This comment on Sri Lanka’s social media blocking that commenced on 7 March 2018, was written on 8 March 2018 at the request of Irida Lakbima Sunday broadsheet newspaper, which carried excerpts from it in their issue of 11 March 2018. The full text is shared here, for the record.
In 2015, the UN is 70 and Sri Lanka’s membership is 60 years
On 24 October 2015, United Nations marks its 70th birthday. A few weeks later, on 15 December 2015, is the 60th anniversary of Sri Lanka (then Ceylon) becoming a member state of this inter-governmental organisation.
In this week’s Ravaya column, (appearing in issue of 25 Oct 2015), I continue my focus on Sri Lanka’s engagement with the UN system. In last week’s column, we recalled how Sri Lanka’s heads of state/government and diplomats engaged with the General Assembly and Security Council.
Today, we look at some eminent Lankan professionals who joined the UN system in expert or management positions and contributed to its intellectual and institutional development over the decades.
As Thalif Deen, a journalist of Lankan origin who has been reporting from the UN headquarters since the mid 1970s, once wrote: “When future historians take stock of Sri Lanka’s enduring contributions during its first 50 years at the United Nations, they may realise that our political legacy spanned both the upper and lower limits of the universe: the sky above and the oceans below.”
The list of Lankans who have excelled within the UN system is long, and I have had to be selective here. The ones mentioned in this column are:
Dhanapala Samarasekera (one of the earliest Lankans to join the UN system, as an expert with ECOSOC);
Neville Kanakaratne (legal advisor to the second Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold);
Nandasiri Jasentuliyana (Director of UN Office for Outer Space Affairs among other positions);
Hamilton Shirley Amerasinghe (President of the UN General Assembly in 1976, and later president of the UN Law of the Sea Conference);
Gritakumar E Chitty (a former Registrar of the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea);
Gamani Corea (a former Secretary General of UNCTAD);
Christopher G Weeramantry (Justice of the International Court of Justice and later its Vice President);
Rajendra Coomaraswamy (Assistant Administrator of UNDP and Director of UNDP’s Regional Bureau for Asia and the Pacific);
Radhika Coomaraswamy (UN Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict 2006-2012);
Jayantha Dhanapala, President of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Conference 1995 and Under Secretary General heading the UN Department of Disarmament (1998–2003)
I end with a reference to Lakshman Kadirgamar, who served the ILO and later WIPO in senior positions in Geneva before becoming Sri Lanka’s finest Minister of Foreign Affairs in 1994. I quote from the Foreword that Kadirgamar wrote to a book on the United Nations in Sri Lanka that I wrote for the UN Information Centre (UNIC) in Colombo in 1995 to mark the UN’s 50th anniversary.
UN Headquarters in New York lights up for 70th birthday (UN Photo)
On 24 October 2015, United Nations marks its 70th birthday. A few weeks later, on 15 December 2015, is the 60th anniversary of Sri Lanka (then Ceylon) becoming a member state of this inter-governmental organisation.
In this week’s Ravaya column, (appearing in issue of 18 Oct 2015), I look at Sri Lanka’s engagement with the UN. It started in December 1955, when Ceylon was admitted to membership (after its application had been resisted by the Soviet Union since 1950, on the grounds that Ceylon was ‘not fully independent’).
Ceylon/Sri Lanka has thus had 60 years of fruitful engagement with the UN through its permanent mission that was set up in New York in early 1956. The country has played a key role in global debates at the General Assembly, Security Council and other bodies and specialized agencies of the UN family.
I quote from the first speech by a Lankan head of government at the General Assembly, made by Prime Minister Solomon W R D Bandaranaike on 22 Nov 1956. I refer to illustrious ambassadors of Ceylon/Sri Lanka who have served as Permanent Representative to the UN – among them scholars, eminent lawyers and career diplomats.
They not only articulated their country’s position at the UN, but also stood for larger ideals such as non-alignment, peaceful resolution of conflicts, nuclear disarmament, and peaceful uses of both outer space and the international seas beyond territorial waters of states.
I point out that, through intellectual contributions and principled positions, Sri Lanka has had an influence disproportionate to the size of its population and economy – a case of punching above its weight category.
I also clarify that the UN Secretariat in New York and its extension in Colombo are actually at the service of its 193 member states which remain the ultimate masters. In fact, Sri Lanka has been a fee-paying member state: its contribution to the UN regular budget for 2015 is USD 678,391 (approx LKR 93,155,300).
So when occasional protesters demonstrate outside the UN office in Colombo, it only shows their gross ignorance of who actually heads the UN. Their own government is one of 193 members that determine the inter-governmental body’s policies and operations. Meanwhile we the citizens of Sri Lanka pay 0.025% of the UN’s annual budget.
Sadly, the UN Information Centre in Colombo has failed to promote such conceptual clarity among the Lankan politicians and media, some of who harbour serious misconceptions about the UN and its operations.
Sri Lanka’s President Maithripala Sirisena addresses the 70th Session of the United Nations General Assembly at the UN in New York on September 30, 2015. AFP PHOTO – JEWEL SAMAD
Sir Senerat Gunewardene, right, Ceylon’s first Permament Representative to the United Nations, with the then UN Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold (UN Photo Archive)
Ceylon Prime Minister S W R D Bandaranaike (third from left) at the UN Headquarters, Nov 1956. On extreme right is Sir Senerat Gunewardene, Ceylon’s first Permanent Representative to the UN (UN Photo Archive)
Left – Sri Lanka PM Sirimavo Bandaranaike speaking at UN on 9 Sep 1976, and her daughter President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga speaking at UN in September 1995 (UN Photos)