9/21/2007
A
presentation titled "Misrepresentations of Sri Lanka: A Briefing
on Human Rights", was held on Thursday 20th September, at
the Palais des Nations. It was chaired by H.E. Dr. Dayan Jayaytilleka.
Over 60 representatives of mainly civil society organizations
attended.
The
speakers were: Professor Rajiva Wijesinha, Secretary General of
the Secretariat for Coordinating the Peace Process, Ms. Shirani
Goonetilleke, Director Legal, Secretariat for Coordinating the
Peace Process and Mr. Shavindra Fernando, Deputy Solicitor General,
Attorney General's Department. Each speaker made a statement of
about10 minutes.
Professor
Rajiva Wijesinha stated that the issues of Internally Displaced
Persons and cases of abductions and disappearances had been misrepresented
and highlighted by certain parties both in Sri Lanka and abroad.
While admitting that there were real issues of concern, he insisted
on the fact that a number of allegations made against the government
were not well founded.
The
almost exemplary conduct of the Sri Lankan Army during the recapture
of the Eastern Province and its continuously improving human rights
record are cases in point. Drawing particular attention to the
need for objective criticism, Prof. Wijesinha invited the NGOs
not to unfairly tarnish Sri Lanka's image but to cooperate with
it genuinely in improving its human rights situation.
He
described the role and the function of the Peace Secretariat in
both rectifying misrepresentations and in requesting for information
for the clarification of alleged and potential human rights violations.
Professor
Rajiva Wijesinha said that Sri Lanka faced both a political and
a terrorist problem and that they required new and imaginative
solutions.
Ms.
Shirani Goonetilleke, Director Legal of the Peace Secretariat
(SCOPP) described the role of the All Party Representative Committee
as well as the progress made in establishing a witness protection
and victim assistance programme.
She
explained that four officials were in Australia undergoing practical
training so that they can become trainers once they return to
Sri Lanka. She said that the trainers had been drawn for their
wide and varied experience and contacts in all parts of the criminal
justice system.
Ms.
Goonetilleke also drew attention to certain difficulties that
the Sri Lankan state has to face when trying to reach its goals:
lack of funds and the absence of legislature, etc. Moreover, delicate
and complex issues such as those that Sri Lanka has been facing
need careful analysis, thus, time.
Referring
to the Northern Ireland peace process, she noted how the parties
involved needed 2 years to find an acceptable solution. In the
case of the Sri Lankan APRC, it is now on the verge of coming
out with a solution after intense deliberations during the past
12 months.
Ms.
Goonetilleke also spoke about the SCOPP's engagement in child
soldier rehabilitation (with the assistance of UNICEF), the obstacles
they face in this respect and the achievements they have made
so far. She stated that the SCOPP's objective is to help these
children be integrated into the society by giving them proper
education, vocational training, etc.
Ms.
Goonetilleke also described the steps taken by the Peace Secretariat
along with UNICEF to rehabilitate child soldiers.
Next
the Deputy Solicitor General Mr. Shavindra Fernando described
in detail the role of the Attorney General and his Department
in Sri Lanka which he said was not a political office and did
not initiate or lead investigations.
He
was responding to a recent public statement issued by The International
Group of Eminent Persons (IIGEP) in which it had expressed its
concern regarding four areas of the work of the Commission of
Inquiry: slowness of the process, the Attorney General's involvement
in the process, the lack of a Victim and Witness protection programme
and the inadequate disclosure of information.
Evoking
the second cause of concern, Mr. Fernando explained in detail
the Attorney General's role in the Sri Lankan judicial system
and the COI. He noted the importance of understanding the Attorney
General's role in the local context before commenting on it from
the point of view of the international community. The Attorney
General does not intervene in the COI unless his support was asked
for, and if requested, he could even withdraw his staff and services
from the COI.
Mr.
Fernando noted that the third cause of concern of the IIGEP, i.e.,
the establishment of a Victim and Witness Protection Programme,
has already been addressed.
The
statements by the panelists were followed by a question and answer
session.
Courtesy:
Permanent Mission of Sri Lanka to the United Nations Office at
Geneva.
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