Miliband cosmetically presents catalogue of failures
[TamilNet, Wednesday, 14 October 2009, 01:18 GMT]
British Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs David Miliband on Tuesday presented a written statement to the House of Commons on the 'developments' in the island of Sri Lanka since his last visit in April in response to his concerns on minimising humanitarian impact, strengthening of the rule of law to address human rights and on setting out a political process to address the grievances of 'minorities'. Tamil circles find nothing worthy has been achieved in the last six months but the cosmetic presentation of the catalogue of failures by Mr. Miliband raises concern in them whether the British government is up for appeasement with the aggressive elements in the island.
Full text of the statement follows:
Written Ministerial Statement
13 October 2009
Sri Lanka
The Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs (David Miliband):
I, together with my Rt Hon Friend the Secretary of State for International
Development (Douglas Alexander), would like to inform the House about the
Government’s ongoing active engagement in Sri Lanka following the end of the
conflict almost five months ago between the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam
(LTTE) and the government of Sri Lanka.
When I visited Sri Lanka with French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner in
April our three areas of focus were to: urge the Government and LTTE to
minimise the humanitarian impact of the then ongoing hostilities and to improve
conditions for Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs); to call for a strengthening
of the rule of law to address human rights concerns; and to encourage urgent
action on setting out a political process to address the grievances of minorities.
I will cover each of these in turn.
In summary, as I explained to Foreign Minister Bogollogama in New York at the
end of last month, we remain deeply concerned about the situation, not least but
not only because of the forthcoming monsoon. Lives are at stake but so is the
long term health of Sri Lanka.
Humanitarian Situation
The last stage of fighting created almost 300,000 IDPs, the majority of whom
were moved to camps in the north of Sri Lanka, near Vavuniya. Approximately
253,000 still remain inside IDP camps. The latest UN figures of 28 September
show that only 7000 people have returned to their place of origin and a further
8000 vulnerable IDPs have been released to host families. I can report some
improvement since my Honourable Friend the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of
State for International Development (Mike Foster), my Right Honourable Friend
the Member for Kilmarnock and Loudoun (Des Browne) and I visited the camps
in three separate visits in late April/early May. Sanitation facilities have
improved and malnutrition cases have decreased markedly. Access for
humanitarian agencies is better but remains ad-hoc and there is scope for
further improvements. The IDPs continue to have inadequate access to health
care and following a drop in the river level delivery of adequate water has been
problematic in recent weeks. Unusually heavy rains during August demonstrated
that the camps are ill-equipped for the sustained heavy rains expected from
mid-October to December during the monsoon season.
We are concerned over the lack of freedom of movement for the IDP population
because of the nature of the ‘closed’ camps and over the ongoing separation of
families and the heavy military oversight of the camps. We are also concerned
that there is no independent visibility of the process by which over 11,000 IDPs
have been identified as suspected LTTE cadres and moved to separate camps
and that the UN and International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) have had
no access to them since July.
The seriousness in which we continue to hold the humanitarian situation was
demonstrated by the visit last week of my Honourable Friend the Parliamentary
Under-Secretary of State for the Department for International Development.
He visited areas of the former conflict zone, IDP camps and centres for the
rehabilitation of former child combatants. He saw for himself the conditions
for civilians inside the camps and ongoing contingency preparations for the
monsoon.
Since September 2008, the Government has allocated £12.5 million of
humanitarian aid to Sri Lanka. In the final stages of the war we used our
funding to help the ICRC and the UN to deliver critical humanitarian assistance
to civilians trapped in the conflict zone and to ensure facilities in IDP camps
met minimum standards. Following the end of the conflict we have continued to
support critical work inside the IDP camps, for example funding UN agencies to
vaccinate children against polio and measles and to provide emergency drainage
in an attempt to minimise the impact of the forthcoming monsoon rains.
