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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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, February 17, 2013
The Games That These People Play
As we await with breathtaking
suspense the coming of yet another ‘procedural’ resolution in Geneva, there is a
certain exquisite irony to the manner in which the Mahinda
Rajapaksa Presidency has been able to run rings around its
international critics so far.
Drastically
undercutting the tone and tenor of LLRC report
So
while the Government mouthed sweet nothings regarding the implementation of
the LLRC recommendations
on the one hand to the so-called international community, it deliberately and
drastically undercut the very tone and tenor of the LLRC report at several
levels.
Last
week, this column commented on the report of the internal committee of the Army
dismissing the LLRC recommendation that the Department of the Police should be
delinked from the Ministry of Defence. The Army also dismissed the LLRC’s noting
of civilian casualties during the intensity of war and attributed such deaths
solely to the LTTE.
We are now back to the old refrains of zero civilian casualties which the
Government kept on parroting at the conclusion of the war even though some
spokespersons adopted a more reasonable attitude later on when such claims were
naturally enough, scorned.
The
LLRC’s other recommendations have suffered a similar fate. Its strong call to
the Government to make public the report of the 2006 Udalagama
Commission of Inquiry, particularly in relation to the extra
judicial killings of helpless students in Trincomalee (2006) and the
executions of the seventeen aid workers in Mutur (2006) has also been
dismissed.
Failure
to exhibit restraint in governance
It
was singularly symbolic that President Mahinda Rajapaksa chose to ‘celebrate’
the Independence Day at Trincomalee and chose not to even refer to justice being
ensured in regard to the killings of the Trincomalee students. If presidential
leadership had been shown in pursuing these two cases, a powerful note of
restraint would have been struck. But that was not to be.
In
contrast, even with all its momentous failures of governance, the Chandrika
Kumaratunge Presidency gave an unequivocal direction to the police
investigators and the Attorney General’s Department to prosecute the rape and
killing of Krishanthi Kumaraswamy (1996) as well as the subsequent deaths of her
mother, her brother and a good Samaritan neighbor.
The
evidence of Sinhalese witnesses played a major part in securing the convictions
of the accused which were upheld on appeal. The trial was sensationalized when
the main accused in the case, Corporal Rajapakse publicly disclosed details of
hundreds of bodies which had been buried in the Jaffna peninsula following
extrajudicial executions carried out by state military forces. These claims were
not properly investigated even in the decades that followed. But to some extent,
there was justice for at least Krishanthi and her family.
A
travesty of justice
In
contrast, what we have in the ACF and
the Trincomalee killings is an utter travesty of justice. At one time, we had
government spokespersons asserting in Geneva that the investigations into these
cases would be reopened at the very same time that the Attorney General, when
questioned by the media locally, roundly denied that any such instructions had
been given to him.
Interestingly,
the report of
the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) released in
preparation for the upcoming Geneva sessions in relation to Human Rights Council
resolution 19/2 cites that the Attorney General’s explanation for failure to
proceed further with the cases was that the ‘quality of investigations and
evidence collected had to date prevented him from proceeding with charges and
prosecutions.’
According
to the OHCHR report, the Government stated that the ‘Attorney General had
advised the Inspector General of Police to conduct comprehensive investigations
and had submitted to him the material collected by and the recommendations made
by the previous commission of inquiry.’
And
we proceed from the farcical to the absurd when we see that the OHCHR team had
been assured that, ‘if adequate evidence was disclosed by the investigations,
filing of indictment would be possible within a reasonable period thereafter.’
Aptly enough, the report observes that ‘it is now more than five years since the
presidential commission of inquiry completed its report, and more than six years
since the incidents.’
Certainly
the Government’s response is a beautiful piece of circuitous reasoning. The
problem itself is the lack of good investigations which is palpably the primary
responsibility of the State and state agencies. If the proper investigations
were carried out, a speedy prosecution would naturally follow. It is also quite
obvious that there is absolutely no government will to carry out such
investigation. Failure to do so is the responsibility of the State. One state
agency blaming another and vice versa does not detract from that fact.
Adding
insult to injury
These
are the unpalatable though scarcely surprising realities that confront us.
Adding insult to injury, we see aid agencies forking out huge sums of money
through government line ministries for ventures supposedly in improvement of the
quality of justice. With impeccable timing, one such venture was announced as
recently as last month with the pious objective of securing implementation of
the Rule of Law at the precise time that a politically motivated impeachment of
the head of the judiciary was taking place in Parliament.
Another
such striking example of absurdity was evidenced when Minister of Languages and
Social IntegrationVasudeva
Nanayakkara told Sri Lanka’s 43rd Chief
Justice to go to hell on the floor of the House and refused
permission to go ahead with the hosting of a conference of judicial officers on
the basis that they were due to discuss the impeachment even as his ministry
proudly boasted of implementing an access to justice project with the United
Nations agencies.
A
carrot and stick approach
In
sum, this country’s hapless citizenry can only stand back and watch the cynical
games that are being played. And the tactics employed by this country’s
political leadership have really not been all that subtle. It has used the stick
and carrot method of inducement with impeccable finesse even as it relies (with
justifiable reason) on the essential disinterest of those pleading with Sri
Lanka to improve its human rights record.
The
Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) was very much a part of this
conscienceless inducement strategy even though the LLRC report was somewhat more
hard hitting than what President Mahinda Rajapaksa would have wished. Even so,
all what was needed was a little bit more creative imaginativeness to deal with
this report which his administration has demonstrated very well.
We
are therefore destined to suffer through more ineffective resolutions and mouthy
debates this year even as the state of democracy in Sri Lanka takes one cruel
beating after another.

