Sri Lanka’s blind spot – Minister calls for end to ‘slaughter’ in Gaza after Auschwitz visit

Sri Lanka’s foreign minister Ali Sabry called for the end of “slaughter” in Gaza after a trip to Auschwitz earlier today, as he condemned the bombing of “refugee camps, hospitals, UN offices, schools, and escaping refugees-collectively punishing hapless women and children for no fault of their own”.

“Unless we do everything in our power to stop the slaughter and destruction of the hapless population in Gaza and other occupied territories of Palestine, future generations will undoubtedly look at those responsible in the same way we now look at the perpetrators of past atrocities,” continued Sabry. “We will have failed to avert a humanitarian catastrophe in the 21st century, right in front of our own eyes.”

His remarks, made in a lengthy post on Twitter, come despite the foreign minister leading the charge against international accountability for the genocide of Tamils committed by his own government.

During my recent visit to #Poland, I had the profoundly moving experience of walking through the #Auschwitz concentration camp and gas chambers. The sheer scale of the suffering that took place there is a stark reminder of humanity's capacity for cruelty. As I moved through the… pic.twitter.com/FJq3i6A3sJ

— M U M Ali Sabry (@alisabrypc) July 22, 2024

Last year the foreign minister slammed the Canadian government for its recognition of Tamil Genocide Remembrance Day, stating that it was a “total lie”“Everybody knows there was no genocide in our country," said Sabry.

In the years since the Tamil genocide of 2009, Sabry has represented the Sri Lankan government at the UN Human Rights Council as it rejected repeated resolutions attempting to hold perpetrators of the mass atrocities to account. A long-time Rajapaksa ally and a member of the legal team of Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s presidential counsel, Sabry helped campaign for the accused war criminal in 2019.

Several Sri Lankan leaders, including president Ranil Wickremesinghe, have spoken out over Israel’s offensive into Gaza, but at the same time have also maintained friendly relations with Israel and sent thousands of workers to the country in recent months.

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