LankaWeb Jilted by the west, Sri Lanka cozying up to new friends
By Ranjit J. Perera
Disappointed with the lack of support from the west at a crucial time in its fight against terrorism, Sri Lanka has successfully bonded with new friends. Vital support from a range of countries including Iran, China and Libya has helped Sri Lanka scoff at the big stick wielded by western countries.
Many European countries started cutting back on military assistance and development assistance to Sri Lanka, says former foreign secretary Palitha Kohona who this week will assume duties in his new post as Sri Lankas new ambassador at the United Nations in New York. The Millennium Challenge Account of the U.S. was summarily withdrawn from us. So, in the circumstances, either we had to succumb to acknowledge blackmail and compromise with terrorism, or look for other friends, which we did.
Kohona made these comments during a wide-ranging interview at the foreign ministry in Colombo for Sri Lanka News Network less than a week prior to his departure to New York to take up his new appointment.
After grappling with terrorism for more than thirty years, Sri Lanka was nearly held to ransom by western countries when crucial aid was withheld at a decisive stage in its battle with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) led by its reclusive leader Velupillai Prabhakaran. With Sri Lankas security forces making steady progress against the rebels, the voices from the international community, including LTTE sympathizers, grew strident as they accused the government and its forces of human rights violations.
As the LTTE steadily lost ground it controlled in the north and east of the country, organizations such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch joined the chorus of accusations against Sri Lanka followed by some western governments expressing concern. During the last days of the conflict in May this year, several countries and international non-governmental organizations were actively working to negotiate a ceasefire and ensure the safety of rebel leaders. However, in carefully crafted military maneuvers, the Sri Lankan armed forces opened up avenues for the nearly 300,000 Tamil civilians, held hostage by the rebels on a small strip of beach, to escape to the safety of government controlled areas.
The large number of internally displaced persons (IDPs), since housed in camps in Vavuniya in northern Sri Lanka, has been the subject of more accusations against the government.
When you talk of human rights, you have to talk about the totality of it, says Kohona. There is no country in the world, absolutely no country even in the developed world, where human rights or standards are complied with absolutely. Sri Lanka is doing well, and if you were to look at countries of the developed world, you can point out many lapses. But we are nowhere near the bottom, and it is absolutely unfair to criticize Sri Lanka for its lapses, when we have actually done extremely well.
Even as western countries withdrew support based on these accusations, Sri Lanka found many other countries willing to lend a hand. Key among them is India, which has supported Sri Lanka during the crucial final phases of the conflict. Sri Lanka in turn has sought advice from India and kept it informed of key developments with top officials from both countries visiting each other and exchanging information. India continues to support Sri Lanka with medical and material assistance for IDPs as well as with assistance for infrastructure development.
Whether they are new or old, Sri Lankas non-traditional friends are generous according to Kohona. He says both Iran and China have donated billions of dollars while support from traditional donors such as India, Japan, and South Korea remain strong. In making the decision to shift the focus from the west to the east, Kohona says the government exploited the fact that the economic focus also appeared to be shifting in that same direction. These new and warmer relationships are allowing Sri Lanka to continue to invest in development projects.
We shifted our focus from our traditional contacts towards the east, and we were very successful, Kohona says. In fact, we hardly felt the pinch of the withdrawal of western development assistance.
One prominent result of the relationships the government has cultivated with countries in the east is the arrest of Selavarajah Pathmanathan. Better known as KP, Pathmanathan was the chief procurer of arms and ammunition for the LTTE. He had evaded the law and widely traveled around the world despite being on Interpols wanted list. Less than three months after Sri Lankan forces decimated the LTTE and its leadership, Sri Lanka arrested Pathmanathan in a dramatic coup.
Over the last two or three years, we have established extremely effective linkages with these countries [such as Laos, Vietnam and Cambodia] with exceptional results, Kohona says. Our success in capturing KP could be attributed to some of the contacts that were developed over the last two or three years.
Sri Lankas western relations, however, remain significant in its continued fight against LTTE propaganda. Western countries crackdown on terrorism played a key role in this regimes surprising success in defeating the LTTE and restraining its networks abroad. Kohona says that was one of the biggest challenges he faced when he took up his post as the foreign secretary.
