In what is seen as another blow to its already damaged credibility, the UN Human Rights Council on Wednesday, May 27, voted in favor of a resolution praising
An emergency session of the UN Human Rights Council (HRC) was initiated by the council’s European Union members and supported by
However, by passing procedures,
Entitled “Assistance to
The Sri Lankan-proposed resolution described the conflict as a “domestic matter that doesn’t warrant outside interference”.
The resolution also supported
The resolution condemned attacks on civilians by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, and their use of civilians as human shields in the final stages of the conflict, but said nothing about mass scale civilian killings committed by government forces or other human rights concerns including forced disappearances and the harassment of human rights activists and journalists.
The European Union and some other countries sought to make amendments to the Sri Lankan resolution.
However,
Subsequently, the Sri Lankan resolution was voted on and carried by a majority of 17 member states.
Western diplomats and human rights officials were shocked by the outcome at the end of an acrimonious two-day special session to examine the humanitarian and human rights situation in
Twelve countries, mostly European and including
The Sri Lankan government hailed the outcome as an emphatic “diplomatic victory".
While the army and state-run newspapers continued to celebrate the victory on the battlefield, the government celebrated what it saw as a triumph on the diplomatic front.
"This is a strong endorsement of our president's efforts to rout terrorism, and the successful handling of the world's biggest hostage crisis,"
"It is a clear message that the international community is behind
Samarasinghe thanked the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) Group and the Organisation of The Islamic Conference (OIC) Group - two important cross-regional groups at the HRC - and in particular the support of the African Regional Group as well as some countries of the Latin American and Asian Groups for their support to Sri Lanka.
The Sri Lanka Ambassador in
“This was a lesson that a handful of countries which depict themselves as the international community do not really constitute the majority,” Dayan Jayatilleka said.
“The vast mass of humanity are in support of
Western diplomats said that the result called into question the entire purpose of the HRC – where the 47 members sit as equals with no right of veto for any country.
The
They are due to take their seats in mid-June.
The
Many rights organisations calling for an independent probe into atrocities the Sri Lankan military committed against Tamils in the past few months were dismayed at the results.
Tom Porteous, the
Juliette de Rivero, advocacy director in the
“The vote is extremely disappointing and is a low point for the Human Rights Council. It abandons hundreds of thousands of people in
The European Union also expressed regret at the failure to launch a probe into alleged war crimes committed by the Sri Lankan military during its offensive against Tamil Tigers.
"The EU regrets that it was not possible for the Human Rights Council to agree on an acceptable outcome of the special session addressing the serious human rights violations and the humanitarian crisis," a statement said.
"We regret that the proposals presented by the EU to amend the Sri Lankan draft resolution could be neither discussed nor considered by the council" after a "closure of debate" rule was supported by a majority of members.
"Such motions contradict the very spirit in which the Human Rights Council was conceived," the Czech presidency of the 27-nation bloc said.
The EU said that the outcome of the rights council meeting in
It said it would continue to work with the UN and its agencies to alleviate the suffering of civilians on the ground and to work for the achievement of durable stability."
UN Watch, a non-governmental organization based in
"
"Sri Lanka does not deserve to be praised, but rather condemned for blocking humanitarian emergency relief to thousands, creating conditions leading to the spread of diseases, and for seizing doctors who exposed to the world the untold suffering of innocent civilians.”
Francis Boyle, Professor of International Law at the University of Illinois College of Law, referring to the resolution passed at the United Nations Human Rights Council on the
"This Resolution simultaneously gives the imprimatur of the U.N. Human Rights Council to the ethnic cleansing, genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes that the Government of Sri Lanka has already inflicted upon the Tamils in the past , as well as the Council's proverbial "green light" for the GOSL to perpetrate and escalate more of the same international crimes against the Tamils in the future," Boyle said.