However, in recent months we have increasingly focused our support on
activities designed to facilitate the speedy return of civilians to their home
areas. For example, we have funded the International Organisation for
Migration (IOM) to provide temporary identity cards to IDPs and transport for
those returning to their homes and funded the Mines Advisory Group (MAG) to
demine civilian areas of the former conflict zone. All of the UK’s humanitarian
funding continues to be channelled through neutral and impartial humanitarian
aid agencies to help those who need it most.
My honourable friend the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for
International Development used his visit to highlight our concern about the lack
of progress on returning IDPs to their homes and to urge the Sri Lankan
government to meet its own target of returning the majority of IDPs by the end
of the year. He further encouraged the Sri Lankan government to release IDPs
who have already been screened. He made clear that it was not acceptable to
transfer IDPs from one closed camp to another in a different part of the
country, as has happened in some cases.
Freedom of movement for the IDP population is critical if a humanitarian crisis
is to be averted in the IDP camps when the monsoon rains fall. The humanitarian
gains made in the IDP camps risk being lost from the resulting deterioration in
water and sanitation facilities and consequent effect on health indicators. We
are working with others to press for freedom of movement to be restored to
the IDPs.
During his visit, my honourable friend the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of
State for International Development confirmed that once the critical monsoon
season is over we will only fund life-saving emergency interventions in the
existing ‘closed’ camps and that we will not support people simply being
transferred from the existing ‘closed’ camps to new ‘closed’ camps. £4.8 million
of UK funding remains available to help the Sri Lankan government in the
process of recovery from the conflict in the areas of de-mining, support to
enable the return of the IDPs to their places of origin and to help them recover
their livelihoods.
We continue to support multilateral engagement in Sri Lanka. The UN has a key
role in focusing international concern; co-ordinating the international
humanitarian response; and providing advice and support to the government to
help heal the rifts that divide Sri Lanka’s communities. We welcome the
involvement by UN agencies on the ground in Sri Lanka and the ongoing senior
level engagement that has included visits to Sri Lanka since the end of the war
by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, Lynn Pascoe the Under Secretary
General for Political Affairs and Walter Kaelin, the UN’s Special Representative
for the human rights of IDPs. The UN’s experience and expertise in working in
post-conflict environments is widely acknowledged and I urge the Sri Lankan
government to engage constructively with all levels of the UN.
At the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the UK took the decision in July not
to support the Stand-By Arrangement for Sri Lanka. Whilst we acknowledged
the need to help Sri Lanka avoid a damaging balance of payments crisis that
would have disproportionately affected the poorest and most vulnerable
members of society, we judged that the risks of a default had diminished and
that the humanitarian and political situations posed risks to implementation of
the programme. The programme was passed by the IMF Board and we will now
turn our attention to monitoring the programme’s implementation through a
robust review process.
Human Rights
The wider human rights situation in Sri Lanka remains very worrying following
the end of the conflict. Although reduced, reports of extra-judicial killings,
abductions, disappearances and intimidation have continued. Media and civil
society organisations who are critical of the government remain at particular
risk and continue to be the victims of anonymous death threats and, in some
cases, violent attack. The recent sentencing of a journalist, Tissainayagam, to
twenty years imprisonment sent a very negative message about media freedom
in Sri Lanka. A culture of impunity continues, with no progress towards
identifying the individuals behind recent high profile human rights abuses, such
as the murder in January of Lasantha Wickrematunge, a leading newspaper
editor. We welcome the fact that in two recent cases, the alleged abduction of
a university student and the killing of two youths in southern Sri Lanka, the
government has ordered investigations into alleged police involvement and action
is being taken through the Sri Lankan courts. The Sri Lankan government
continues to retain extraordinary emergency powers which limit the
fundamental democratic freedoms of its citizens. With the LTTE defeated and
a substantially reduced terrorist threat we hope to see the Emergency
Regulations lifted soon.