First and foremost, we had to ensure that the international community never compromised on the view that Sri Lanka was one entity, says Kohona. It was not two entities, and it will not be two entities. We succeeded in that.
Western countries, including the United States, Canada, and Britain among others, were particularly helpful for the government when they chose to proscribe the LTTE
Not only was the LTTE proscribed, through our efforts, these are more recent achievements LTTE front organizations were also proscribed, Kohona explains citing The World Tamil Movement in Canada and the Tamil Rehabilitation Organization in the United States as examples.
In another strategic move, Kohona says the government targeted individual LTTE operatives in western countries.
The United States prosecuted over 15, France has prosecuted over 20, Italy has taken in close to 30 and Canada is prosecuting others, Kohona says. This is an area where the Foreign Service through incessant contact with western capitals succeeded in putting a clamp on the LTTE leadership overseas. And it worked.
Even though few expect the LTTE to reemerge to its former strength, many international supporters continue to advocate the LTTE cause the fight for a separate state. Therefore, maintaining strong ties with powerful western countries will remain a crucial component of the governments national security strategy. Furthermore, even though development assistance now comes mainly from eastern allies, the countrys trade links continue to be with the west, as Kohona explains.
Countries with whom we have had very close relations until recently may have quietly drifted away from us, admits Kohona. It is our challenge now to bring them back to where they were because Sri Lanka is a non-aligned country. We do not believe in confrontational relationships with the rest of the world. We never have.
That though could be a tough task even for a seasoned diplomat like Kohona as reports emerge of a spat with Colombos British High Commission over the issue of a visa for Kohona to travel via London, which may have delayed his departure for New York by a day.
In response to a request for comments on newspaper reports, Acting British High Commissioner Mark Gooding said the following in an emailed statement: The suggestion that there is any political bias in our visa application process is completely unfounded. We never comment on individual visa applications, but many of the details of the various cases reported are incorrect.
As the U.N. General Assembly gets underway next month, Sri Lanka will no doubt be looking to cement existing relationships and make new friends. Whether western countries will be open to a rapprochement with Sri Lanka, only time will tell.
By Ranjit J. Perera
Disappointed with the lack of support from the west at a crucial time in its fight against terrorism, Sri Lanka has successfully bonded with new friends. Vital support from a range of countries including Iran, China and Libya has helped Sri Lanka scoff at the big stick wielded by western countries.
Many European countries started cutting back on military assistance and development assistance to Sri Lanka, says former foreign secretary Palitha Kohona who this week will assume duties in his new post as Sri Lankas new ambassador at the United Nations in New York. The Millennium Challenge Account of the U.S. was summarily withdrawn from us. So, in the circumstances, either we had to succumb to acknowledge blackmail and compromise with terrorism, or look for other friends, which we did.
Kohona made these comments during a wide-ranging interview at the foreign ministry in Colombo for Sri Lanka News Network less than a week prior to his departure to New York to take up his new appointment.
After grappling with terrorism for more than thirty years, Sri Lanka was nearly held to ransom by western countries when crucial aid was withheld at a decisive stage in its battle with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) led by its reclusive leader Velupillai Prabhakaran. With Sri Lankas security forces making steady progress against the rebels, the voices from the international community, including LTTE sympathizers, grew strident as they accused the government and its forces of human rights violations.
As the LTTE steadily lost ground it controlled in the north and east of the country, organizations such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch joined the chorus of accusations against Sri Lanka followed by some western governments expressing concern. During the last days of the conflict in May this year, several countries and international non-governmental organizations were actively working to negotiate a ceasefire and ensure the safety of rebel leaders. However, in carefully crafted military maneuvers, the Sri Lankan armed forces opened up avenues for the nearly 300,000 Tamil civilians, held hostage by the rebels on a small strip of beach, to escape to the safety of government controlled areas.
The large number of internally displaced persons (IDPs), since housed in camps in Vavuniya in northern Sri Lanka, has been the subject of more accusations against the government.
