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, April 28, 2013
The Land Of Miracles
By Tisaranee
Gunasekara -April 28,
2013
Miracles
happen in the ‘Wonder of Asia’.
Last
week, the lawyers representing Parliamentarian Duminda
Silva – on the basis of multiple diagnoses by eminent physicians –
assured a court of law that their client was a grievously sick man. The judge
was told that Mr. Silva’s left side was paralysed, his brain function down by
40% and his recovery contingent on immediate quite retirement into the bosom of
his loving family.
The
AG’s Department – as much of a Presidential appendage as the post-Impeachment
Supreme Court – had no objections to bail. Thus persuaded, the judge gave bail
to this key suspect in the Kolonnawa quadruple-murder case.
Then
the miracle happened.
When
Mr. Silva left the hospital, amidst the cheers of his supporters, he was fully
recovered. There was no sign of a partial paralysis or brain damage; he radiated
rude-health and cocky-wellbeing.
Mr.
Silva has been accused of child abuse and murder, but let none call him an
ingrate. His first task upon leaving hospital was to pay his obeisance to
the Rajapaksa
Siblings– the God Fathers who saved him, twice.
In
a lawful country, the lawyers and doctors who provided the court with false
information about Mr. Silva’s health would have been hauled before a judge. In
today’sSri Lanka, no harm will come to those who helped a Rajapaksa-pet to
escape justice. On the contrary, the lawyers and doctors who enabled this
charade will be suitably rewarded.
Before
approving bail, the judge warned Mr. Silva not to intimidate the witnesses. The
Witnesses witnessing the miracle of Duminda Silva must be intimidated already.
Any witness with an ounce of grey-matter would know that the Ruling Siblings are
not going to allow any harm to come to their pet and that giving evidence
against Mr. Silva will be almost as foolhardy as giving evidence against the
Rajapaksas.
That
would suffice to intimidate any witness, and make him forget what he saw, or
remember it differently.
The
miracle of Duminda Silva will be followed, sooner or later, by the miracle
of Sampath
Chandrapushpa, the main suspect in the murder of Khuram Shaikh.
Plenty of witnesses will be found to swear that Mr. Chandrapushpa, instead of
launching a murderous attack on a defenceless man, was actually trying to save
him from some unknown assailants; or that he was never present at the scene of
crime, but was at home all the time, gift-wrapping Christmas presents for
orphaned-children, or at a temple meditating on the impermanence of life and
worldly glory, in the company of Namal
Rajapaksa (who is another meditation-buff, according to Sinhala
papers). Whatever the tale, this other Rajapaksa-pet too will get away with
murder.
And
Mr. Kamalesh
Sharma, he of wondrous insight into Rajapaksa Sri Lanka, can have the
pleasure of shaking the hand of Mr. Chandrapushpa when he attends the Hambantota
Commonwealth. Because, as the Chairman of the Tangalle Pradesheeya
Sabaha, Mr. Chandrapushpa will be an honoured invitee to this Rajapaksa
mega-show.
‘Be
faithful to us and thou will be granted eternal impunity’: that is the First
Rajapaksa Commandment.
Liar,
Liar…
Parliamentarian
Duminda Silva may or may not be partially paralysed; but the Lankan judicial
system certainly is. He may or may 40% brain-dead, but the Lankan society
certainly is.
Had
the Rajapaksas wanted, the Duminda Silva saga could have been handled slightly
less blatantly. He could have been taken home quietly; there could at least have
been the pretence of a gradual recovery. But the Rajapaksas are so intoxicated
with their own power, so confident of their capacity to get away with any crime,
so contemptuous of popular-intelligence that they do not see any reason to
maintain appearances.
In
England and France, before the discovery of germ-theory, people believed that
the touch of a monarch could cure illnesses[i].
Do the Rajapaksas think a sufficient number of Lankans are gullible enough to
gulp a similar tale about Duminda Silva? Or is it that they no longer care,
because impunity has become second nature?
Will
the Northern PC poll be held, actually, or will it be postponed at the last
moment? If it is held at all, will it be another ‘Humanitarian Operation’?
Will
the Rajapaksa regime fulfil the expectations of Commonwealth Secretary General
or will Kamalesh Sharma join the long list of international players who were
duped by the Siblings?
Will
the President honour his promise to reduce the electricity bill next year?
Will
they this? Won’t they that?
Reflect
on the Duminda Silva miracle, and the answers to these and every other question
about what the Rajapaksas will or won’t do will become crystal-clear.
The
Rajapaksas do not want to leave power. Actually, they cannot afford to leave
power. The Siblings also believe that power is their right, their due.
They
will do anything to stay in power, to prevent anyone from violating their
eternal right to absolute power.
That
includes being licentious towards your die-hard loyalists. Since the Mervyn
Silvas, the Duminda Silvas and the Sampth Chandrapushpas are willing
to break the law on behalf of their masters, they must be allowed to break the
law, now and then, on their own behalf. That is their reward for mindless
obedience and perfect sycophancy.
The
birth of the 18th Amendment constitutes
the best case-study in Rajapaksa purpose and modus operandi.
When
the proposal to remove presidential term-limits was floated immediately after
the 2010 parliamentary election, the Opposition protested; top monks expressed
concern and even some UPFA members demurred. Instead of steamrolling the
opposition, the President deflected it by deliberately turning public attention
elsewhere. He commenced negotiations with the Leader of Opposition, purportedly
about a new constitution.Ranil
Wickremesinghe, beleaguered in his own party by those who wanted to
oust him, jumped at this opportunity of playing statesman. The President dangled
the carrot of removing the executive presidency, and the UNP gulped it
wholesale.
The
eternal optimists dreamed of consensual politics and national governments.
While
this drama was being enacted in the public square, behind the scenes, the Legal
Draughtsman’s Department and the AG’s Department (both Presidential appendages)
were preparing the 18th Amendment.
The
stratagem worked. Believing that the Rajapaksas would not dare to remove the
term-limit provision, the UNP occupied itself with endless infightings, when it
was not engaged in meaningless negotiations with the President about replacing
the executive presidency with an executive premiership. The fate of Gen. Fonseka
consumed the time and the attention of the JVP and the DNA,
understandably.
Then,
suddenly, without any warning, the charade ended. President Rajapaksa informed
the Opposition that he intends to remove presidential term-limits and run for a
third (and, the Grim Reaper permitting, a fourth and a fifth…) term. The,
Opposition, blindsided again, was unable to mount an effective campaign. And the
18thAmendment, one of the most anti-democratic pieces of legislations
ever, was born.
The
Rajapaksas lie; they cheat; they make false promises. Those are not anomalies
but integral components of their standard operational procedure.
And
whenever necessary, they engineer mass-hallucinations about a dire-threat or a
diabolical-enemy.
They
fashion miracles out of our fearful-gullibility; and thrive.
[i] Especially
Scrofula, a skin disease also known as the King’s
Evil.


