27 April, 2024

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Promoting Accountability Internationally

By Rajiva Wijesinha –

Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha MP

The International Centre for Ethnic Studies (ICES) invited me recently to a seminar which was essentially on the post-conflict situation, though it had a more philosophical title, as is required to attract funding. I felt ICES should have invited many more people who were not quite so single-mindedly opposed to the government as were almost all their speakers (except for Michael Roberts, who is no great defender of the regime, though he is an objective enough scholar to see where prejudices against government should be combated).

Mario thought many people had been asked, but this turned out to be an illusion. He also thought that some of the names we discussed had received the call for papers, but this was completely wrong. I certainly had not, nor had Pradeep Jeganathan and Jeevan Thiagarajah, who had been pillars of ICES before Rama Mani ran down the funds while trying to turn it into a proconsular palace for Gareth Evans.

LLRC members

More worryingly, ICES had not gone out actively to seek papers to ensure balance. Mario thought that some of the LLRC members had been asked, as was certainly desirable given that the LLRC figured so large in the deliberations, but only one of them had been, and he had not been asked for a paper.

Dayan Jayatilleka had not been asked to present in the discussion on the Human Rights Council, and given that ethics figured large in the title and in some of the abstracts – though I heard little about this in the sessions I was able to attend – it was sad that one of the few Sri Lankans to have published internationally on the subject was not encouraged to participate.

Jeevan Thiagarajah had not even been invited to the seminar, though I gather that he has been asked to another by the Kandy branch of ICES, which Rama Mani, and then the hatchet men who succeeded her, had wanted to suppress. I can understand though that Jeevan is still feared by the ICES establishment, because he had in fact been Neelan‘s choice to succeed him, and the move to carry that plan out had only been stopped by a fiendish combination of Sithy Tiruchelvam and Radhika Coomaraswamy. The latter had paid out a million rupees from ICES to Sithy soon after Neelan’s death, with no mandate from the ICES Board, and Sithy had then consolidated control of the Board, while Radhika became Executive Director.

This indulgence was in part because of what I term Sri Lankan softness, the idea that, since Sithy had suffered because of Neelan’s assassination, she needed to be treated with kid gloves.

Foreign funders

Indeed I remember, when Gananath Obeysekera stepped in to perpetuate the control of those who resented the exposure of Rama Mani, he told me he was essentially concerned about Sithy, a sympathy which governed others too.

But what is unforgivable is the failure of the foreign funders to have exercised due controls. In a context in which transparency and accountability are supposed to be essential for good governance, it is hypocritical to say the least that all this was ignored as far as ICES was concerned.

Radhika’s preposterous explanation for the ravages into funding that occurred in her time, that she simply signed what the Accountant put in front of her, seems to have been generally accepted, with no effort to find out what happened to the money, and whether some of what was used for Sithy’s personal expenses, including use of vehicles etc, can be recovered.

I do not know if Mario will be able to ensure full accountability, but I hope he will try. If ICES is to go back to what Neelan envisaged, accountability is essential.

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Latest comments

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    As usual no article is complete without him mentioning Dayan !

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    Sri Lanka and its learned Professors are the people who are qualified Promote Accountability Internationally! Hurray!

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    Oh well!

    He is still part of the Rajapaksha government.

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    “Fiendish”, “preposterous”, “unforgivable” – Prof Windbag has really excelled himself this time. Absolutely nothing to say on the topic in hand (not surprising really, given his history) except lazy insults hurled at random, and a bizarre attempt to present himself as the true inheritor of Neelan’s vision. Such generosity of spirit, such modesty, and such impeccable political and ethical judgement – the man is a paragon.

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    “I felt ICES should have invited many more people who were not quite so single-mindedly opposed to the government”
    They invited you a certified govt. hack that is on the govt payroll. So what are you complaining? Be thankful.

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      Ha ha absolutely true..why does he need others to back him up. isn’t he the all knowing great one?

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    Looks like something wrong with his meta data

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