When you talk of human rights, you have to talk about the totality of it, says Kohona. There is no country in the world, absolutely no country even in the developed world, where human rights or standards are complied with absolutely. Sri Lanka is doing well, and if you were to look at countries of the developed world, you can point out many lapses. But we are nowhere near the bottom, and it is absolutely unfair to criticize Sri Lanka for its lapses, when we have actually done extremely well.
Even as western countries withdrew support based on these accusations, Sri Lanka found many other countries willing to lend a hand. Key among them is India, which has supported Sri Lanka during the crucial final phases of the conflict. Sri Lanka in turn has sought advice from India and kept it informed of key developments with top officials from both countries visiting each other and exchanging information. India continues to support Sri Lanka with medical and material assistance for IDPs as well as with assistance for infrastructure development.
Whether they are new or old, Sri Lankas non-traditional friends are generous according to Kohona. He says both Iran and China have donated billions of dollars while support from traditional donors such as India, Japan, and South Korea remain strong. In making the decision to shift the focus from the west to the east, Kohona says the government exploited the fact that the economic focus also appeared to be shifting in that same direction. These new and warmer relationships are allowing Sri Lanka to continue to invest in development projects.
We shifted our focus from our traditional contacts towards the east, and we were very successful, Kohona says. In fact, we hardly felt the pinch of the withdrawal of western development assistance.
One prominent result of the relationships the government has cultivated with countries in the east is the arrest of Selavarajah Pathmanathan. Better known as KP, Pathmanathan was the chief procurer of arms and ammunition for the LTTE. He had evaded the law and widely traveled around the world despite being on Interpols wanted list. Less than three months after Sri Lankan forces decimated the LTTE and its leadership, Sri Lanka arrested Pathmanathan in a dramatic coup.
Over the last two or three years, we have established extremely effective linkages with these countries [such as Laos, Vietnam and Cambodia] with exceptional results, Kohona says. Our success in capturing KP could be attributed to some of the contacts that were developed over the last two or three years.
Sri Lankas western relations, however, remain significant in its continued fight against LTTE propaganda. Western countries crackdown on terrorism played a key role in this regimes surprising success in defeating the LTTE and restraining its networks abroad. Kohona says that was one of the biggest challenges he faced when he took up his post as the foreign secretary.
First and foremost, we had to ensure that the international community never compromised on the view that Sri Lanka was one entity, says Kohona. It was not two entities, and it will not be two entities. We succeeded in that.
Western countries, including the United States, Canada, and Britain among others, were particularly helpful for the government when they chose to proscribe the LTTE
Not only was the LTTE proscribed, through our efforts, these are more recent achievements LTTE front organizations were also proscribed, Kohona explains citing The World Tamil Movement in Canada and the Tamil Rehabilitation Organization in the United States as examples.
In another strategic move, Kohona says the government targeted individual LTTE operatives in western countries.
The United States prosecuted over 15, France has prosecuted over 20, Italy has taken in close to 30 and Canada is prosecuting others, Kohona says. This is an area where the Foreign Service through incessant contact with western capitals succeeded in putting a clamp on the LTTE leadership overseas. And it worked.
Even though few expect the LTTE to reemerge to its former strength, many international supporters continue to advocate the LTTE cause the fight for a separate state. Therefore, maintaining strong ties with powerful western countries will remain a crucial component of the governments national security strategy. Furthermore, even though development assistance now comes mainly from eastern allies, the countrys trade links continue to be with the west, as Kohona explains.
Countries with whom we have had very close relations until recently may have quietly drifted away from us, admits Kohona. It is our challenge now to bring them back to where they were because Sri Lanka is a non-aligned country. We do not believe in confrontational relationships with the rest of the world. We never have.
That though could be a tough task even for a seasoned diplomat like Kohona as reports emerge of a spat with Colombos British High Commission over the issue of a visa for Kohona to travel via London, which may have delayed his departure for New York by a day.
In response to a request for comments on newspaper reports, Acting British High Commissioner Mark Gooding said the following in an emailed statement: The suggestion that there is any political bias in our visa application process is completely unfounded. We never comment on individual visa applications, but many of the details of the various cases reported are incorrect.
As the U.N. General Assembly gets underway next month, Sri Lanka will no doubt be looking to cement existing relationships and make new friends. Whether western countries will be open to a rapprochement with Sri Lanka, only time will tell.