On
Sri Lanka, Ban
Praises
Sirisena Engagement
on Report,
Nambiar
UNnamed
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
September 26
-- When the
Sri Lanka
report of the
UN human
rights office
was belatedly
put online,
one searched
it in vain for
any mention of
the UN's own
failure and
worse, for
example in the
"White Flag"
killings of
surrenderees,
for whom UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's Good
Offices envoy
Vijay Nambiar,
by his own
account, acted
as
intermediary.
This is not
covered, or is
covered up, in
the UN report.
On
September 26,
Ban's Office
issued a
glowing
meeting read-out,
here:
"The
Secretary-General
met with the
President of
Sri Lanka,
H.E. Mr.
Maithripala
Sirisena, on
26 September
2015.
The
Secretary-General
discussed
recent
political
developments,
congratulated
the President
on the
elections, and
commended his
message of
national
unity,
reconciliation
and good
governance. He
encouraged the
President to
advance the
dialogue on a
political
settlement and
seize this
opportunity to
lay the
foundation for
long-lasting
peace and
stability.
The
Secretary-General
welcomed the
High
Commissioner
for Human
Rights’
recently
released
report on Sri
Lanka. He was
pleased with
the
Government’s
positive and
constructive
engagement
with the UN on
the report,
and he hoped
that the
President
would
implement its
recommendations.
The
Secretary-General
reiterated his
strong
commitment to
Sri Lanka and
pledged the
UN’s continued
support. He
looked forward
to working
closely with
the President,
the Government
and domestic
stakeholders
during this
critical time.
The
Secretary-General
also
encouraged the
President to
incorporate
the
Sustainable
Development
Goals into the
national
development
agenda."
Did
the "constructive
engagement" on
the UN report
include the
elimination or
censorship of
names? We'll
have more on
this.
"The
Secretary-General
welcomes the
Report of the
Office of the
High
Commissioner
for Human
Rights on
promoting
reconciliation,
accountability
and human
rights in Sri
Lanka. He
hopes that its
important
recommendations
will help
support the
efforts of the
people and the
Government of
Sri Lanka to
carve a
durable path
toward
long-lasting
peace and
stability and
respect for
human rights,
through a
genuine and
credible
process of
accountability
and
reconciliation
that meets
international
standards.
The victims of
all
communities,
their families
and the Sri
Lankan nation
itself demand
no less than a
full and
proper
reckoning.
"The
Secretary-General
is also
encouraged by
the response
of, and
commitment
expressed by,
the Government
of Sri Lanka
and the
opposition to
consult widely
with all
stakeholders
and take
meaningful
action to
address these
issues.
"Recognizing
the courageous
strides being
made by the
country, he
urges the
Government to
continue
building on
this positive
momentum and
the
international
community to
support Sri
Lanka in this
regard. In the
process, the
Secretary-General
hopes that Sri
Lanka’s
efforts will
ensure that it
will fully
secure a
peaceful,
prosperous
future among
the family of
nations."
In the report
that Ban
"welcomes,"
former UN
Ambassador
(and staff
member)
Palitha Kohona
is mentioned
in the section
on
Extrajudicial
Executions;
his deputy
Shavendra
Silva, who
served on
Ban's and
Herve Ladsous'
Senior
Advisory Group
on
Peacekeeping
Operations, is
described
shelling a
hospital which
the UN now
says had
civilians in
it. These are
war crimes.
From
the new
report:
"Major
General
Shavendra
Silva denied
hitting
Putumattalan
hospital and
asserted that
the facility
was only used
to treat LTTE
fighters, that
there were no
civilians
there.
However, this
would in no
way change the
nature of the
hospital as a
protected
objected since
LTTE fighters
placed hors de
combat by
sickness or
injury could
not be
targeted under
international
humanitarian
law.
However,
testimony
collected by
OISL strongly
contradicts
this version
of
events.
Putumattalan
hospital was
used to treat
civilians, and
came under
repeated
attack."
On
"Allegations
of
extrajudicial
executions in
the final
phase of armed
conflict," the
new report
says
"Between
16 and 18 May,
a number of
foreign
intermediaries
were involved
in
facilitating
communication
with senior
representatives
of the
Government,
primarily
Permanent
Secretary
Ministry of
Foreign
Affairs
Palitha
Kohona, Senior
Adviser to the
President
Basil
Rajapaksa,
Defence
Secretary
Gotabaya
Rajapaksa and
President
Mahinda
Rajapaksa.
Communications
at this stage
also included
others, such
as senior UN
officials and
foreign
journalists."
One (UNnamed
here) senior
UN official
was Mr.
Nambiar. Were
there others?
Who were they?
