SRI LANKA: Colombo’s Diplomatic Sparring Games with EU, U.S.
By Analysis by Amantha Perera
COLOMBO, Nov 7 (IPS) - One thing that has set apart the current administration of President Mahinda
Rajapaksa from those of his predecessors is its diplomatic duels with
international heavyweights.
While battling the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, the government took
criticism of its conduct of the war and other rights violations by western
nations in international fora head-on, and on more than one occasion came
out a winner.
It has successfully fended off scrutiny at United Nation bodies like the
Security Council and the U.N. Human Rights Council with the help of regional
powers like India and China. Now once again the government is engaged in
high-stakes diplomatic manoeuvres, this time with the U.S. and the European
Union.
With the former, it is on the request by the U.S. Department of Homeland
Security (DHS) to interview the former commander of Army and the current
chief of defence staff Lt Gen Sarath Fonseka. With the EU it is over the
extension of a preferable tariff waver known as Generalised System of
Preference Plus or GSP Plus that was worth over 100 million U.S. dollars in
2008.
The EU last month released the report of an investigation it carried out on
whether Sri Lanka should be given the GSP Plus extension. The report said
that Sri Lanka was in breach of full implementation of the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the Convention against Torture and the
Convention on the Rights of the Child. The failure could spell the end, at
least temporarily, of the tariff concessions.
The Sri Lankan government had until Nov. 6 to make an appeal or
representations against the suspension. The government submitted a 48-
page document to the EU in Colombo on Nov. 6, titled ‘Observations of the
GOSL [Government of Sri Lanka] in Respect of the Report on the Findings of
the Investigation with Respect to the Effective Implementation of Certain
Human Rights Conventions in Sri Lanka’.
The report challenged the findings of the EU report. It said, "in this situation,
of the very foundation of the (EU) Report being in question, it would be
reasonable to keep action on the document in abeyance, while the authorities
of the European Commission and the Government of Sri Lanka continue a
constructive engagement concerning the issues at hand."
The government has maintained that while not cooperating with the EU
investigation, its preferred mode of negotiation was through bilateral
dialogue.
"The government of Sri Lanka is taking positive action (on the GSP Plus
extension)," Foreign Minister Rohitha Bogollagama said on Nov. 5. "We are in
dialogue with the EU."
High-level Sri Lankan diplomats accredited to the EU in Brussels were in Sri
Lanka finalising the government's response over this week before it was
handed over. Export Development and International Trade Minister Prof. G.L.
Peiris told the Sri Lankan parliament on Nov. 5 that the government had
prepared a comprehensive response to the EU report.
Immediately after the October EU report came out, Peiris said that the
government would not change its stance and subject itself to any kind of EU
investigation. The government had rejected EU requests for an investigation
in October 2008 and maintained that such an investigation from foreign
powers would undermine the country’s sovereignty.
The EU too has said that it wanted to keep an open dialogue with the Sri
Lankan government. EU Ambassador to Sri Lanka Bernard Savage told IPS last
month the EU hoped that continued dialogue would result in a positive
development.
Some members of the EU have been staunch critics of the government’s war
efforts, but they have had limited clout within the U.N. to force any kind of
resolution against Sri Lanka.
The U.S. has also been vociferous in its criticism of the conduct of Sri Lanka’s
decades-long war that finally ended in May. The State Department last month
released a report to Congress on the conduct of the final months of the war.
It was critical of both the armed forces and the defeated Tigers.
The rising diplomatic tensions between the U.S. and Sri Lanka went up by
notches when on Oct. 28 the DHS requested Lt Gen Fonseka to attend a
voluntary meeting at the DHS office in Oklahoma. Fonseka, who is a U.S.
green card holder, was in the U.S. visiting his daughters but was travelling on
a Sri Lankan diplomatic passport.
According to Bogollagama the DHS officials had informed Fonseka he was to
be interviewed as a source on Defence Secretary Gottabaya Rajapaksa and
alleged war crimes. Rajapaksa, who is a U.S. citizen, was instrumental in
leading the final war efforts alongside Fonseka.
The Sri Lankan government immediately called the request for the interview
beyond U.S. jurisdiction. Bogollagama said that Fonseka was privy to
privileged information due to his office and he could not share them with a
third party without the approval of the government.
"There is no separation between your public life and private life (when you
hold high office)," he said, referring to the nature of Fonseka’s visit.
He met with the U.S. ambassador to Sri Lanka, Patricia Butenis, on Nov. 2 and
conveyed the government position. He also held a telephone discussion with
Butenis on the night of Nov. 3. The U.S. ambassador had informed the foreign
minister that she would convey Colombo’s position to Washington. The U.S.
Embassy in Colombo and the DHS office were tight-lipped on the details of
the interview that was scheduled for 3:00 p.m. on Nov. 4, U.S. time, at the
DHS Oklahoma office.
As the country waited in suspense to see whether Fonseka would in fact
attend the meeting, in the afternoon of Nov. 4, Sri Lankan time, about 18
hours before he was to attend the meeting, news broke in the Sri Lankan
parliament that Fonseka had left the U.S.
His departure was hailed as a diplomatic success by the Sri Lankan foreign
office. "I consider it as a success of the diplomatic relationship (between Sri
Lanka and the U.S.)," Minister Bogollagama said on Thursday morning after
Fonseka had arrived on the island.
Bogollagama said that Fonseka had initially agreed to attend the interview but
had later changed his mind after the government conveyed its decision.
Before the request for the interview with Fonseka, Defence Secretary
Rajapaksa had been interviewed on arrival in the U.S. by immigration officials
when he was travelling as a delegate to the U.N. General Assembly sessions
in October.
Bogollagama, who was present at the interview, said that Rajapaksa was
interviewed as the Defence Secretary of Sri Lanka and not on the basis of his
U.S. citizenship. He did not divulge any details of the interview but said he
saw no connection between the immigration interview with Rajapaksa and the
DHS request for one with Fonseka.
In between the two came the State Department’s 68-page report to Congress
on the conduct of the last phase of Sri Lanka’s ethnic conflict. The sequence
of events has led nationalist groups in Colombo to accuse the U.S. of trying
use high-handed tactics.
"This attempt to interview the general is an effort to influence the sovereignty
of Sri Lanka," member of parliament for the People’s Liberation Front Vijitha
Herath said. The same accusation has been levelled against the EU—that of
using financial instruments like tax concessions to influence internal decision
making in Sri Lanka.
By the end of the week, though, Bogollagama appeared to be satisfied that
the latest diplomatic storms had been weathered. But many more may be
around the corner.
(FIN/2009)
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