President Mahinda Rajapakse, who is on a trip to Belarus, has told his counterpart Alexander Lukashenko that both nations are being targeted unfairly by the UNHRC whose chief Navi Pillay is visiting Sri Lanka.
A banner headline in the Sri Lankan state-run Daily News branded the UNHRC an "anti-Lankan catspaw".
"President Rajapakse condemned the practice of certain countries using the UN Human Rights Council against countries such as Sri Lanka and Belarus," the paper said.
"I am not writing my own statute. I am looking at the (human rights) framework that was also developed by Sri Lanka," she said.
"If I raise criticism, it is on whether they (Sri Lanka) comply with those standards," she added. "I have not come to criticise. I have come to raise human rights concerns."
Rajapakse left for Belarus on Sunday, the day Pillay arrived. But the two are due to meet in Colombo before she leaves on Saturday.
Pillay travelled to the island's former war zone in the north yesterday and met relatives of people who disappeared during and after the government's crushing of Tamil separatists in May 2009, ending the decades-long civil war.
Pillai, who has previously been accused by Colombo of overstepping her mandate, is on her first official fact-finding mission since the government dropped its public hostility to her and promised free access.
