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Uncategorized Archives - Sri Lankan Canadian Action Coalition Ontario Bill 104 https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/index.php/category/uncategorized/ United Sri Lankan Canadian platform to deliver actions! Mon, 08 Aug 2022 19:36:52 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.4 https://i0.wp.com/www.srilankancanadian.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/cropped-whiteline-thumbbail-23_Aug.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Uncategorized Archives - Sri Lankan Canadian Action Coalition Ontario Bill 104 https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/index.php/category/uncategorized/ 32 32 189243925 Joint statement of SLCAC and SLCAB about APPEALING the verdict on TGEWA https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/index.php/2022/08/08/joint-statement-of-slcac-and-slcab-about-appealing-the-verdict-on-tgewa/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=joint-statement-of-slcac-and-slcab-about-appealing-the-verdict-on-tgewa Mon, 08 Aug 2022 19:33:36 +0000 https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/?p=4177 Joint statement of SLCAC and SLCAB about APPEALING the verdict on TGEWA In June of...

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Joint statement of SLCAC and SLCAB about APPEALING the verdict on TGEWA

In June of 2021, the Sri Lankan Canadian Action Coalition (SLCAC) and Sri Lanka Canada Association of Brampton (SLCAB) with the help of many stepped up to challenge the legality of Tamil Genocide Education Week Act (TGEWA). At that time the only action we can do was to file a case.  We filed a Notice of Application in the Superior Court in September 2021. On 28th of June, the superior court judge handed over a verdict that we and our legal counsel along with many educated consultants who felt there were serious legal issues in judgement.

 

For the first time in Canada, the Sri Lankan community came together to fight against a wrong decision taken by a provincial government. We took the Ontario government to courts. This did not come easy. The biggest challenge for us has been raising funds. You managed to chip in every way you could, and we collected close to $200,000 in 1 year. 

The fight is not over yet. As you know, the first verdict from the Trial court was against us. We would like to inform you that we have appealed this verdict to the Superior Court. A 3-judge bench will hear our appeal and we expect a favorable result. This requires more money. But we have managed to negotiate a $100,000 reduction to the current debt and also a block fee of $60,000+HST for the appeal stage. While we continue to fight for the truth, we also need your support more than ever.  

Cambridge LLP has done the attached Appeal on the 28th July to the verdict that was given by Superior court judge on the 28th of June. We all feel that we need justice. The appeal court has 3 judges and we hope justice will be served to us. Please see the Link to full document:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/176t9EDZ7myvDYb_4MPzjGfE0VNz9Y7IV/view?usp=sharing

We will hold a Town Hall meeting on the 8th of August (Monday) at 7:30pm to provide more information and clarify any questions you have. Our legal counsel will also be present. Please register in advance for this meeting:
https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZEsd-Cpqz0iGNW4MQCxJLYpN6iuM9eHtjLV

Please be generous to continue to support efforts to bring much needed justice. You can make named or anonymous donations at:

1. eTransfer email (Auto deposit enabled):
eTransfer@srilankancanadian.ca

2. GoFundMe Link:
https://www.gofundme.com/f/legal-fund-for-fighting-against-bill-104

3. Paypal (one time or monthly donations):
https://tinyurl.com/28ndshwy

4. Cheque:
Sri Lankan Canadian Action Coalition Inc
Suite 401, 900 Greenbank Road, Nepean, Ontario,K2J 4P6,Canada

5. Please participate in upcoming fundraising event:
https://tinyurl.com/2ca6fe2z


Thank you!

 

Sri Lankan Canadian Action Coalition
Sri Lanka Canada Association of Brampton

The post Joint statement of SLCAC and SLCAB about APPEALING the verdict on TGEWA appeared first on Sri Lankan Canadian Action Coalition Ontario Bill 104.

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November 27th සුරකිමු ලංකා වින්දනීය ගී සැඳෑව in aid of repealing TGEWA https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/index.php/2021/11/09/november-27th-surakimulanka/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=november-27th-surakimulanka Tue, 09 Nov 2021 23:24:25 +0000 https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/?p=4015 Sri Lanka Canada Association of Brampton presents සුරකිමු ලංකා වින්දනීය ගී  සැඳෑව in aid of repealing TGEWA via...

The post November 27th සුරකිමු ලංකා වින්දනීය ගී සැඳෑව in aid of repealing TGEWA appeared first on Sri Lankan Canadian Action Coalition Ontario Bill 104.

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Sri Lanka Canada Association of Brampton presents

සුරකිමු ලංකා වින්දනීය ගී  සැඳෑව in aid of repealing TGEWA via Zoom, with local artists and special guest appearance by  නුවන්ධිකා සේනාරත්න (Derana Dream Star Season 9)

Join us on Zoom Sat. Nov 27, 2021 from 8:00 p.m. EST

Tickets $20

Purchase online at http://bit.ly/3EMEM0v

For Info:
Phone: (289) 652 5791
Email: eventSLCAB@gmail.com


The post November 27th සුරකිමු ලංකා වින්දනීය ගී සැඳෑව in aid of repealing TGEWA appeared first on Sri Lankan Canadian Action Coalition Ontario Bill 104.

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Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Prof. G. L. Peiris meets with Canadian High Commissioner David McKinnon on Bill 104/TGEWA https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/index.php/2021/10/08/sri-lankan-foreign-minister-prof-g-l-peiris-meets-with-canadian-high-commissioner-david-mckinnon-on-regarding-bill-104-tgewa/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=sri-lankan-foreign-minister-prof-g-l-peiris-meets-with-canadian-high-commissioner-david-mckinnon-on-regarding-bill-104-tgewa Fri, 08 Oct 2021 20:10:37 +0000 https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/?p=3933 Foreign Minister Prof G.L. Peiris met the High Commissioner of Canada David McKinnon on 8 October at...

The post Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Prof. G. L. Peiris meets with Canadian High Commissioner David McKinnon on Bill 104/TGEWA appeared first on Sri Lankan Canadian Action Coalition Ontario Bill 104.

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Foreign Minister Prof G.L. Peiris met the High Commissioner of Canada David McKinnon on 8 October at the Foreign Ministry. A number of areas of ongoing bilateral cooperation were discussed. The Minister also briefed the High Commissioner on Sri Lanka’s recent multilateral engagements in Geneva and New York.

The Minister updated the High Commissioner on progress related to Sri Lanka’s vaccination programme and the gradual opening up of the country. The Minister appreciated Canada’s contribution to Sri Lanka’s process of recovery from the pandemic. Sri Lanka continues to seek vaccine availability from all available sources.

The High Commissioner briefed the Minister on post- Covid recovery in Canada and economic collaboration between Sri Lanka and Canada, as well as other issues of mutual interest.

The Minister reiterated Sri Lanka’s strong concern regarding the Private Members Public Bill passed earlier this year in the Ontario Legislative Assembly including  Sri Lanka’s  objection to the unacceptable association of  genocide in relation to the past conflict in Sri Lanka . The Minister noted that this Act is being challenged in the Ontario Superior Court. As highlighted in his address to the UN Human Rights Council, Sri Lanka is continuing its efforts to achieve reconciliation among the communities following decades of terrorist conflict. The Minister also recalled that the LTTE is a proscribed terrorist organization in Canada.

The High Commissioner stated that this issue, which was a decision by the Ontario Legislative Assembly, is in a judicial process relating to a Constitutional Question. He agreed to keep the Minister informed of developments.

