22 March 2021 05:15 am Views - 812
Like a great sporting event that comes every other year, Geneva is the venue and the time for Sri Lanka’s post-
"The outcomes of the Geneva sessions are hinged on many undercurrents within local and global politics. Right now, Sri Lanka is vigorously canvassing for support in the council"
But, Bachelet’s focus was not only on past sins. A foreign TV channel reported the UNHRC as being cautious of some of the tangible outcomes of the 20th Amendment. It quoted Bachelet as suggesting that the “independence of the judiciary, the Human Rights Commission, the National Police Commission and other key bodies [to be] deeply eroded,” as a result of the new amendment which aided the greater centralization of power on the executive president. Bachelet’s attention had also been drawn by what she termed “growing militarization” within governance and the gloomy speculation that “past patterns of violations could be repeated”.
The Sri Lankan Foreign Minister had expressed displeasure over the HRC report. He had referred to the ongoing push against the Sri Lankan government as “unprecedented propaganda”. Speaking on several TV programmes, former diplomat Dayan Jayatilleka emphasised the seriousness of the pressure building against the Sri Lankan government at the UNHRC. In a 93-page report titled “Open Wounds and Mounting Dangers: Blocking Accountability for Grave Abuses in Sri Lanka” released in February, Human Rights Watch urged that the UNHRC should “pursue accountability” regarding the Sri Lankan situation.
The outcomes of the Geneva sessions are hinged on many undercurrents within local and global politics. Right now, Sri Lanka is vigorously canvassing for support in the council and – largely driven by geopolitical interests than the interest in dead and disappeared people – it will probably succeed in aligning several key players behind its defence. A castle may be moved a few spaces to make the contending player double-think before moving his piece, or a pawn will be shifted so that a bishop appears within the opponent’s line of vision. Chess and hopscotch have much in common.
"Whether the mechanism is local, hybrid, or foreign-assisted, Sri Lanka cannot move ahead without establishing truth or by admitting what went wrong and where."
Irrespective of what Geneva offers us in 2021, our poverty in finding a reasonable and acceptable justice scheme and a meaningful reconciliation programme remains unfortunate. An arm or a leg being broken in taking a fall, the last 12 years has been spent letting the bones reset themselves without opting for medical assistance. 2013 to 2017, in degrees, were years of promise. They include the last two years of Mahinda Rajapaksa’s second term and the more stable years of the Good Governance coalition led by the United National Front. But, the absence of a comprehensive, clearly-stated, clearly-understood, socially-invested framework – one that is nurtured and adopted by all as an inviolable policy – has ensured that social-healing in post-conflict Sri Lanka will remain a long road with many obstacles. Whether the mechanism is local, hybrid, or foreign-assisted, Sri Lanka cannot move ahead without establishing truth or by admitting what went wrong and where. The families of conflict-victims in the north, east, and elsewhere in the country do not demand lynching as redress for the deaths and disappearances of their beloved. But, as the custodian of the constitution and social safeguards of the country, the state is bound to be accountable for each life lost and affected under questionable circumstances. The state alone owes the people that explanation.
If the Sri Lankan government is in search of a guideline, it can turn back – like it did with the Lessons Learnt and Rehabilitation Commission (LLRC) in 2011 – to the South African example where truth establishment was given primary focus. The act of justice has several stages and, as some experts suggest, cannot be complete until perpetrators are sentenced and an atmosphere of ‘never again’ is created. But, for Sri Lanka – where the state has clearly expressed unwillingness to press charges against its military in any way – the path leading on from ‘truth establishment’ has to take a home-grown way. But, whatever that path may be, it is adverse to design it (as it is currently done) at the expense of burying the truth. In my opinion, Sri Lanka always had the option to situate the truth and acknowledge responsibility without having to buy into the ‘war crimes’ narrative. Our politicians and their advisors had instead chosen the curious game of hopscotch.