This is the
UN,
"reporting" on
itself, as it
sloppily did
on Haiti
cholera, and
stands ready
to try to do
on rapes in
the Central
African
Republic.
We'll have
more on this.
The
report states,
"OISL further
concludes that
there are
reasonable
grounds to
believe that
the Government
of Sri Lanka
possessed the
requisite
knowledge
about the
intent to
surrender to
have been able
to convey this
to the ground
forces in time
for them to
ensure
protection.
Intermediaries
made multiple
attempts and a
sustained
effort to
convince key
government
figures to
allow for
independent
witness to the
surrender,
which was
rejected."
On
September 16,
Prince Zeid
came out not
for a fully
international
accountability
mechanism, but
for a “special
hybrid court.”
In response to
generally
softball
questions, he
lauded the new
government's
approach to
the UN. The
message, at
least to some,
is that if lip
service is
paid to the
UN, the push
for
accountability
goes away.
There is, of
course, the
shifting
position of
the US as
well.
Why after all
this delay
Zeid's office
didn't make
the report
available
before Zeid
“took
questions” is
unclear. In
fact, the room
in Geneva ran
out of
questions:
Zeid left 10
minutes before
it was said he
had to. But no
arrangement
was made to
take questions
online.
Nor was Zeid
asked about
the UN's own
failings, from
leaving
Kilinochchi to
the White Flag
Killings and
beyond. The
UN's Petrie
Report was
conveniently
forgotten.
Notably, the
first round of
questions
included Voice
of America,
which at the
UN tried to
get Inner City
Press thrown
out after it
reported on
how Sri
Lanka's
Palitha
Kohona, after
renting
one of the UN
Correspondents
Association's
then and now
president
Giampaolo
Pioli's
apartments,
was given a UN
screening for
his
government's
genocide
denial film,
"Lies Agreed
To," without
other (then)
UNCA board
members like
Inner City
Press getting
to vote. Reuters
did the same,
and has tried
to cover up.
Overall, if
the UN covers
up its own
acts, like
bringing
cholera to
Haiti and now,
under Herve
Ladsous,
covering up
and excusing
rapes in the
Central
African
Republic, how
can it offer
accountability
to places like
northern Sri
Lanka? Zeid
said “we”
didn't find
genocide, and
then left the
press
conference.
Lies Agreed
To, indeed.
We'll have
more on this.
As
an aside,
OHCHR's role
in covering up
the first
round of
Sangaris rapes
remains
unclear; the
report
commissioned
by Ban Ki-moon
has been, what
else, delayed.
Zeid's deputy
in New York
picks and
choose how and
to whom to
answer
questions,
excluding the
investigative
Press from his
briefing on
topics like
South Sudan
(where the UN
is
under-reporting
ceasefire
violations).
And so it
goes.
Back
on August 13,
2015, Inner
City Press
asked UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon's
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric about
torture in the
country -
including in
2015. From
the UN's
transcript:
Inner
City Press: on
torture,
there’s a
report by a
group called
Freedom From
Torture about
Sri Lanka, and
although some
of the witness
statements
they get are
from a
previous
couple of
years ago,
they’re
actually
documenting
cases in 2015
even since the
election of
Mr. Sirisena
of the
unauthorized
detention and
torture of
people
perceived as
having been a
part of the
LTTE in the
past.
And I wonder,
given the UN’s
engagement,
what you read
out here about
the million
dollars, about
rehabilitation,
one of the
testimonies is
from someone
who was,
quote,
rehabilitated,
then released,
picked up in a
white van,
tortured…
Spokesman
Dujarric:
I haven’t seen
those
reports.
Obviously, we
stand clearly
against the
use of
torture.
We'll
see.
The UN
delayed the
war crime
report on Sri
Lanka until
September 16.
UN documents
leaked to Channel
4 indicate
that the UN is
trying to
undercut that
report and
support a
merely
national
investigation,
or cover-up.
And
I’ve asked to
offer some
more details
and
clarification
to the UN’s
support to the
Government and
people in Sri
Lanka.
And so as I
said last
Friday, the UN
supports the
Government and
the people of
Sri Lanka in
their efforts
to advance
reconciliation
and
accountability.
At the request
of the
Government of
Sri Lanka, the
UN is
exploring the
provision of a
broad package
of technical
and financial
assistance in
consultation
with all key
stakeholders.
The framework
of UN support
for
peacebuilding
in Sri Lanka
was presented
in Sri Lanka
last June by
the Resident
Coordinator.
And that
presentation
is available
online on the
UN’s country
office in Sri
Lanka and
that’s un.lk.
What is being
discussed for
support by the
Peacebuilding
Fund are
initiatives to
advance the
process of
reconciliation
in Sri Lanka
through the
resettlement
of internally
displaced
persons,
national
reconciliation,
and the
development of
credible
transitional
justice
mechanisms in
line with
international
standards.
UN support is
always built
on the basis
of inclusive,
transparent
and
participatory
consultations
with all key
stakeholders.
$1 million has
already been
disbursed to
support
resettlement
and
integration
initiatives
for the
remaining
internally
displaced
persons in the
north and east
on seized land
that has been
returned by
the
Government.
For the rest,
the UN
continues to
consult with
the Government
of Sri Lanka,
and all key
stakeholders,
to finalize
the details of
UN support.
The same
principle of
inclusive,
participatory
and
consultative
processes will
apply to UN
support for
the
establishment
of credible
accountability
and
reconciliation
mechanisms
that meet
international
standards.
And lastly,
the UN of
course
believes that
there should
be genuine and
inclusive
consultations
on a national
basis,
including the
Northern
Province, to
help arrive at
the right
model in the
Sri Lankan
context.
Done.
Matthew.
Inner City
Press:
Thanks for
that.
I’m going to
have to, I
guess, go over
that Sri Lanka
statement.
Here is what
Dujarric was
responding to:
on July 31,
Inner City
Press asked UN
spokesman
Stephane
Dujarric, transcript here:
Inner
City Press:
yesterday I’d
asked you
about Sri
Lanka and this
memo that’s
emerged where
the UN appears
to be working
for a purely
national
mechanism.
And the
foreign
ministry
spokesman
there has
spoken today
about Mr.
Feltman’s trip
and has
mentioned the
Peacebuilding
Fund. So
I wanted to
ask you more
specifically,
is Mr. Taranco
and the
Peacebuilding
Fund
considering
funding a
purely
national
accountability
mechanism in
Sri Lanka
contrary to
what’s been
said here and
to the Human
Rights Council
report that’s
due in
September?
Spokesman
Dujarric:
I think what I
can tell you
is that the UN
supports the
Government and
the people of
Sri Lanka and
their efforts
to advance
reconciliation
and
accountability
as evidenced
by commitments
made by the
Secretary
General and
during the
Under-Secretary-General’s
recent visit —
Feltman’s
recent visit
to Sri
Lanka.
In this
regard, we’re
exploring
provision of a
broad package
of technical
and financial
assistance at
the request of
the Chief
Minister, also
including the
support of the
Northern
Province to
bolster
citizen
confidence in
the peace
process.
What is
currently
under
discussion for
support by the
Peacebuilding
Fund are
initiatives to
advance the
process of
reconciliation
in Sri Lanka
by
resettlement
of internally
displaced
persons,
national
reconciliation,
strengthening
human rights
mechanism, and
ending
impunity.
The UN support
is always
based on the
basis of
inclusive and
participatory
consultations
with all key
stakeholders.
And my
understanding
is that
already $1
million have
been already
dispersed to
support
resettlement
and
integration
initiatives
for the
remaining
internally
displaced
people in the
north and east
on land that’s
been… on
seized land
that have been
returned by
the
Government.
For the rest,
we continue to
consult with
the Government
of Sri Lanka
and the
Northern
Provincial
Council and
all key
stakeholders
to finalize
the UN
support.
Inner City
Press:
Are you saying
this
Peacebuilding
Fund support
is not for an
accountability
mechanism that
would be
entirely
national,
which is the
one denounced
by the Tamil
group that you
mentioned?
Spokesman:
You know, I
think the…
whether there
should be
domestic or
international
process, the…
I think what
we are looking
at is
obviously
implementing
projects both
with the
support of the
Government and
the Northern
Provincial
Council.
If I have
more, I will
share it with
you.
Inner City
Press:
What about an
international
mechanism?
Spokesman:
I think, you
know, whether
it’s domestic
or
international,
that will need
to be
determined.
We are
obviously
awaiting the
High
Commissioner’s
report and
recommendations
to make that
decision.
Inner
City Press:
this has to do
with the UN’s
engagement on
the issue of
Sri
Lanka.
There’s been
a… Channel 4
has published
what they say
is a leaked UN
document in
which it
appears that
the UN is
preparing to
give its
blessing to an
entirely
national
accountability
mechanism that
would involve
the National
Provincial…
according to
the document,
Northern
Provincial
Council,
Tamil, which
they deny that
they ever saw
it. They
say it’s an
outrage and
would be a… a…
kind of
selling out
the Human
Rights Council
and any
international
mechanism.
I wanted to
know, since I
saw the
pictures of
Mr. [Jeffrey]
Feltman
meeting with
that group and
that there was
a lot of
discussions of
documents
going back and
forth, is the
document
referred to by
Channel 4 a
document that
Mr. Feltman
had?