The Minister also updated the High Commissioner on his address to the UN Human Rights Council and on progress on matters related to human rights and the recent steps taken domestically. The High Commissioner thanked the Minister for the update and encouraged Sri Lanka to make progress on the matters raised by the Council.

Foreign Ministry

Colombo

08 October, 2021

……………………………………..

මාධ්‍ය නිවේදනය

විදේශ අමාත්‍ය මහාචාර්ය ජී. එල්. පීරිස් මැතිතුමා කැනේඩියානු මහකොමසාරිස් ඩේවිඩ් මැකිනන් මැතිතුමා හමුවෙයි

විදේශ අමාත්‍ය මහාචාර්ය ජී. එල්. පීරිස් මැතිතුමා කැනඩාවේ මහ කොමසාරිස් ඩේවිඩ් මැකිනන් මැතිතුමා ඔක්තෝබර් 8  (අද) දින  විදේශ අමාත්‍යාංශයේ දී හමුවිය. එහි දී දැනට පවතින ද්විපාර්ශ්වික සහයෝගීතාවයේ අංශ ගණනාවක් පිළිබඳව සාකච්ඡා කෙරිණි. මෑතකදී ශ්‍රී ලංකාව ජිනීවා හි සහ නිව්යෝර්ක් හි දී සිදුකළ බහුපාර්ශ්වික කටයුතු පිළිබඳව ද මහ කොමසාරිස්වරයා දැනුවත් කරන ලදි.

ශ්‍රී ලංකාවේ එන්නත් කිරීමේ වැඩසටහන හා ක්‍රමයෙන් රට විවෘත කිරීම සම්බන්ධ ප්‍රගතිය පිළිබඳව අමාත්‍යවරයා මහ කොමසාරිස්වරයාට යාවත්කාලීන කිරීමක් ලබා දුන්නේය. ශ්‍රී ලංකාව වසංගතයෙන් යථා තත්ත්වයට පත් කිරීමේ ක්‍රියාවලිය සඳහා කැනඩාව විසින් ලබා දෙන දායකත්වය අමාත්‍යවරයා අගය කළේය. ලබා ගත හැකි සියලුම ප්‍රභවයන්ගෙන් එන්නත් ලබා ගැනීම සඳහා ශ්‍රී ලංකාව අඛණ්ඩව කටයුතු කරයි.

මහ කොමසාරිස්වරයා කැනඩාවේ පශ්චාත් කොවිඩ් සුවපත් වීම සහ ශ්‍රී ලංකාව සහ කැනඩාව අතර ආර්ථික සහයෝගිතාව මෙන්ම අන්‍යෝන්‍ය වශයෙන් වැදගත් වන වෙනත් කරුණු පිළිබඳව අමාත්‍යවරයා දැනුවත් කළේය.

ශ්‍රී ලංකාවේ පෙර පැවති ගැටුම්වලට අදාළව පිළිගත නොහැකි ආකාරයෙන් ජන සංහාරයක් ගැන සඳහන් කිරීම සම්බන්ධව ශ්‍රී ලංකාවේ විරෝධය ද ඇතුළුව, මෙම වසර මුලදී ඔන්ටාරියෝ ව්‍යවස්ථාදායක සභාවේදී සම්මත කරන ලද පෞද්ගලික මන්ත්‍රීවරුන්ගේ පොදු පනත් කෙටුම්පත පිළිබඳව ශ්‍රී ලංකාවේ දැඩි අවධානය පිළිබඳව අමාත්‍යවරයා අවධාරණය කළේය. මෙම පනත ඔන්ටාරියෝ හි උත්තරීතර උසාවියේදී අභියෝගයට ලක් කරනු ලබන බව අමාත්‍යවරයා සඳහන් කළේය. එක්සත් ජාතීන්ගේ මානව හිමිකම් කවුන්සිලය අමතමින් ඔහු කළ දේශනයේ දී ඉස්මතු කර දැක්වූ පරිදි, දශක ගණනාවක ත්‍රස්තවාදී ගැටුවලින් පසුව ජාතීන් අතර සංහිඳියාව ඇති කිරීම සඳහා සිය ප්‍රයත්න ශ්‍රී ලංකාව විසින් අඛණ්ඩව සිදුකරමින් පවතී. එල්ටීටීඊ සංවිධානය, කැනඩාවේ තහනම් කරන ලද ත්‍රස්තවාදී සංවිධානයක් බව ද අමාත්‍යවරයා සිහිපත් කළේය.

මෙම ගැටළුව, ඔන්ටාරියෝ ව්‍යවස්ථාදායක සභාව විසින් ගනු ලැබූ තීරණයක් වන අතර, එය ව්‍යවස්ථාමය ප්‍රශ්නයකට අදාළව අධිකරණ ක්‍රියාවලියක පවතින බව මහ කොමසාරිස්වරයා සඳහන් කළේය.  එහි ප්‍රවණතා පිළිබඳව අමාත්‍යවරයා දැනුවත් කිරීමට ඔහු එකඟ විය.

තමන් එක්සත් ජාතීන්ගේ මානව හිමිකම් කවුන්සිලය අමතා කළ කථාව, මානව හිමිකම් සම්බන්ධ කරුණු පිළිබඳ ප්‍රගතිය සහ මෑතකදී දේශීය වශයෙන් ගනු ලැබූ පියවර පිළිබඳව අමාත්‍යවරයා මහ කොමසාරිස්වරයා යාවත්කාලීන කළේය. එම තොරතුරු ලබා දීම පිළිබඳව අමාත්‍යවරයාට ස්තූති කළ මහ කොමසාරිස්වරයා, එම කවුන්සිලය මඟින් මතු කරන ලද කාරණා සම්බන්ධයෙන් ප්‍රගතියක් ලබා ගැනීම සඳහා ශ්‍රී ලංකාව දිරිමත් කළේය.

විදේශ අමාත්‍යාංශය
කොළඹ

2021 ඔක්තෝබර් 08 වැනි දින

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ஊடக வெளியீடு

 வெளிநாட்டு அமைச்சர் பேராசிரியர் ஜீ.எல்பீரிஸ் கனேடிய உயர்ஸ்தானிகர் மாண்புமிகு டேவிட்  மெக்கினனுடன் சந்திப்பு

கனேடிய உயர்ஸ்தானிகர் மாண்புமிகு டேவிட் மெக்கினனை வெளிநாட்டு அமைச்சர் பேராசிரியர் ஜீ.எல். பீரிஸ்  அக்டோபர் 08ஆந் திகதி வெளிநாட்டு அமைச்சில் வைத்து சந்தித்தார். இந்த சந்திப்பின் போது இருதரப்பு ஒத்துழைப்பின் பல பகுதிகள் குறித்து கலந்துரையாடப்பட்டன. ஜெனீவா மற்றும் நியூயோர்க்கிலான இலங்கையின் அண்மைய பல்தரப்பு ஈடுபாடுகள் குறித்தும் உயர்ஸ்தானிகருக்கு அமைச்சர் விளக்கினார்.

இலங்கையின் தடுப்பூசி செயற்றிட்டம் மற்றும் படிப்படியாக நாட்டை மீளத் திறத்தல் தொடர்பான முன்னேற்றம்  குறித்து உயர்ஸ்தானிகருக்கு புதுப்பிக்கப்பட்ட தகவல்களை அமைச்சர் வழங்கினார். தொற்றுநோயிலிருந்து இலங்கையை மீட்டெடுக்கும் செயன்முறையில் கனடாவின் பங்களிப்பை அமைச்சர் பாராட்டினார். சாத்தியமான அனைத்து வழிகளிலிருந்தும் தடுப்பூசிகளைப் பெற்றுக் கொள்வதற்கு இலங்கை தொடர்ந்தும் எதிர்பார்ப்பதாக அவர் மேலும் தெரிவித்தார்.

கனடாவில் கோவிட்டுக்குப் பிந்தைய மீட்பு நடைமுறை, இலங்கை மற்றும் கனடாவிற்கு இடையேயான  பொருளாதார ஒத்துழைப்பு மற்றும் பரஸ்பர நலன் சார்ந்த ஏனைய விடயங்கள் குறித்து உயர்ஸ்தானிகர் அமைச்சருக்கு விளக்கினார்.

இலங்கையில் கடந்த கால மோதல்கள் தொடர்பாக இனப்படுகொலை சார்ந்த குற்றச்சாட்டுக்களை ஏற்றுக்கொள்ளாத இலங்கையின் ஆட்சேபனை நிலைப்பாடு உட்பட, ஒன்ராறியோ சட்டமன்றத்தில் இந்த ஆண்டின் தொடக்கத்தில்  நிறைவேற்றப்பட்ட தனியார் உறுப்பினர்கள் பொது மசோதா குறித்த இலங்கையின் வலுவான கவலையை அமைச்சர் மீண்டும் வலியுறுத்தினார். இந்த சட்டம் ஒன்ராறியோ மேல் நீதிமன்றத்தில் சவாலுக்குட்படுத்தப்படுவதாக அமைச்சர் குறிப்பிட்டார். ஐ.நா. மனித உரிமைகள் பேரவையில் அவர் ஆற்றிய உரையில் குறிப்பிடப்பட்டுள்ளபடி, பல தசாப்த கால பயங்கரவாத மோதலைத் தொடர்ந்து சமூகங்களுக்கிடையே நல்லிணக்கத்தை அடைந்து கொள்வதற்கான முயற்சிகளை இலங்கை தொடர்வதாக அவர் மேலும் தெரிவித்தார். விடுதலைப் புலிகள் கனடாவில் தடைசெய்யப்பட்ட பயங்கரவாத அமைப்பினராவர் என்பதையும் அமைச்சர் நினைவு கூர்ந்தார்.

ஒன்ராறியோ சட்டமன்றத்தின் தீர்மானமான இந்த விடயம் அரசியலமைப்பு சார்ந்த கேள்வி என்ற வகையில்  நீதித்துறையின் செயற்பாட்டில் உள்ளதாக உயர்ஸ்தானிகர் குறிப்பிட்டார். அதன் முன்னேற்றங்கள் குறித்து அமைச்சருக்குத் தெரிவிப்பதற்கு அவர் ஒப்புக்கொண்டார்.

ஐ.நா. மனித உரிமைகள் பேரவையில் தான் ஆற்றிய உரை, மனித உரிமைகள் தொடர்பான விடயங்கள் மற்றும்  உள்நாட்டில் முன்னெடுக்கப்பட்டுள்ள அது சார்ந்த சமீபத்திய நடவடிக்கைகள் குறித்த புதுப்பிக்கப்பட்ட தகவல்களை உயர்ஸ்தானிகருக்கு அமைச்சர் வழங்கினார். குறித்த புதுப்பிக்கப்பட்ட தகவல்களுக்காக தனது நன்றிகளைத் தெரிவித்த உயர்ஸ்தானிகர், பேரவையினால் குறிப்பிடப்பட்ட விடயங்களில் ஆக்கபூர்வமான நடவடிக்கைகளை முன்னெடுக்குமாறு இலங்கையை ஊக்குவித்தார்.

வெளிநாட்டு அமைச்சு,

கொழும்பு

2021 அக்டோபர் 08

Original article:
https://mfa.gov.lk/fm-sl-canada-hc/
More information on Bill 104/TGEWA:
www.OntarioBill104.ca
Ways to donate to repeal TGEWA:


a. etransfer for Canadians only: etransfer@srilankancanadian.ca

b. https://www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=HX9JJNMQSZFJG

c. https://www.gofundme.com/f/legal-fund-for-fighting-against-bill-104

The post Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Prof. G. L. Peiris meets with Canadian High Commissioner David McKinnon on Bill 104/TGEWA appeared first on Sri Lankan Canadian Action Coalition Ontario Bill 104.

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“You scratch my back, I will scratch your back” – Logan Kanapthi https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/index.php/2021/08/10/you-scratch-my-back-i-will-scratch-your-back-logan-kannapthy/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=you-scratch-my-back-i-will-scratch-your-back-logan-kannapthy Tue, 10 Aug 2021 21:49:56 +0000 https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/?p=3857 10th August 2021 , Toronto – A video has surfaced with the statement of “You...

The post “You scratch my back, I will scratch your back” – Logan Kanapthi appeared first on Sri Lankan Canadian Action Coalition Ontario Bill 104.

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10th August 2021 , Toronto – A video has surfaced with the statement of “You Scratch My Back and I will scratch your back” from then City Councillor Logan Kanapathi. The satement was made during the opening of the Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam’s office in September 2013.

Currently MP Kanapathi serves in the Ontario Legilature representing Markham riding and he is the Chair of the Standing Committee on Regulations and Private Bills (SCRPB). This committee was responsible for the referring of Bill 104: Tamil Genocide Education Week Act for 3rd reading on May 5th, 2021.

 

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Ignoring the human rights of disabled students… https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/index.php/2021/06/01/ignoring-the-human-rights-of-disabled-students/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=ignoring-the-human-rights-of-disabled-students Tue, 01 Jun 2021 20:04:50 +0000 https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/?p=3433 JAY KOBLOVSKY Disability Advocate/Policy Analyst/Sometimes Epic DJ The York Region District School Board (YRDSB) is...

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JAY KOBLOVSKY

Disability Advocate/Policy Analyst/Sometimes Epic DJ

The York Region District School Board (YRDSB) is no stranger to ignoring the human rights of students underneath its care, let alone their parents as well. In 2016, the Province of Ontario had to step in to investigate allegations of systemic racism not just within board and political leadership but by staff as well. The board was eventually taken to the Ontario Human Rights Tribunal where the tribunal ordered an apology to a black woman who was called the “n” word by a YRDSB trustee, along with this woman’s children being racially discriminated against by staff. The provincial investigators later recommended that The York Region District School Board put into place an “independent” human rights office to assist with defending the board against human rights claims. A move that the Ontario Ombudsman completely signed off on.

 

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Canada’s myopic view on ‘genocide’ https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/index.php/2021/05/15/canadas-myopic-view-on-genocide/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=canadas-myopic-view-on-genocide Sat, 15 May 2021 16:23:25 +0000 https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/?p=3259 Tamil and Sikh MPs take gullible Canadians for a ride: Daily News Genocide is the...

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Tamil and Sikh MPs take gullible Canadians for a ride:

Daily News

Genocide is the intentional destruction of a particular group through killing, serious physical or mental harm, preventing births and/or forcibly transferring children to another group and this term has been applied to the experiences of Indigenous peoples in Canada, particularly in the final reports of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls inquiry.

Using the liberal use of the term ‘genocide’ to hoodwink the gullible Canadian public, Sri Lankan asylum seeker-turned Scarborough-Rouge Park Member of Parliament Vijay Thanigasalam influenced the Ontario Legislative Assembly to adopt a resolution that Sri Lanka subjected the Tamil community to genocide during the armed conflict. The Legislative Assembly voted in favour of Bill 104 (aka the Tamil Genocide Education Week Act), moved by Thanigasalam, at the Third Reading in the Legislature. The first reading took place on April 30, 2019, and the second on May 16, 2019.

