Government
of Sri Lanka
to allow civil
society
organizations
and NGOs,
which play a
vital role in
supporting Sri
Lanka’s
democratic
values, to
operate
freely."
Also
on July 8, US
President
Barack Obama
nominated his
current
Ambassador to
Sri Lanka
Michele Sison,
to become the
US' Deputy
Ambassador to
UN and its
Security
Council.
On July
7, Inner
City
Press
asked UN
Deputy
Spokesperson
Farhan Haq
about it. Video here, on Inner City Press'
YouTube
channel.
Inner City
Press asked,
since UN envoy
Oscar
Fernandez
Taranco was
recently in
Sri Lanka, had
he spoken to
the Rajapaksa
government
about this
crack-down, or
did he have
any comment
now?
Haq replied,
"We'll have to
study what
this
particular
injunction
was... we'll
have to
evaluate
that."
But 24 hours
later on July
8, after lead
UN Spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric had
already
belatedly
begun the
day's noon
briefing --
and after 5 pm
in Geneva --
the
Spokesperson's
Office sent
Inner City
Press this: