Sunday Times 2
Qatar attack: Why our Foreign Ministry refuses to name “Israel”
View(s):By Rauff Hakeem, leader of the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress
Sri Lanka’s Foreign Ministry has demonstrated once again not just how incapable it is of distinguishing between an occupier and the occupied, or between an air attack and an incident, or even worse, between mercenary behaviour and solidarity with victims.
It has also exposed the depths of a culture of tomfoolery, recklessness and vicarious criminality in which it remains ensnared when it comes to unconscionable and abominable breaches by the Benjamin Netanyahu government of all norms of humanity and decency, principles of international law, and sovereignty of other countries.
Sadly, this is the government which has come to power on a pledge to create a culture of accountable and responsible governance. It often claims so vociferously that the “Clean Sri Lanka” project it has launched since it assumed office is aimed at placing the country on a governance footing that is ethically and morally sound.
The government fails on all these criteria so miserably when it comes to one single entity—that is, Israel. With bleeding hearts, the entire world watches, discourages, abhors, and condemns unequivocally the Netanyahu government’s genocidal activities, violent, aggressive, and catastrophic conduct of war, and its breach of peace in the region and in the world. But the government appears to be in a tactical or strategic collusion with Netanyahu and his ruling cabal, not just with regard to crimes committed in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, especially Gaza, but now far beyond, extending to Iran last June and now, more dangerously, to Qatar.
All the statements or official remarks that this government has issued, including in particular the latest one on Qatar, expose the government and the Foreign Ministry for their chronic inability to extend those ethical and moral parameters to Israel and to reject its aggressive behaviour, prolonged occupation and challenges to regional stability. Any reasonable-minded person reading the Foreign Ministry’s statement on Wednesday would conclude that it is nothing but an Israeli hand in the Foreign Ministry or in the government that drafts such statements. An average Sri Lankan citizen would never be so insensitive, illogical, and scornful as to even attempt to draft such a deliberately apathetic, one-sided, distorted statement as was released on Wednesday.
We need Qatar for labour migration, investment, trade, and tourism, which, alongside similar contributions from Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait, Oman and Bahrain, bring much-needed foreign exchange to the country. We need the Gulf Cooperation Council to speak in Sri Lanka’s favour during the Human Rights Council session. Hon. Minister Bimal Rathnayake has just returned after a visit to Saudi Arabia, where he appealed for financial support for specific projects in Sri Lanka. But it is a poignant reality that when one of those countries comes under aggression with targeted air attacks, the government of Sri Lanka has no audacity to name the aggressor or even talk about how it shared the sentiments of the government and the people of the country whose sovereignty was so blatantly violated.
By calling serious breaches by Israel just incidents or strikes, not naming the perpetrator even as the world, and the perpetrator itself, so boldly claim it was carried out by Israel, what prevents the government and the Foreign Ministry from doing so? Sri Lanka’s foreign policy apparatus is not just becoming a pack of jokers, but they are actively making Sri Lanka a STRIKINGLY “INCIDENTAL” state.