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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, April 19, 2013
Last
week Australian authorities were shocked to see that a boat with 66 ragged Sri
Lankan Tamils, many of them women and children, sailed into Geraldton port in
Western Australia without being noticed by border patrols or intelligence
agencies.
While
the Australians’ astonishment was limited to the breach of border-security, what
went unnoticed was desperation of the refugees in the rickety boat who were
willing to risk their lives and travel several weeks at sea to escape their
homeland. They ought to have been more desperate than the north African refugees
who are often washed ashore in Malta and Italy.
Today,
Tamils from Sri Lanka constitute the second largest number of asylum seekers in
Australia after Afghanistan. In 2012, about 6,000 Tamils arrived in
Australia, a report byTime magazine quoted
prominent Sri Lankan commentator P Saravanamuthu on Monday.
The
Sri Lankan government, not surprisingly, was quick to rubbish the claims of the
asylum seekers. The country’s high commissioner to Australia said that it would
soon be found that the boat-people were not refugees and would be sent back. He
even listed the efforts taken by his country and the cooperation between Sri
Lanka and Australia to stop people from leaving the island. According to him,
the government is spending a lot of money to prevent people from leaving.
But
the unanswered question is why do the Tamils leave Sri Lanka? That too at such
enormous personal risk. Europe, for many north African refugees, is almost with
viewing distance, but Australia is light years away from Sri Lanka. Doesn’t the
government say that all’s well for Tamils in the country and the north and east
are flourishing? And that the government has undertaken historic rehabilitation
and reconciliation efforts?
To
top up, didn’t its neighbour India, which has reportedly granted Rs 500 crore of
its people’s money for the rehabilitation of Tamils, made tall claims through
full page newspaper ads? New homes, new skills, new workplaces, new fields to
farm… the ad sounded so reassuring.
Still,
Tamils leave the country – that too at such enormous personal risk. If all’s
well back home, why are they happier in the refugee camps in Australia where the may have to
share poor facilities with Afghans and Iranians? According to Saravanamuthu, the
arrival in Australia is 30 times higher than in 2011. A BBC report said
that in the recent past Australia deported hundreds of them.
If
the rights groups termed the killing of thousands of innocent Tamil civilians
during the war (at least 40,000 according to an UN expert panel report, close to
70,000 by another UN report by Charles Petri and more than 100,000 by the
Catholic Bishop of Mannar) as genocide, what is currently happening is its live
extension. Had the situation been as good as the Sri Lankan and Indian
governments claim, would the Tamils pay up to US$ 10,000 for a dangerous
boat-ride to nowhere?
Unable
to sell cover-up stories to the international community and the media, which
have been relentless in their scrutiny of the war crimes and human rights
violations of the Sri Lankan government, the Mahinda Rajapaksa regime has
launched itself into a dangerous offensive that makes Tamils more insecure than
ever before.
Instead
of taking at least a few modest steps as suggested by the soft resolution
against the country at the UNHRC in last March, as a confidence-building gesture
at reconciliation, the country’s government chose to rev up its triumphalism and
revel in its impunity.
By
the time the second UNHRC resolution, mostly arising out of year-long inaction
and hubris, was passed, the government couldn’t care less. Instead, it became
more defiant and even blatant in its habitual excesses. This time, it also has
enrolled nationalist and majoritarian groups such as Bodu Bala Sena and Sinhala
Ravaya, which targetted other minorities such as Muslims and Christians.
While
the project of majority consolidation unfolded in Colombo and elsewhere, the
Rajapaksas continued the Sinhalisation and militarisation of the north and east
which for centuries belonged to the Tamils. Today 16 of the 19 divisions of the
Sri Lankan army are stationed in the northern province and the military has
usurped civil administration and even businesses. In Vavuniya, there are three
soldiers for every three citizens. Perhaps on advice from the Pakistan’s
Military Inc, they run whale watching trips (Sri Lanka’s tourism USP), hotels,
ferry services and, apparently even sell vegetables.
International
media reports show that what the government is attempting is to change the
socio-cultural demographics of the north and the east. As journalist Ranga Jayasuriya of Lakbima noted as early as 2011, the efforts
at Sinhalalisation was evident in even naming places and streets. For e.g.
Omanthai in Vanni had been converted into Omantha and a street in the heart of
Killinochi was named after Mahinda Rajapaksa. Other streets were named after
military personnel.
As
noted Sri Lankan social anthropologist Darini Rajasingham Senanayake notes in
her paper “Post-war Development, Militarization and the Logistics of Humiliation
in Sri Lanka”:
“Defence
ministry has taken under its wing offices responsible for urban development;
land reclamation, development and construction; waterways; and the registration
of NGOs. While civilian administrators and expertise from the business community
are increasingly marginalised, former or serving military officers are being
appointed to key central, local government and foreign-service positions, to the
detriment of knowledge-based, people-centered economic development policy
making. The government has also been investing heavily in expensive technologies
of surveillance such as closed circuit television security cameras and in
biometric identity cards.”
It’s
not just the project of disenfranchising them on their land that is making
Tamils insecure. Since the war, the government has continued with its human
rights abuses such as torture, abductions and disappearances. According to a Guardian report,
tens of thousands of Tamils have been held captive and they are systematically
abused flouting laws and post-conflict promises of reconciliation. A recent
Human Rights Watch report documented several cases of sexual violence and
torture by the Sri Lankan establishment.
Sri
Lanka’s brazenness and impunity is a threat to humanity. As Yasmin Sooka, who
headed the successful Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa and a
member of the expert panel of the UN in Sri Lanka, said “Colombo’s contempt for the international
community seems to be increasing.”
She
expressed shock at the recent findings of a military court of enquiry that
rejected the charges of war crimes by the international community. Sooka, who is
a renowned expert on transitional justice, also said that the government and the
military cannot be trusted to investigate the crimes during the final phase of
the war.
It’s
this atmosphere of terror and Sinhala subjugation that the Tamils are fleeing.
If this is a new world order that countries such India are willing to live with,
it’s an outrageously dangerous world. Most probably, that’s what pushes
desperate Tamils to take to the high seas.

