It is disappointing that Sri Lanka, a country
with such a serious democratic deficit, is chairing the Commonwealth for the
next two years. All signs indicate Sri Lanka is descending into
authoritarianism, and much work is needed if Sri Lankan democracy is to be
saved
Given Sri Lanka’s chairmanship, it is not clear what the
values and principles of the Commonwealth actually are. At November’s
Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Colombo, many heads of
state chose not to attend.Mauritius has even given up its right to host CHOGM
in 2015, and the event is now slated to be held in Malta. Of those who did
participate, British Prime Minister David Cameron made the most noise.
Sri Lanka continues to face a human rights crisis of
epic proportions. The continued erosion of the rule of law, impunity, the
government’s blatant unwillingness to implement the most meaningful
recommendations from the final report of its own reconciliation commission (the
Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission), and the recent unconstitutional
impeachment of the chief justice underscore this. Sri Lanka is no longer a
semi-democratic country — it is a dying ‘democracy on life-support’.
The Sri Lankan government chose to hold CHOGM in Colombo,
principally because of the prestige associated with the event and desire to
show the world that Sri Lanka has moved on from three decades of brutal war.
The event, however, did not go that smoothly. The regime consistently limited access
for international journalists, especially to the North,
and revealed its deep unease with being questioned. With the way CHOGM was
handled, the current regime has yet again reminded domestic and international
observers that it is far from untouchable. That being said, the regime remains
the only game in town.
Many countries — including India, China, the United States
and Japan — are currently vying for influence on the island. But the reality is
that the international community’s ability to shape events in Sri Lanka remains
limited. Not helping this are Sri Lanka’s mainstream media, which consistently
fails to report the news in any meaningful way. The harsh repression of
dissent has resulted in significant self-censorship. A deeply fragmented
opposition is also an issue.
India has long had a very understandable interest in the way
things play out on the island. China’s interest is more recent and includes geopolitical and economic concerns.
But it is the American case that is especially intriguing. Washington appears
to be using Sri Lanka as a test case, perhaps to see how effective similar
interventions, international pressure and
the concomitant use of venues like the UN Human Rights Council (HRC) — where two resolutions
critical of the government’s actions have already been passed — can actually
be. Aside from speaking more generally about human rights and democratic
reforms, Washington is pressuring the regime to implement the recommendations
emanating from the LLRC. Though bilateral ties are also very important, Washington
has used the HRC as a platform to rally international support for these issues.
Washington is quite open that another resolution will be
floated at the HRC in March 2014, and it is likely that such a resolution will
pass. But will the resolution be ‘strong’, and include a provision for an
independent international investigation into wartime atrocities and/or an
international mechanism to monitor ongoing developments on the island? And —
more importantly — would a strong resolution on Sri Lanka at the HRC be
effective? Would it compel the regime in Colombo to modify its behaviour,
respect human rights, the rule of law and promote democratic values?
Another coming measurement of Sri Lanka’s democratic
condition will be in the next parliamentary and presidential elections, which
could come as soon as early 2014. While the Tamil National Alliance (TNA)
has recently been effective in voicing the concerns of Tamil people and
speaking more generally about the erosion of democracy in the country, the TNA
will never be able to capture a huge swath of the mostly Sinhalese electorate.
The trick for the TNA will be to build an alliance with one of the larger
Sinhalese parties — in this case, the United National Party (UNP).
When it comes to democracy and human rights in Sri Lanka
the signs are, quite evidently, not promising. Unfortunately, it looks like
things will get worse before they get better.
Taylor Dibbert is an international consultant based in
Washington, DC.
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