A leaked US Embassy cable reveals how Archbishop Malcolm Ranjith lobbied the US government against international pressure on accountability for war crimes.
The Archbishop Malcolm Ranjith told the US ambassador that “pushing the government of Sri Lanka too hard on the war crimes accountability issue now could destabilize Sri Lankan democracy and could suffer revolution from the right or a coup by the military” a leaked US Embassy cable revealed.
The cable classified as “CONFIDENTIAL” by ambassador Patricia A. Butenis.
The cable said, the Archbishop Ranjith, despite his problems with the ‘Buddhist right’ has a good relationship with the President, whose wife is Catholic. It is certainly true that the President is under great pressure from the ‘Sinhalese Buddhist right’. It is also arguable that the international community’s pushing too hard on accountability could backfire.
Mahinda Rajapaksa a good man
In the cable, written in 2ndOctober 2009 recounts details of the meeting. Under the sub-heading “RAJAPAKSA AND ACCOUNTABILITY” embassy wrote that “the archbishop said he believed President Rajapaksa personally was a good man and in the constellation of Sri Lankan politics was a relative moderate. He reminded us that Rajapaksa used to attend human rights meetings in Europe as an opposition MP. Rajapaksa and his brothers were under great pressure from the Sinhalese Buddhist right, and any show of what would be perceived as weakness before the international community could result in their losing ground to much more extreme elements. Indeed, he argued that if something happened to the President there would be ‘chaos’ in Sri Lanka.”
Something happened to the President there would be “chaos”
The cable further says “ This led the archbishop addressing directly the question of war crime accountability. He said “my suggestion is, in order to strengthen democracy in Sri Lanka, don’t push accountability now” he reasoned that weakening the Rajapaksa could be backfire. Moreover, if Sri Lanka were denied GSP – Plus or the US were to enact strong economic sanctions, leading to a sharp downturn in the economy, Sri Lanka – where democracy was not strong now – could suffer revolution from the right or a coup by the military, which currently had a very strong position in society”. Ambassador counted that this was a very interesting perspective, but if the Rajapaksas were in fact moderates, they need to show it in at least a few ways.
Forces lurking beneath him
The archbishop said this was the challenge that he had been working on – how to get the President not to worry only about the “ forces lurking beneath him” and act as a moderate. He told the President it was important to work with Tamil leaders on reconciliation and to invite the diaspora to help re-build the economy. “ The Rajapaksas will come and go,” the archbishop opined, “ but the Tamils will always be here.”
we reproduced the full cable here.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 COLOMBO
000929
SIPDIS
DEPARTMENT FOR SCA/INSB
E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/02/2019
TAGS: PGOV PREL PREF PHUM PTER EAID MOPS CE
SUBJECT: ARCHBISHOP SUGGESTS PUSHING ACCOUNTABILITY COULD
DESTABILIZE SRI LANKAN DEMOCRACY
COLOMBO 00000929 001.2 OF 002
Classified By: AMBASSADOR PATRICIA A. BUTENIS. REASONS: 1.4 (B, D)
¶1. (C) SUMMARY: Roman Catholic Archbishop Ranjith told ambassador that pushing the GSL too hard on the war crimes accountability issue now could destabilize Sri Lankan democracy and would set back the cause of human rights. He reasoned that weakening the Rajapaksas — who despite their public image were relative moderates in the Sri Lankan polity — could backfire. Moreover, if Sri Lanka were denied GSP-plus or the U.S. were to enact strong economic sanctions, leading to a sharp downturn in the economy, Sri Lanka could suffer revolution from the right or a coup by the military,which now had a very strong position in society. Ambassador countered that this was an interesting perspective, but if the Rajapaksas were in fact moderates, they needed to show it. END SUMMARY.
POLITICAL ROLE OF THE CHURCH
—————————-
¶2. (C) In a September 30 introductory meeting with Ambassador and PolChief, Roman Catholic Archbishop Malcolm Ranjith recounted the recent political evolution of Sri Lanka, of which he has been both an astute observer and important participant, and described the role of the Church in society. He noted that while he himself was a Singhalese, he was very sympathetic to the plight of Tamils, who had suffered greatly from pogroms and discrimination by the majority and from the disastrous results of LTTE separatist ideology. He explained that the Church had played a key role in brokering talks between the GSL and the LTTE over the years, including the 2002 cease-fire agreement. After the war, the church was advocating publicly for the release of IDPs and other controversial positions. This had led to criticism from the Buddhist right and even death threats against the archbishop himself. This was the opposite of the leading role in reconciliation the archbishop believed Buddhists should have been playing years ago.
RAJAPAKSA AND ACCOUNTABILITY
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¶3. (C) Despite this criticism, the archbishop said he believed President Rajapaksa personally was a good man and in the constellation of Sri Lankan politics was a relative moderate (he reminded us that Rajapaksa used to attend human rights meetings in Europe as an opposition MP). Rajapaksa and his brothers were under great pressure from the Singhalese Buddhist right, and any show of what would be perceived as weakness before the international community could result in their losing ground to much more extreme elements. Indeed, he argued that if something happened to the president there would be “chaos” in Sri Lanka.
¶4. (C) This led to the archbishop addressing directly the question of war crimes accountability. He said “my suggestion is, in order to strengthen democracy in Sri Lanka, don’t push accountability now.” He reasoned that weakening the Rajapaksas could backfire. Moreover, if Sri Lanka were denied GSP-plus or the U.S. were to enact strong economic sanctions, leading to a sharp downturn in the economy, Sri Lanka — where democracy was not strong now — could suffer revolution from the right or a coup by the military, which currently had a very strong position in society. The archbishop said this was why he had recently come out publicly in favor of extending GSP-plus to Sri Lanka, despite the GSL’s many human rights problems. Ambassador countered that this was a very interesting perspective, but if the Rajapaksas were in fact moderates, they needed to show it in at least a few ways. The archbishop said this was the
COLOMBO 00000929 002.2 OF 002
challenge that he had been working on — how to get the president not to worry only about the “forces lurking beneath him” and to act as a moderate. He told the president it was important to work with Tamil leaders on reconciliation and to invite the diaspora to help re-build the economy. “The Rajapaksas will come and go,” the archbishop opined, “but the Tamils will always be here.”
COMMENT
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¶5. (C) Archbishop Ranjith purportedly is respected by the pope and served as papal nuncio in Indonesia. He also commands considerable authority in Sri Lanka — despite his problems with the Buddhist right — and has a good relationship with the president (whose wife is Catholic). It is certainly true that the president is under great pressure from the Singhalese Buddhist right. It is also arguable that the international community’s pushing too hard on accountability could backfire.
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