Onetime open supporter of the LTTE, Vijay Thanigasalam was compelled to apologize for his infamous Facebook post: “Happy 57th birthday to our national Leader V. Prabhakaran.” He identified himself with the banned terrorist organization even after the end of war in 2009. As the protests mounted from Canadian democrats, he said, “In the past I shared material related to the Tigers. I apologize and I no longer hold those views.”

Infuriated over the ‘genocide’ Bill passed by Ontario Legislative assembly, Foreign Minister Dinesh Gunawardena summoned Canadian High Commissioner David McKinnon and expressed Sri Lanka’s deep concern over the adoption of Private Member Bill 104 on ‘Tamil Genocide Education Week’. The Minister pointed out that the position taken by the Ontario Legislative Assembly contradicted the Canadian Government’s stand. Foreign Secretary Jayanath Colombage pointed out to the Canadian High Commissioner the potential harm Bill 104 could cause to the reconciliation process, peace building and the bilateral relations between the two countries.

Foreign Minister Gunawardena sought immediate intervention of the Canadian Government to stop Royal Assent by Lt. Governor of Ontario to the controversial Bill.

It is strange that Canada, a country with a black history of genocide of indigenous people, accused Sri Lanka of genocide when millions of Tamils live in harmony with Sinhala, Muslim and Christian people in every part of the island-nation.

Many scholars have accused Canada of cultural genocide too. Due to the objections of various nations, the 1948 UN Genocide Convention does not use the term cultural genocide, nor does the 1994 UN Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. Within Canada, however, indigenous people and some scholars have argued that programmes and policies of colonization, such as residential schools were intent on destroying indigenous peoples in Canada as a distinct group and were therefore acts of cultural genocide.

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission labelled the residential school system as a case of cultural genocide. The final report defined cultural genocide as the “destruction of those structures and practices that allow the group to continue as a group.” It stated that residential schools “were part of a coherent policy to eliminate Aboriginal people as distinct peoples and to assimilate them into the Canadian mainstream against their will.”

According to The Canadian Encyclopedia, the forced sterilization of indigenous women in Canada has also been viewed as an act of genocide. Sterilization legislation in Alberta (1928–72) and British Columbia (1933–73) attempted to limit the reproduction of “unfit” persons, and increasingly targeted indigenous women. Coerced sterilization of indigenous women took place both within and outside existing legislation, and in federally operated indigenous hospitals. The practice has continued into the 21st century. Approximately 100 indigenous women have alleged that they were pressured to consent to sterilization between the 1970s and 2018, often while in the vulnerable state of pregnancy or childbirth. Professor Karen Stote has argued that, in these ways, the coerced sterilization of indigenous women can be viewed as an attempt to undermine the ability of a group to exist.

A landmark report on missing and murdered women in Canada has concluded that Canadians can no longer turn a blind eye to the “genocide” of indigenous people in the country. Indigenous communities across the country have for decades attempted to convey the depth and scope of a tragedy that has haunted thousands of families. As many as 4,000 indigenous women and girls are believed to have been killed or gone missing in Canada over the past 30 years – although the true number of victims is unlikely ever to be known. The findings of a three-year inquiry were released at a solemn ceremony in Quebec, attended by victims’ families, survivors, indigenous leaders and senior government officials. This was acknowledged by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau too. “This is an uncomfortable day for Canada,” said the Prime Minister, “We have failed you.”

While LTTE activists such as Vijay Thanigasalam carry out disinformation campaigns to tarnish the image of Sri Lanka, so-called ‘Khalisthan’ supporters in Canada continue their mud-slinging against India. Anita Lal, director of the Canada-based World Sikh Organization, and co-founder of Poetic Justice Foundation (PJF) and Canadian Parliamentarian Jagmeet Singh have gone to the extent of hiring publicity firms to promote their ‘separate Khalistan’. It was revealed that the toolkit that was tweeted and then deleted by environmental activist Greta Thunberg, 18, to garner support for the ongoing farmers’ protest in India was allegedly “fed to her” as part of a “larger conspiracy to create disharmony” in India.

Indian media reported that Canada-based PJF played a “vital role” in “starting a global campaign”, with backing from “political leaders and activists based out of Canada”. The people that are on the radar of Indian agencies include Mo Dhaliwal, founder of the PJF and director of a PR firm named Skyrocket, Marina Patterson, who worked as a relationship manager with PR firms.

It was revealed that it was Skyrocket that allegedly paid $ 2.5 million to pop star Rihanna to tweet in support of the farmers’ protest in India. Dhaliwal, the sources said, is a Canada-based Sikh who is a “self-proclaimed Sikh separatist” and is also close to Jagmeet Singh.

The Canadian MP Jagmeet Singh, who lauded Rihanna’s tweet, has often courted headlines for allegedly supporting the Sikh separatist movement. His participation in a 2015 rally in the US where a poster of Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale, the radical Sikh leader who was killed at the Golden Temple siege in 1983 was viewed by Canadians with concern. The PJF, which describes itself as an organization that “challenges structures of oppression and discrimination through intersectional grassroots advocacy”, claims on its website that “currently we are most actively involved in the #FarmersProtest” in India.

In October last year, Dhaliwal was a panelist for a webinar named ‘Khalistan, a conversation on trauma, racism and sovereignty’. Organized by the Poetic Justice Foundation, the programme involved a discussion on the Sikh separatist movement.

Delhi Police filed a case in connection with the toolkit, booking unknown persons under sections for sedition, criminal conspiracy, promoting enmity between religions, and provocation with intent to cause a riot.

India officially tweeted a statement saying “it is unfortunate to see vested interest groups trying to enforce their agenda on these (farmers’) protests, and derail them.”

“Some of these vested interest groups have also tried to mobilize international support against India,” it added. “Before rushing to comment on such matters, we would urge that the facts be ascertained, and a proper understanding of the issues at hand be undertaken. The temptation of sensationalist social media hashtags and comments, especially when resorted to by celebrities and others, is neither accurate nor responsible.”

Sri Lanka too should consider legal action against Canadian Tamil MP Vijay Thanigasalam for sedition, criminal conspiracy, promoting enmity between religions, and provocation with intent to cause a riot. Referring to the Ontario ‘genocide’ accusation against Sri Lanka, Thanigasalam declared the passage of Bill 104 ‘a historic event for Tamil people in Ontario and across the world. Ontario is the first Government worldwide to pass such a law.”

The Bill 104, the Tamil Genocide Education Week Act, establishes seven days each year, May 11 to 18, during which Ontarians “are encouraged to educate themselves about, and to maintain their awareness of, the Tamil genocide and other genocides that have occurred in world history.” It is interesting to see if the organizers would educate people about ‘genocide of indigenous Canadians’ during the Genocide Education Week.

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Sri Lanka Friend to All Enemy to none https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/index.php/2021/04/24/sri-lanka-friend-to-all-enemy-to-none/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=sri-lanka-friend-to-all-enemy-to-none Sat, 24 Apr 2021 13:26:00 +0000 https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/?p=3047 The Story Still Untold Lanka Courier In the aftermath of the world’s greatest catastrophe, the...

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The Story Still Untold

Lanka Courier

In the aftermath of the world’s greatest catastrophe, the Second World War, Sri Lanka played a
significant role in turning the tide of events to negotiate peace between the two parties. Urging the
states that attended the San Francisco Conference in 1951 to choose love over hatred, Sri Lanka made
its mark in a long tradition of promoting world peace. To this date, it has not changed this standpoint.

