| Neither Sri Lanka nor UN asked for Abolition of British Monarchy |
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| Sunday, 15 June 2008 | |
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The entire matter is regarded as subject to the sovereign decision of the British people, and the recommendation is that the UK considers the ascertainment of their wishes by means of a referendum. It contains the further qualifier of 'the desirability or otherwise'.
It is a double distortion to assert that Sri Lanka insisted on the inclusion of the recommendation of the abolition of the monarchy in the UN report, firstly because, as stated above, no such recommendation was made, secondly because the preparation and production of the report is entirely a matter for the group of three randomly chosen states, termed the 'troika' together with the state under review, in this case the UK. Sri Lanka was not a member of the 'troika'.
It was entirely the prerogative of the state under review, the UK , to raise a point of order, or object to the listing of any recommendation it chose to reject, and thereby limit its mention to the summary of proceedings in the narrative portion of the text. The state under review also has the further option of engaging through the troika with any other state which had made recommendations to negotiate their modification. The Universal Periodic Review (UPR) process and mechanism entail recommendations which are constructively intended. In the UPR process the UK too has made many recommendations about other countries, which those countries have dealt with in different ways. |
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| Last Updated ( Sunday, 15 June 2008 ) |
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