Spokesman:
Let me see… I
don’t have any
language on
that with me
here.
Inner
City Press:
Sri
Lanka. I
wanted to get
your comment
on this, given
the
Secretary-General's
historic
involvement.
It's been now
confirmed by
the Foreign
Minister there
that the
promised
internal
domestic human
rights
investigation
into crimes in
the final
stages of the
conflict is
now not going
to take place
until
September, and
now this is
being laid off
on elections,
due to the
failure to
dissolve
parliament.
So, I guess,
given that the
Secretary-General,
it seems, kind
of supported
the delay,
what's the
response?
Spokesman
Dujararic:
I don't have
any language
on that, but I
will harvest
some for you.
"We
were also
asked earlier
about
accountability
in Sri
Lanka. I
can say that
the new
Government in
Sri Lanka has
passed a
constitutional
amendment
which, if
implemented
appropriately,
brings renewed
hope for
democracy and
the rule of
law. In
this regard,
it is
important that
the Government
consults
broadly with
all political
parties, civil
society, and
above all
victims and
their
families, to
ensure full
national
support and
ownership of
these
processes.
"The Office of
the High
Commissioner
for Human
Rights remains
engaged in
discussions
with the Sri
Lankan
authorities on
the need for
transparent
and inclusive
processes to
develop
credible
mechanisms for
accountability
and
reconciliation."
So delaying or
even
dispensing
with the
promised
domestic war
crimes
investigation
is now OK with
Ban's UN?
We'll have
more on this.
Back
in May, with
the UN's
already long
delayed report
into war
crimes in Sri
Lanka
postponed
until at least
September, now
one of those
most
responsible
for the crimes
in 2009, Jagath
Dias of
the 57th
Division, was
named Chief of
Staff of the
Army.
One wondered
if those
recently
praising the
Sri Lankan
government,
from UN
Secretary
General Ban
Ki-moon to US
Secretary of
State John
Kerry during
his visit two
weeks ago will
say anything
about this.
On May 18,
Inner City
Press asked
Ban's deputy
spokesperson
Farhan Haq if
Ban had any
comment on
Dias, named in
Ban's own
report on Sri
Lanka, getting
this post.
Haq said to
wait and see
what the Human
Rights Council
says -- the
Human Rights
Council which
already
delayed
release of
their report.
Video
here.
Now Silva is
in War College
in India and
Dias is Army
chief of
staff. Will
anything be
said by UN
High
Commissioner
for Human
Rights Prince
Zeid, now
embroiled in a
scandal about
OHCHR's
seeming cover
up for child
rapes by
French troops
in the Central
African
Republic, and
letting French
UN Peacekeepin
chief Herve
Ladsous try to
fire the OHCHR
whistleblower?
What has
changed?
Inside
the UN in
September 2011
the
government's
"Lies Agreed
To" -- but NOT
"No Fire Zone"
-- was
screened.
When Inner
City Press
reported on
the screening,
then on the
background
fact that the
person who
agreed to the
screening,
Giampaolo
Pioli, had
previously
been the
landlord of
Palitha
Kohona, who as
Sri Lanka's
Ambassador
requested the
screen in the
UN hosted by
the United
Nations
Correspondents
Association,
then and now
headed by
Pioli, demands
for censorship
and expulsion
began.
Unhappy
with Inner
City Press
reporting,
Pioli demanded
that the story
come down.
When Inner
City Press
instead of
censorship
offered
amplifications
and to publish
a letter to
the editor of
any length,
Pioli rejected
it and pushed
to get Inner
City Press
thrown out.
After some
of this was
reported
in the media
in Sri Lanka,
and Inner City
Press informed
Pioli of this
and of death
threats it had
received,
Pioli refused
to suspend his
campaign,
instead trying
to use the
threats as
leverage to
get Inner City
Press to
publish a
"box," that he
would dictate,
on the front
of its
website.
In this
audio clip,
after Inner
City Press
informed Pioli
and other UNCA
Executive
Committee
members that
their kangaroo
court
proceeding had
given rise to
death threats,
Pioli demands
a "box of
apology... as
long as it is
Inner City
Press."
This is what
UNCA became,
the UN's
Censorship
Alliance, and
what it is,
and functions
as. Inner City
Press when its
elected term
on the UNCA
Executive
Committee
ended quit the
group and
co-founded the
new Free UN
Coalition for
Access, now
defending the
rights of
journalists
from
Somaliland to
Bangladesh
and
beyond. We
will have more
on this.
Pioli
& Ban
Ki-moon, Sri
Lanka war
crimes denial
not shown. UN
Photo/Mark
Garten