 

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Inside Job Part 2: Controversial Brampton CAO handed $218K in City contracts to former Niagara political ally https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/index.php/2021/04/04/inside-job-part-2-controversial-brampton-cao-handed-218k-in-city-contracts-to-former-niagara-political-ally/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=inside-job-part-2-controversial-brampton-cao-handed-218k-in-city-contracts-to-former-niagara-political-ally Sun, 04 Apr 2021 12:27:08 +0000 https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/?p=2931 By Nida Zafar Click here to read

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By Nida Zafar

The post Inside Job Part 2: Controversial Brampton CAO handed $218K in City contracts to former Niagara political ally appeared first on Sri Lankan Canadian Action Coalition Ontario Bill 104.

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Serious flaws in Geneva resolution https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/index.php/2021/03/31/serious-flaws-in-geneva-resolution/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=serious-flaws-in-geneva-resolution Wed, 31 Mar 2021 22:02:50 +0000 https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/?p=2922 By Neville Ladduwahetty –The Island Resolution A/HRC/46/L.Rev.1 dated 16 March 2021 has been adopted by...

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By Neville Ladduwahetty –The Island

Resolution A/HRC/46/L.Rev.1 dated 16 March 2021 has been adopted by the UN Human Rights Council based on procedures and practices adopted by Committees of the General Assembly. Of the 47 Members in the Council, 22 Member States cast an affirmative vote, 11 members opposed it, and 14 abstained. The procedure adopted does not recognize the number of votes that abstained. Therefore, adoption of the Resolution was based on 22 affirmative votes, which is less than half the 47-members in the Council. This outcome should be a cause to fault the Council for adopting a procedure that permits a Resolution to be adopted even when more than half of its members decided not to support it for whatever reason.

However, other agencies of the UN adopt other procedures. For instance, the 15-member Security Council requires nine affirmative votes for a decision to be adopted. Others who see a moral obligation to the institution they represent require half plus one for a decision to be adopted. Simple majorities in most Parliaments require half plus one of its elected members for a Bill to become Law. Therefore, there is nothing comical if perceived from another perspective, that the resolution did not secure a majority of the 47 Member Human Rights Council and furthermore, that 25 Members did not affirmatively support the Resolution. The lesson, in particular for the Human Rights Council, is that the basis for adopting a Resolution should be revisited, because the current practice allows Resolutions to be adopted by less than half the number in the Council. This is not good enough a threshold for a UN institution as vital as the Human Rights Council where much is at stake for all States.

Notwithstanding all of the above, the hard reality is that the Resolution was adopted. Another hard reality that is of serious consequence is that the adoption of the Resolution comes at a great cost to the purposes and principles of the United Nations Charter. In fact, having stated at the very outset that the Resolution is “Guided by the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations …” the Resolution goes on to violate Article 1(2) and Article 2(7) of the Charter. In addition, it recalls co-sponsored Resolutions of 2015, 2017, and 2019, despite withdrawal from co-sponsorship because they violate Sri Lanka’s Constitution; a right granted under the Vienna Convention and furthermore, violates the mandate granted to the Human Rights Council under General Assembly Resolution 60/251. Under these circumstances, such a flawed Resolution should not be adopted, particularly with votes less than half the membership in the Council.

Article 1(2) states: “To develop friendly relations among nations based on respect of the principle of equal rights and self-determination of peoples…”. AND Article 2(7) states: “Nothing contained in the present Charter shall authorize the United Nations to intervene in matters which are essentially within the domestic jurisdiction of any state…”.

Article 1(2): Right of Self-Determination

The International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights AND the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights state in Article 1 of their respective Covenants:

“All peoples have the right of self-determination. By virtue of that right they freely determine their political status and freely pursue their economic, social and cultural development”.

In view of the people’s right to freely determine its political status, the Resolution of the Core-Group states: “…to ensure that all provincial councils, including the northern and eastern provincial councils, are able to operate effectively, in accordance with the thirteenth amendment to the Constitution of Sri Lanka” (Preamble to the Resolution)

COMMENT: This is a violation of the right of self-determination of a people to freely administer and govern themselves because it binds the people of Sri Lanka to a particular form of internal Government, and denies them the opportunity to self-determine a form of Local Government that best serves them. Therefore. this provision amounts to a denial of the fundamental freedom of a Peoples to govern themselves under a form of Government of their choosing. For the Human Rights Council to impose restrictions on how a Member State should govern itself is a denial of their fundamental right to self-determination.

The Preamble states: “Noting the enactment of the twentieth amendment to the Constitution of Sri Lanka, while stressing the importance of democratic governance and independent oversight of key institutions”.

COMMENT: The need to remind the people of Sri Lanka the “importance of democratic governance and oversight key institutions” is an insult in view of the fact that the amendment is a product the people of Sri Lanka have determined in keeping with their right of self-determination. Furthermore, Sri Lanka is not the only country to function under a Presidential system of government under provisions of separation of power and the internal arrangements in each are different as they are with the systems of governance in each state that supported the Resolution. Under the circumstances, the need to draw special attention to arrangements in Sri Lanka is a slur on what Sri Lanka has rightfully determined for itself.

It is indeed comical for the U.K. as the sponsor of the Resolution to “stress the importance of democratic governance”, when three-fourths (¾) of U.K. Parliament was for staying in the European Union whereas the majority of the people of U.K. wanted to leave the EU, thus laying bare the U.K.’s deficit in democratic governance.

Article 2(7): Domestic Jurisdiction

Section 2 of the Resolution states: “…implement the recommendations made by the Office and to give due consideration to the recommendations made by the special procedures ….”

Section 7 of the Resolution ‘expresses serious concern at the trends emerging over the past year, which represent a clear early warning sign of a deteriorating situation of human rights in Sri Lanka, including the accelerating militarization of civilian government functions; the erosion of the independence of the judiciary and key institutions; ongoing impunity and political obstruction; policies that adversely affect the right to freedom of religion or belief; increased marginalization of persons belonging to the Tamil and Muslim communities; surveillance and intimidation of civil society; restrictions on media; freedom, and shrinking democratic space; arbitrary detentions; alleged torture and sexual and gender-based violence’.

COMMENT: Section 7 of the Resolution is influenced by the Report of the Office of the High Commissioner. It contains comments and observations that violate provisions of Article 2(7) of the UN Charter in respect of issues that are “essentially within the domestic jurisdiction of any state” cited above.

Unlike under normal circumstances, the literal interpretation of Article 2(7) that prohibits UN from intervening in issues domestic as enunciated by Professor Kelsen and others of similar view, is justified under the extremely extraordinary background that Sri Lanka and the rest of mankind had to face due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This view was underscored by the UN when it decided NOT to intervene in issues domestic relating to how member states coped with the COVI-19 pandemic. What the Resolution addressed instead was the situation that prevailed in Sri Lanka in the background of a terrorist attack by Muslim extremists in 2019, and the measures adopted to cope with the pandemic in the absence of international guidelines that the UN should have spearheaded.

The extraordinary circumstances referred to above started with a new President being elected in November 2019. A bare two months later, starting January 2020, Sri Lanka encountered its first COVID-19 patient. Until August 2020 when a new Parliament was elected, it was the Executive that had to deal with the unprecedented challenges of COVID-19 pandemic.

In fact, most countries were at a loss as to what strategies to adopt to deal with the pandemic. Furthermore, a fact that should not be overlooked is that during the period of review by the Council, the Legislative and Executive Branches of the government in Sri Lanka had existed only for four months.

