UN
Claims Vets Sri Lankans, But
Won't Answer on Reassignment of
Vetter, Silent on Shavendra
Silva
By Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS,
May 26 – The UN did little
during the killing of Tamils
in Sri Lanka in 2009. Then
under Ban Ki-moon, the UN even
accepted a military leader
implicated in the mass
killing, Shavendra Silva, as a
Senior UN Adviser on
Peacekeeping. Inner City Press
pursued
the question and asked
Ban why he did it; later Ban
had Inner City Press evicted
from the UN, where
restrictions remain still. On
May 26, Inner City Press asked
the UN, transcript here:
Inner City Press: I've
heard that at the Office of
the [United Nations] High
Commissioner of Human Rights
(OHCHR), that they had an
assigned staffer that was
vetting Sri Lankans being
deployed, for example, to Mali
and other missions where
they're being taken by the UN
and that that person has
recently been reassigned such
that there is no staff member
handling this. I'm
wondering, is the policy that
you read out today, is this a
response to the AP
story? How does it
relate to actually reassigning
the person who had been, until
recently, in charge of vetting
soldiers?
Deputy Spokesman: No,
no, this is not a
response. This is the
policy that we've had in place
because of the exceptional
needs in terms of how we deal
with peacekeeping
contributions from Sri
Lanka. Obviously,
there's a self-certification
process that’s standard for
troops and police
contributions by Member
States. And in that, the
Department of Peacekeeping
Operations works closely with
the Office of the High
Commissioner for Human Rights
to tailor their approach and
put in place mitigating
measures as needed. With
Sri Lanka, the measures are as
I've been spelling out just
now.
Question: So when they
sent Shavendra Silva, a
well-known military commander,
this same country sent him as
a senior adviser on
peacekeeping, would it have
passed this policy if they'd
said that he didn't commit any
crimes?
Deputy Spokesman:
Obviously, like I said, you
know, any… the content of any
policy, you know, of any
review or investigation, needs
to be done in a precise
manner. We are not the
ones who nominated Mr.
Silva. You would have to
ask the Government of Sri
Lanka why they nominated him.
On March
30, laundered by Ban Ki-moon
and the UN, Shavendra Silva
has been named Adjutant
General of the Sri Lankan
Army, photos
here. On April 3, Inner
City Press asked the UN
spokesman Stephane Dujarric
who served Ban Ki-moon and now
Antonio Guterres about Silva,
UN transcript
here:
Inner City Press:
in Sri Lanka, there's a
military figure called
Shavendra Silva that you may
remember. He was
appointed as a senior…
Spokesman: Yes.
Yeah, I know who he was.
Inner City Press:
Okay. So, there was some
controversy, and he ended up…
even the UN Secretariat seemed
to acknowledge that there was
a controversy under Ms.
Frechette. He's recently
been named the chief
administrative officer of the
Sri Lankan military. So,
I wanted to know, one, if you
have a comment, but, two, how
this may relate to the vetting
of Sri Lankan peacekeepers,
which I've asked about in
writing, being deployed to UN
peacekeeping missions.
Is the military…?
Spokesman: I think the…
I… the vetting of peacekeepers
will remain the same along our
procedures. And I have
no specific comment on him.
It is an outrage - but one in
which the UN has played a
shameful part. (There was also
Shavendra Silva as a speaker
at a "UN screening" of a war
crimes denial film, here.)
Not only does the UN remain
silent on human rights abuses
like this year in Cameroon:
it actively launders war
criminals, and remains silent
when they get promotions,
accepts their troops as
peacekeepers. Last week Inner
City Press formally asked the
UN Spokesman to describe the
UN's vetting and due diligence
of the Sri Lanka military
figures it is deploying to
peacekeeping missions, without
response. We'll have more on
this.
Now that Sri Lankan president
Sirisena has said, No foreign
judges, Inner City Press on
March 3 asked Stephane
Dujarric, the spokesman for
Ban Ki-moon and now Antonio
Guterres, for the new
Secretary General's reaction.
Video
here; UN
transcript here:
Inner City Press:
the President of Sri Lanka,
Mr. Sirisena, has said in Sri
Lanka that there will be no
foreign judges, no hybrid
court. I know this was
an issue that the former
Secretary-General had kind of
a personal interest in, this
idea of following up on the
2009 events. What's the
response of the UN system to
essentially a flat “no” by the
President?
Spokesman: The situation
remains one that we're
following. I think I
would encourage you to ask the
human rights… our colleagues
in the Human Rights Office who
are on the lead on this issue.
(Of
course, the spokesman of the
UN Human Rights Office, Rupert
Colville, has refused
to answer written
questions from Inner City
Press.)
The UN,
which half-admitted systemic
failure under Ban Ki-moon
while tens of thousands of
Tamils were killed in Sri
Lanka, has been supporting
something called the National
Authority for Protection of
Victims of Crime and
Witnesses.
But now
that the body has been shown
to include, among others, a
person accused by the UN's own
Special Rapporteur of torture,
what does the UN do? Nothing,
it seems.
The issue
was raised again on February
20 in the 66th Session of
Committee on Elimination of
Discrimination against Women.
Video
here. This came, as it
happens, hours after the son
in law of just-left UN
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon,
Siddharth Chatterjee, dodged
again on his connection to
alleged war crimes in Sri
Lanka. He wrote: "The fact is
that I arrived in Sri Lanka
having cut short a specialized
combat under water diving
course with the Indian Navy on
October 16, 1987. The raid at
Jaffna University took place
on 12 October 1987." But it
was after the failed October
12 raid - and after
Chatterjee's now specified
October 16 arrival - that the
alleged reprisals took place.
We'll have more on this,
including in light of the new
human rights self-attestation
promulgated in the UN.
On February
14, Inner City Press asked UN
deputy spokesman Farhan Haq
about it. He had no answer,
and later in the briefing,
regarding Ban Ki-moon who has
had two relatives indicted for
real estate fraud involving
the UN, called Inner City
Press "obsessive"
then an a*hole.
(This same Haq in
2016 cut off Press questions
about a protest in Jaffna of
Ban Ki-moon's unilateral
eviction from the UN of Inner
City Press, where it remains
restricted as
"non-resident correspondent.")
Here's
from the February 14 UN
transcript, on Sri
Lanka:
Inner City Press:
I want to ask you about Sri
Lanka, and I'll say why.
There's a report
out by the International Truth
and Justice Project run by
Yasmin Sooka, who was one of
the named panellists.
And they've basically said
that there's a Sri Lankan body
called the National Authority
for Victim and Witness
Protection, and they've named
a member of the body, put on
by the Government, who's named
in a UN report as having been
accused of torture by a
Special Rapporteur on
Torture. And the reason
I'm asking is the UN is
apparently providing financial
support to this National
Authority for Victim and
Witness Protection.
There's a… a… they've… they've
hired a management
consultant. And I wanted
to know, is the UN, given its
previous role in Sri Lanka,
aware that it's financially
supporting a body that has, in
fact, torturers on it?
And, if so, what happens to
the financial support?
Deputy Spokesman: We'd
have to check and see what
sort of financial support is
being provided. I'm not
aware of what support is given
to this group and whether that
would need to be conditioned
on any particular set of
circumstances.
Haq, after
calling
Inner City Press an obsessive
a*hole, left his office hours
later having provided no
answer. Here
is the report, and here
a sample
UN system recruitment,
showing support.
40,000 dead
Tamils, UN failure? Get over
it.
***
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