A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Back to 500BC.
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, February 17, 2013
Image -Freedom of Speech
Sri Lanka

Freedom of Speech
Sri Lanka
Despite
the end of the government’s long-running war with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil
Eelam (LTTE) rebel group in May 2009, media freedom remained restricted in Sri
Lanka, with journalists subject to myriad forms of legal harassment and physical
intimidation. Although the constitution provides for freedom of expression, it
and other laws and regulations place significant legal limits on the exercise of this right. The
1979 Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) contains extremely broad restrictions on
freedom of expression, such as a prohibition on bringing the government into
contempt. The decades-old Official Secrets Act bans reporting on classified
information, and those convicted of gathering secret information can be
sentenced to up to 14 years in prison. Although no journalist has ever been
charged under the law, it is used to threaten them. Journalists are also
occasionally threatened with contempt of court charges or questioned regarding
their sources. During the year, legal harassment of the Sunday Leader continued,
with the newspaper facing several defamation and contempt of court charges worth
millions of dollars in cases filed by the defense secretary. Several sets of
lawyers representing the paper have withdrawn after being intimidated, while
another was vilified on the Defense Ministry website. The cases had not been
resolved by year’s end. The 1973 Press Council Act, which prohibits disclosure
of certain fiscal, defense, and security information, had not been enforced in
more than a decade, in keeping with an unwritten agreement between the
government and media groups. However, in 2009 the government stated that it was
bringing the law back into force. It allows for the imposition of punitive
measures, including prison terms, for offenses including publication of internal
government communications or cabinet decisions,
matters affecting national security, and economic issues
that could influence price increases or food shortages.
http:// www.freedomhouse.org/ report/freedom-press/2011/ sri-lanka
Be Faithful To The Principles Of Justice, Equality And Unity

“On 4th February our
beloved Motherland, Sri Lanka will be celebrating 65
years of Independence. It is truly a joyful moment for all of us in
spite of the many imperfections we still need to overcome, in the march towards
the consolidation of that freedom. At this moment we wish to salute all those
great leaders of our motherland who struggled together, irrespective of their
many differences, to free this country from the shackles of foreign
domination.
While
we do that we also have the obligation to not only preserve that freedom but
also to ensure that it is truly strengthened and consolidated in the years to
come. “Be faithful to the principles of justice, equality and unity”. Simply
remembering the achievements of the past will have no meaning unless we commit
ourselves to ensure that on the one side no foreign power or ideology would ever
be allowed to enslave us again and on the other to ensure that we create in this
country a truly democratic, just, prosperous, united and peaceful Sri
Lanka.
Regrettably,
in the past 65 years not everything has been rosy. There indeed have been many
dark patches in this historic journey. Racial, religious and political
intolerance have caused bloodshed, violence and the creation of a divisive
mentality among the people of this country. Even after 30 years of war and
misguided political ideologies and their resultant terror events in the North as
well as in the South, there still are people who boastfully claim that this
country belongs only to them and not to the others. There is still an underlying
sense of suspicion between the Sinhala and Tamil races of this country and now
it has been shown to spread even against our Muslim brethren. There is a nagging
sense of insecurity in the hearts of people, which can erupt once again into
violence and yet another unending conflict. Three years after the terrible war,
still we do not see a sincere attempt being made to win over the minds and
hearts of the people in the North, who are longing for a time in which they can
administer their own areas without being centrally controlled by men in uniform.
They are longing to enjoy the freedom to administer themselves. The monstrosity
of the ill effects of mono-culturalism is haunting us still. Besides there is
also a nervous feeling of insecurity stemming from certain political initiatives
which seem to threaten the democratic institutions of this country. All of this
could lead to yet another wave of instability and the loss of that hard won
freedom.
What
we need to do is to strive to be faithful to the principles of justice, equality
and the respect for unity in diversity as well as commitment to true peace and
prosperity for all, without being partial to our own community, whatever that
be. These, after all, are the principles which originate from the different
religious traditions we profess, for religion is never exclusive but inclusive
and is never restrictive but universal.
I
therefore, call upon all our beloved citizens to work hard to overcome all
divisive and authoritarian and anti democratic urges that often tempt and taunt
us and to reach out to everyone in true fraternity in order to consolidate this
freedom and to ensure that we never fall back again into slavery and the
dominion of others or of our own egoisms. I call upon all our faithful to pray
for our dear motherland.
May
God bless Sri Lanka!
*Malcolm
Cardinal Ranjith – Archbishop of Colombo- Message on the 65th Independence Day
of Sri Lanka