At the end of the day, governments have to make hard choices. In the background of a raging pandemic the choice is whether to implement strict controls by deploying personnel known for their ability to ensure strict adherence to health guidelines, or to relax them. Those countries that have decided to leave it to individuals as a matter of individual choice have experienced far more deaths than countries such as Sri Lanka that decided otherwise. Are they guilty of fratricide? To fault elected representatives for the choices they made in the fulfillment of their responsibilities to their people, is to place individual choice at a premium over state-initiated guidelines to contain a global crisis. Not to recognize the positive results in terms of lives saved because of the measures adopted by the government is not to recognize the most fundamental of all human rights which is right to life.

The impression conveyed upon perusing the list of societal shortcomings cited in Section 7 is that they are unique to Sri Lanka. On the other hand, over the span of one year there would be instances of societal shortcomings similar to those cited in Section 7, in every country. For instance, in other countries too, policies exist that affect freedom of religion or belief; marginalization of persons or groups; restrictions on media freedom; shrinking democratic space; sexual and gender-based violence etc. Such shortcomings exist, albeit to different degrees, in all of the 22 countries that supported the Resolution despite the existence of independent institutions, or how liberal and democratic their policies are. Therefore, what is so special or unique about Sri Lanka for it to deserve special attention?

Mandate of the Human Rights Council

Section 6 of the Resolution states: “Recognizes the importance of preserving and analyzing evidence relating to violations and abuses of human rights and related crimes in Sri Lanka…and to develop possible strategies for future accountability processes for gross violations of human rights or serious violations of international humanitarian law…and to support relevant judicial proceedings in Member States with competent jurisdiction”.

COMMENT: The Human Rights Council has NO MANDATE nor the COMPETENCE to collect evidence relating to international humanitarian law or to support judicial proceedings in Member States. The Council is expected to function within the mandate stated in UN Resolution 60/251. The relevant provisions are:

3. Decides also that the Council should address situations of violations of human rights, including gross and systematic violations, and make recommendations thereon. It should also promote the effective coordination and the mainstreaming of human rights within the United Nations system;

4. Decides further that the work of the Council shall be guided by the principles of universality, impartiality, objectivity and non-selectivity, constructive international dialogue and cooperation, with a view to enhancing the promotion and protection of all human rights, civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights, including the right to development…”.

The mandate of the Council does not authorize it to share its findings with other Member states for them to engage in judicial proceedings because it violates the “principle of equal sovereignty” (Article 1(1) of the Charter. If they do, what about the evidence sequestered for thirty years? Instead, what the Council is supposed to do, is to make recommendations to the states concerned. By focusing on Sri Lanka, the Council is being selective, thus violating the principles it is supposed to follow as stated in Paragraph 4 cited above.

A fact that should be borne in mind is that no investigations that could lead to a prosecution would be possible, using any evidence gathered for the purpose of future accountability exercises because access to victims and witnesses would not be possible due to Paragraph 25 of the OISL Report relating to confidentiality in the OISL Report.

CONCLUSION

Resolution A/HRC/46/L.Rev.1 dated 16 March 2021 has been adopted by the UN Human Rights Council based on the procedures and practices adopted by Committees of the General Assembly. Since the procedure adopted does not take into account the 14 abstained votes, the 22 members who supported the resolution prevailed over the 11 that opposed. Consequently, the procedure adopted enabled the Council to adopt the Resolutions based on votes that were less than half of the 47-member Council.

While the procedure adopted by the Council is acceptable for Committees of the General Assembly, the Human Rights Council is in a league by itself. Since its decisions impact on nearly every aspect of human life, the procedures and practices it adopts should be unique and stand alone. Another Council of similar standing is the Security Council. The procedure adopted by them is that out of its fifteen members at least nine should vote affirmatively for a decision to be adopted. Democratic Parliaments require half plus one of its members for a Bill or decision to have any legitimacy. Therefore, Sri Lanka should take the initiative to table a Resolution in the General Assembly calling on the Human Rights Council to take a fresh approach in the adoption of Resolutions. The outcome of such an approach should as a minimum be that even if the abstaining votes are not recognized, no Resolution should be adopted without half plus one of its members casting an affirmative vote for it to have any legitimacy i.e., more than 24 affirmative votes.

Having stated at the very outset that the resolution is “Guided by the purposes and principles of the Charter”, the Resolution goes on to violate Article 1(2) and 2(7) of the Charter, right of a State to withdraw from an undertaking if it is in conflict with the “internal law of fundamental importance” to the State based on a right granted under Article 46 of the Vienna Convention, and violates the mandate granted to the Human Rights Council. If a Resolution violates the stated purposes and principles of the UN Charter, the General Assembly should take note and declare such a Resolution unadoptable.

The call on the Sri Lankan government to hold Provincial Council elections and to ensure that all Provincial Councils operate effectively in accordance with the 13th Amendment is a violation of Article 1(2) because it denies the right of self-determination to institute local government arrangements that suit them best and to bind the people of Sri Lanka to internal arrangements of governance set by external entities.

Article 2(7) does not “authorize the United Nations to intervene in matters which are essentially within the domestic jurisdiction of any state…”. In keeping with this provision the UN did NOT intervene in the decisions taken by member states to handle the enormous challenges arising from the COVID-19 pandemic. Having stayed in the sidelines they have decided to single out Sri Lanka to document what the Council determines as shortcomings in the manner Sri Lanka coped with the crisis presented by the COVI-19 pandemic in a background of a Muslim terrorist attack that denied the fundamental right to life of hundreds.

The resolution is not binding on Sri Lanka. Furthermore, as stated above it violates certain provisions of the UN Charter and holds Sri Lanka to commitments it withdrew from on legitimate grounds. What Sri Lanka could do is table a Resolution in the General Assembly highlighting the issues at stake and seek redress. In addition, such a Resolution should propose a revision on the lines suggested above to the procedures adopted by the Human Rights Council in respect of how it decides to adopt Resolutions since current procedures are totally inappropriate for an all-important institution as the Human Rights Council.

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Has the UNHRC become a marionette show? https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/index.php/2021/03/18/has-the-unhrc-become-a-marionette-show/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=has-the-unhrc-become-a-marionette-show Thu, 18 Mar 2021 03:07:33 +0000 https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/?p=2795 Daily News– Wednesday, March 17, 2021 Ranjiv Goonawardena of International Consultants who is an ardent...

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Daily News– Wednesday, March 17, 2021

Ranjiv Goonawardena of International Consultants who is an ardent defender of Sri Lanka had a virtual meeting with Lord Naseby on March 13. During the meeting, Lord Naseby outlined substantial errors of a report from the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights on Sri Lanka.

The following are his observations:

LTTE terrorist enterprise estimated to be valued over US$1 billion

UN High Commissioner – Michelle Bachelet, failed to recognise that the transnational terrorist group the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), was one of the world’s most ruthless and wealthiest terrorist groups. The Group is estimated to be worth over US$1 billion.

It is understood that the group raised funds from human smuggling, made associations with other terror groups by selling and smuggling weapons and was involved in money laundering, drug trafficking, credit card fraud, financial crimes and other illegal activities. Other means of raising money was under duress from the Tamil businesses community and providing financial loans to Tamil businesses.

