Sri Lanka and the Non-Aligned Movement explained

Sri Lanka is one of the founding members of the Non-Aligned Movement. Principles of Non-Alignment and participation in movement's activities is of high priority in foreign policy of the country.[1]

Its capital of Colombo hosted the 5th Summit of the Non-Aligned Movement on 16–19 August 1976. The country proposed its bid to host the summit at the 1973 Non-Aligned Standing Committee Conference in Kabul.[2] Following the 1976 Summit Sri Lanka held the chairmanship of the movement for three years until 1979.[3] This role represented the pinnacle of Sri Lankan foreign policy in the period of Cold War.[4]

History

Ahead of the 2nd Summit of the Non-Aligned Movement Indonesia and China strongly criticized the idea of the Non-Aligned conference as counterproductive to Bandung which motivated Prime Minister of Sri Lanka Sirimavo Bandaranaike to confront those criticisms by stressing indivisibility of the World peace.[5]

On 16–19 August 1976 in Colombo hosted the 5th Summit of the Non-Aligned Movement with 86 nations participated in the summit with additional 30 observers and guests representing all the continents in the world.[6] The logo of the conference included references to five values of self-determination, economic development, peace and security, solidarity and the denial of colonialism and imperialism.[7] The Government of Sri Lanka declared the public holiday to enable residents in the capital city to get to the street and see and greet foreign guests.[7]

At the time of 6th Summit of the Non-Aligned Movement in Havana, delegation of Sri Lanka expressed the concern that due to the host's sectarianism his opening speech was deficient in showing appropriate level of statecraft.[2] In 2021, during his participation in 60th Anniversary Additional Commemorative Non-Aligned Meeting in Belgrade, Tharaka Balasuriya reaffirmed his country's continued commitment to principles and goals of the movement.[8]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Non-alignment and SL’s foreign policy . 10 January 2012 . .
  2. Book: Tvrtko Jakovina . Tvrtko Jakovina . 2011. Treća strana Hladnog rata . hr . The Third Side of the Cold War . Fraktura . 978-953-266-203-0 .
  3. Karunadasa . W. M. . 1993 . A re-appraisal of Sri Lanka's Non-Alignment : 1948 - 1960 . Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Sri Lanka . 37 . 69-81 .
  4. Web site: Non Alignment: Will Lanka abandon principles . The Sunday Times (Sri Lanka).
  5. Bogetić . Dragan . 2017 . Sukob Titovog koncepta univerzalizma i Sukarnovog koncepta regionalizma na Samitu nesvrstanih u Kairu 1964. . The Conflict Between Tito’s Concept of Universalism and Sukarno’s Concept of Regionalism in the 1964 Summit of Non-Aligned Countries in Cairo . Istorija 20. Veka . . 35. 2 . 101–118 . 10.29362/IST20VEKA.2017.2.BOG.101-118 . free .
  6. Web site: Non-aligned Summit: Togetherness in Colombo . 11 April 2015 . Prithvis Chakravarti . . 19 September 2021 .
  7. Book: Jürgen Dinkel . 'To grab the headlines in the world press': Non-aligned summits as media events . Nataša Mišković . Herald Fischer-Tine . Nada Boškovska . The Non-Aligned Movement and the Cold War: Delhi — Bandung — Belgrade . . 978-0-415-74263-4 . 207—225 . 2014 .
  8. Web site: Sri Lanka remains committed to principles and goals of the Non-Aligned movement - State Minister Balasuriya . Lanka Business Online .