In our bilateral contacts we have encouraged the government of Sri Lanka to
tackle the culture of impunity in Sri Lanka. In this light we welcome the
investigations and subsequent legal action against police officers involved in
alleged abuses and encourage the government to take similar action in all cases
where such allegations are made. We have also been active in working with the
EU to call for an improvement in human rights in Sri Lanka. An improvement is
important too in the context of the investigation by the EU Commission looking
at whether Sri Lanka should continue to benefit from the EU trade scheme,
GSP+ which is dependent on the implementation of a number of human rightsrelated
conventions. We have consistently encouraged the Sri Lankan
government to engage constructively with the Commission.
Political Settlement
At the end of May the Sri Lankan President issued a joint statement with UN
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon recognising the need to work ‘towards a lasting
political solution ....fundamental to ensuring long-term socio-economic
development’, and to take measures ‘to address possible violations of
international humanitarian law during the conflict.’ The government of Sri Lanka
has stated its intention to begin a process of political reform and reconciliation
after elections which are expected in the first half of 2010. They have made
some welcome moves to reach out to minority communities in the interim. For
example, the President recently opened a dialogue with the Tamil National
Alliance, the principal grouping of Tamil politicians inside Sri Lanka, and for the
first time in over 25 years the police force have begun a recruitment process in
Jaffna, a majority Tamil area in northern Sri Lanka. The government has
publicly recognised that the Tamil Diaspora can play a positive role in helping
shape the future direction of Sri Lanka. I encourage the government to
continue with, and to broaden, its initial contacts with representatives of the
Diaspora. We are concerned that the government has yet to make clear how it
intends to address concerns that both sides may have been responsible for
violations of international humanitarian law during the conflict.
The UK has consistently maintained that one of the prerequisites for lasting
peace in Sri Lanka is a political settlement that fully takes into account the
legitimate grievances and aspirations of all communities. When the my right hon
Friend the Prime Minister spoke to President Rajapakse on 18 May he urged him
to be magnanimous in victory. On the same day I pressed Foreign Minister
Bogollogama to seize the historic opportunity – and duty – to lay the foundations
for the peaceful, secure and prosperous Sri Lanka that we all want to see.
Despite some recent welcome developments the government needs to show
greater urgency in making clear its plans for future political reforms if it is
serious about wanting to win the confidence of Tamils, Muslims and other
communities in Sri Lanka. We hope to see an inclusive, genuine political process
initiated as soon as possible.
We have consistently called for a credible process of accountability, most
recently during the visit to the UK of the Sri Lankan Attorney General and
Justice Permanent Secretary in early October and the visit of the Sri Lankan
Justice Minister in September. Addressing accountability could play an integral
role in the process of reconciliation and will be essential in creating conditions
for a sustainable end to the conflict. The recent broadcast of mobile phone
footage purporting to show members of the Sri Lankan military summarily
executing Tamils underlines the importance of lifting the fog of uncertainty
surrounding events of the final months of fighting when independent observers
had no access to the conflict zone.
The Government remains actively involved in working for a peaceful Sri Lanka.
We have urged the Sri Lankan government, in a number of direct contacts, to
make greater progress on improving conditions inside the camps, on returning
IDPs to their homes and on working for reconciliation. We urge that freedom
of movement be returned to IDPs, and highlight the urgency of doing so before
the monsoon. We also encourage swifter progress on the development of an
inclusive political process to address minority concerns and for an improvement
in the rule of law, including accountability for possible violations of international
humanitarian law, as both would be essential for a sustainable end to the
conflict.
We continue to work with other international partners, such as the US and
India, the EU and the UN. My right hon Friend the Prime Minister’s Special
Envoy for Sri Lanka, my right hon Friend the Member for Kilmarnock and
Loudoun, visited Washington and the UN (in New York and Geneva) in
September to exchange views on Sri Lanka with other partners and will be
writing to hon Members this week to inform them of his visits.
The final death toll of the 25-year conflict may never be known, but it is likely
that over 100,000 Sri Lankans of all communities died over the course of the
conflict. The Sri Lankan government needs to steer the country away from the
violence that has troubled the country for so long and towards long-term peace,
security and prosperity for all its citizens. The Government will continue to
work with the Sri Lankan government and with other partners to help bring this
about.