To prevent British soldiers being subject to allegations of war crimes, the UK Government is bringing in new laws to safeguard them

It is significant to highlight here that the UN Human Rights Council proceedings have been encouraged by the UK Government as the Chair of the Core Group. These proceedings attempt to take action against Sri Lankan soldiers on the basis of war crimes allegations. Britain’s actions can be deemed as duplicitous and inconsistent as it is about to bring new legislation to effect, called the Overseas Operations (Service Personnel and Veterans) Bill, which was introduced to the UK Parliament in March 2020.

The main feature of the Bill is that no charges except for those heinous, evidence-based war crimes, may be laid after the lapse of five years of the date of the incident. This implies the UK cannot be a party to supporting any allegations of overseas war crimes other than those of the same type. In particular, it should not be applied for a fellow member of the Commonwealth, especially for one who stood alongside the UK in the Second World War as Sri Lanka did. Furthermore, Sri Lanka stood with the UK during the Falklands War, one of the very few countries to do so.

People have failed to remember the contribution Sri Lanka made with more than 12,000 in the Ceylon Volunteers Force which was mobilized in 10 Infantry units and three artillery regiments.

Incidentally, the UK Government is a major donor to the Human Rights Council, at US $1,709,532. It has therefore become notably evident that powerful countries seem to have a different approach and mechanism, with regard to alleged human rights abuses by adopting a different way of mitigating and distancing themselves. For instance:

International Criminal Court (ICC) prosecutor drops investigation into UK war crimes in Iraq

The prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, Fatou Bensouda’s office said she was dropping a preliminary investigation into alleged war crimes by British troops in Iraq, even though she found a reasonable basis to believe they committed atrocities.

The ICC has been under fire by Washington for opening a full-fledged investigation into war crimes allegedly committed by US troops on the territory of ICC member Afghanistan. Former US President Donald Trump last year imposed sanctions on Bensouda because of the investigation.

Public records will indicate that powerful nations can get away with daylight murder while other nations are harassed into submission.

The Human Rights Council is meant to be totally impartial and unbiased. However, in this instance it has failed on the basic principle for justice for all, not as they have depicted for the chosen few. The Human Rights Council is not supposed to be a weapon to terrorise small and emerging nations of the world, as it has evidently done in this case with Sri Lanka. It should rather be a beacon of light and justice with integrity.

 
 

Everything has to be based on facts, evidence, due process and due diligence has to be carried out. It must never be based upon “shouting loud enough for a long time, repeat a lie often enough, till it becomes the truth” as seems to be the case regarding the proxy LTTE groups. They came to the Western Hemisphere as refugees and asylum seekers and are now in their second and third generation; being radicalised and indoctrinated by their elders to believe a falsehood. Apparently, the population of Tamils living in the countries which gave them refuge is over five million.

According to the above-mentioned population statistics there are more Tamils overseas than in Sri Lanka. This may explain why they are very vociferous to continually lobby their public office holders towards their separatist agenda, Tamil Eelam. The terror group is also influencing favourable Tamil asylum policies. They want to claim harassment in Sri Lanka to make it easier for them to bring over their kith and kin, and for the shadow-LTTE groups to continue to raise money. The proxy LTTE is continually engaged in terrorism and glorifies terrorism, hosting events annually. July 5, Black Tiger (Suicide Terrorist) Day and November 27, Heroes (Terrorists) Day to celebrate their dead cadres are examples of such glorification of terrorism.

The LTTE never had any democratic principles, there was never an election hosted but instead, they subscribed to a totalitarian mindset and idolised their dictatorial leader who controlled them without any transparency and no accountability.


Ranjiv Goonewardena

The UN Human Rights Council was never supposed to be an enforcement agency, judge, jury and executioner. It was never given that mandate.

The Council was never established to isolate countries, intimidate and harass nations. It was designed to help countries to improve their human rights performance in a collaborative manner. The Council’s job is to assist and to encourage, not to punish. This was the objective of those who created the Council in the first place, having terminated its predecessor. The High Commissioner has no authority to enforce Council resolutions.

The Constitution does not allow this but Michelle Bachelet, it seems, is going on an unauthorised path to enforce principles that have never been endorsed by the international community at all.

Former President and current PM Mahinda Rajapaksa

The only country in the whole world which defeated terrorism outright is Sri Lanka; it has been castigated and vilified by the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva. It was Mahinda Rajapaksa’s leadership allied with his brother Gotabaya Rajapaksa that built the Armed Forces to a level and competence where they could face the military might of the Tamil Tigers funded by the Tamil Diaspora. Regretfully the West refused to sell modern armaments leaving Sri Lanka with no option but to seek help from China and Pakistan which was forthcoming. If the LTTE, i.e., the Tamil Tigers, a terrorist group proscribed in over 30 countries, had not been defeated, then there would undoubtedly have been a rogue State of Eelam created. The real goal of the LTTE was to capture the North and the East of Sri Lanka. Then they could have used Sri Lanka as a springboard to start the second insurgency phase for a guerrilla warfare campaign in South India as there are 67 million Tamils in Southern India.

That would have eventually led to the breakup of India for the third time in 73 years of its independence. India would have jeopardised its ability to become an emerging superpower if that prevailed. China would be the only power in Asia if that occurred. China considers itself as an emerging global superpower in economy, military, technology, diplomacy and soft power influence.

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Was astounded with UK statement on Sri Lanka at UNHRC: Lord Naseby https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/index.php/2021/03/05/was-astounded-with-uk-statement-on-sri-lanka-at-unhrc-lord-naseby/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=was-astounded-with-uk-statement-on-sri-lanka-at-unhrc-lord-naseby Fri, 05 Mar 2021 08:00:00 +0000 http://www.srilankancanadian.ca/?p=2664 Thu, 04 Mar 2021 – Daily Mirror Commenting on the UK statement of February 25,...

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Thu, 04 Mar 2021 – Daily Mirror

Commenting on the UK statement of February 25, 2021 in Geneva on Sri Lanka at Human Rights Council by Lord Tariq Ahmad, President of the UK all party British Sri Lanka Parliamentary group Lord Naseby said he was astounded how the UK or any other Member of the Core group could possibly welcome the High Commissioner’s so called ‘detailed & most comprehensive report on Sri Lanka.

He said the report is riddled with totally unsubstantiated allegations & statements totally ignoring the huge effort to restore infrastructure & rehouse displaced Tamils & Muslims who lost their homes due to the Tamil Tigers.

Furthermore, he questioned how the UK Government knowingly & apparently consciously with-held vital evidence from the despatches of the UK military attaché Col Gash. 

“Evidence I obtained from a Freedom of Information request, resisted by the Foreign Office at every stage for over 2 years. These despatches from an experienced & dedicated senior officer in the field makes it clear that the Sri Lankan armed forces at every level acted & behaved appropriately trying hard not to harm any Tamil civilians who were held by the Tamil Tigers as hostages in a human shield,” Lord Naseby underlined.

“This conscious decision totally undermines the UN standing as an objective Leader of the Core group; made even worse by the conscious decision not to prosecute the LTTE leader living in the UK largely responsible for recruiting, training and deploying over 5,000 Child Soldiers – a real War Crime,” he said.

“Furthermore, the criticism of the way Covid has been handled with no burials for anyone based entirely on scientific advice at a time when there was no advice from WHO shows no understanding. Following the recent scientific advice from WHO burials are now permitted. The UN ignores the fact that only about 400 people on a population of 22m have sadly died in Sri Lanka whereas no less than 120,000+ have died in the UK with a population of 66 million. By any yardstick Sri Lanka has more successful at saving lives than any member of the Core group,” he said.

“It seems to me the Core group need to have more faith in the ‘Reconciliation structure already on the ground of the Missing Persons Commission, the Office of Reparations and the Truth & Reconciliation Commission being created but understandably not yet finalised because of the Pandemic. If the UN Core really want to help then why do not the UK, Canada & Germany release to Sri Lanka the names of all Asylum seekers since the war so they can be checked against the list of missing Persons & be removed from the master list,” he stressed.

“It is for Sri Lanka to decide how much help they seek from outside but for me I doubt the need or the efficacy of the UNHRC being able to help in an enhanced monitoring role as proposed,” Lord Naseby added.

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Consensus or Compromise will mean Admission https://www.srilankancanadian.ca/index.php/2021/02/17/consensus-or-compromise-will-mean-admission/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=consensus-or-compromise-will-mean-admission Wed, 17 Feb 2021 23:31:38 +0000 http://www.srilankancanadian.ca/?p=2511 By Palitha Senanayake Discussing the impending issues, Sri Lanka will be confronted with at the...

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By Palitha Senanayake

Discussing the impending issues, Sri Lanka will be confronted with at the forthcoming UNHRC sessions, Minister Sarath Weerasekera, blurted,’ “The arguments we present will not matter munch because they are determined to punish us”. This appears to be the thinking of the Government too, and in that mood it further confirms what the foreign secretary Mr. Colombage has aired on this topic, at a few instances.

This however appears, a rather capitulating attitude and an un-redeemable commiment, given the fact that, what the country and its forces have been accused of; killing civilians and violating basic human rights in milieu, that was 100 % LTTE creation. This should mean that the Government is prepared to admit, at least to some extent, that our forces, that risked their lives, with an extraordinary number killed and wounded, in rescuing 290,000 civilians, are guilty of deliberately killing, and violating the right of, civilians?  

Listening to M/s Tamara Kunanayagam, our former UNHCR representative, the other day who faced some of the UNHCR sessions in her forthright manner, it is all but right for us to withdraw from this 30/ A resolution  because she has been privy to how US exerted  undue influence on those resolutions against Sri Lanka. The issue now is, having rightly withdrawn from that resolution, on what and with whom are we now trying to reach a consensus? Further the attitude of the present UNHCR secretary is quite clear when you study the remarks she has made in her new report; she obviously thinks that she could treat the democratically elected Government of Sri Lanka like a doormat.

There are two salient factors in this whole scenario of ‘human rights violation’, that the present or any of the previous Governments have not taken in to reckoning and those two factors beam out as daylight amidst the concocted darkness of these allegations. These two issues have neither been considered even in the Maxwell Paranagama report nor in any other document that deals with the subject.

The first of these is the Census report of special population census survey carried out by the Department of Census & Statistics for the North East in the year 2011 and then the report of the General census carried out in 2012.  Apparently this figure of 40,000 missing persons, brought in Darusman and UNOCHA reports, is based on a report an AGA named Pratheepan has submitted to the Darusman  panel in 2012, having collected the statistics from the Grama Niladharis who were present at the Nanthikadal site at this so- called ‘last stage’. It is a fact that the Grama Niladharies have been the authorities in declaring population figures as per their voters list, since the LTTE did not allow the Department of census & statistics to conduct a proper survey in the North and some parts of the East since 1981. Further, it is also a fact that these Grama Niladharies worked under the LTTE since 2002, courtesy Ranil W Peace Agreement. It is also revealed that these GN’s , in the absence of a population survey, have  been manipulating their voters list for subsidies and purposes. Therefore, it is these Grama Niladharies who have declared a figure of 330,000 as the number of persons to have been present at  Nanthikadal from February to May 2009  as per the records they claimed to maintain of the Vanni area (4 Districts).  They have been maintaining these records by adding the persons born from Birth certificates issued and deducting those for whom death certificates have been issued.        

However, when the special survey was commissioned by the Department of census in 2011, as is usually done, these same Grama Niladharies were requested to present the figures they had in their possession and were told to update the same after enumerating, the persons present, known to have died due to natural or unnatural causes and the missing. Since the Grama Niladharies were not able to visit all the households in that limited time, school teachers from the GN divisions were hired with the co-ordination of the GN.  The wider purpose of this survey was to issue Death certificates to those who died during this questionable period between 2006 January to 2009 May; the period of displacement. This report, which covers the entire Northern province including Jaffna and Vanni, is available in the Department website and gives the following results,

Total number died from January 2009 to May 2009              8,898 persons

Of which deaths due to age and sickness                                 1,067 persons

          Do               due to natural disasters                                      45 persons

          Do               due to Accidents and homicides                     454  persons

          Do               due to other                                                     6,858  persons

          Do               due to reasons not stated                                 584 persons       

 

Then we also have the untraceable persons report for Northern province in the same website and that gives a verified figure of 2,651 persons of which the Jaffna figure of 651and that number is suspected to have migrated to UK and Canada through India. Therefore, for Darusman to maintain that 40,000 people have died from Jan to May 2009,  some people who have not registered their births in Sri Lanka should also may have died at Nanthikada!!!

 

This exercise gets still more interesting when the General survey carried out as at end of 2012 results were released in 2016.  By that time all the IDP’s internal migrations have been settled and hence the enumeration was more realistic.  In 2011 Rev. Rayappu Joseph declared under oaths to the LLRC that not 40,000 but 146,679 persons have perished at Nanthikadal claiming that the entire Vanni population that was present there was 429,059 and only 282,380 have been rescued.  The good Rev. had released these figures to Frances Harrison of BBC and even to Yasmin Sooka (Darusman Panel) who have quoted this figure in their publications.

 

When the 2012 All Island general census report was published in 20015 the report mentioned   430,525 persons as the total verified and living Vanni population that made not only Rev. Rayappu’s figures partisan but even his total population figures wrong.

Therefore, the question now is, is Sri Lanka, with the Government that fought the war in power, going to admit all these fabrications as true when incontrovertible evidence is available to the contrary??

 

The other major factor concerning these allegations is, what is the LAST STAGE of the war that this Darusman &  UNOCHA reports are interpreting as? Is it possible to identify the rescue operation of the Sri Lanka army as the ‘last stage’? As far as SL army was concerned the war was over on the 22nd January after they captured Kilinochchi and Mulaitivu and after the LTTE vacated their headquarters which they occupied for the last 27 years of the conflict.  That was when the Government dropped leaflets from the air and called the LTTE fighters to surrender with an offer of clemency.

 

The LTTE hot footed their belongings from Kilinochchi and Mulaitivu and took a load of civilians for their protection and went in to a hiding in a lagoon. They took along 300+ civilians and deployed them to construct bunkers, making them also combatants and positioned themselves in the No Fire Zones declared by the Government. Do you call that the LAST STAGE of the war when the war was well over by then and it was only the capture of LTTE leadership that remained?  The Second WW was over on the day they capture Berlin and not the day Hitler committed suicide. Conventionally, a war is called ‘Over’ the day the headquarters of one party is captured. Please study how the NATO bombed civilian sites in Kosovo and brought army generals Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic to trial. Prabhakaran did exactly the same thing and he went further by shooting the fleeing civilians. These are documented well in the Darusman report. The LTTE may be no more but what about Sampanthan who said that the LTTE is the sole representative of Tamil people and Suren Surenthiran who financed the LTTE?

Sri Lankan Foreign affairs officials are lining up for foreign travel but how many have studied these cases and explore the possibilities of taking these culprits who are now portraying themselves as victims.

Any compromise on this issue will not be in favor of the mandate this Government is enjoying!

 

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