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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, May 28, 2013
Celebrating A Victory That Has Lost Its Way
By M A Sumanthiran -May 28, 2013 |
“Truth
must be told. After all, it is the truth that will set everyone free.
But, for truth to be told, there needs to be a change in attitude”, are
words from my first speech in Parliament and three years later we have
yet to see a change in attitude. We have seen instead, a vigorous effort
to garner and concentrate power in the executive, to eliminate dissent
and make blanket denials to any call for justice regardless of who makes
the call, be it citizen, political opponent or the international
community. Instead of engaging in truth seeking, justice and
reconciliation, this country is persistently dealing with crises of rule
of law and encroachment on the independence of democratic institutions.
Truth and justice are essential components of the larger programme of
reconciliation. Reconciliation in its simplest of meanings is a
resolving of differences. It is a process initiated by acknowledgement
and understanding. The launch of a domestic commission for
reconciliation was in itself an acceptance that there existed an
alienation of communities based not only on social and economic
disparity, but on the offer of protection and the suppression of the
search for justice. It was and is an inequality that conjures an image
of ‘the other’. The Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC),
which was set up to address many of these issues, despite its
shortcomings, identified several institutional obstacles to justice and
reconciliation. However even the proposals of this home grown process
were met with trepidation and rejection. It has become near impossible
to engage in a process of reconciliation where there is no
acknowledgement of differences, or of the inequality that persists
amongst communities in this country. True reconciliation requires a
bridging of differences. It requires positive measures to secure and
protect the equality of all citizens, to ensure physical and emotional
security, and dignity in their lives. For many of those affected by the
war, regardless of the community, emotional security lies also in
understanding what has happened to their loved ones. The failure to seek
the truth and put to rest the distress that haunts their every waking
moment, is to create a community of people who live in limbo, who are
unable to move forward in their lives. There is a responsibility on us
to look after their interests and assist them, and a greater
responsibility on the government who has the power to provide the
mechanisms to address these issues. These are not issues that can be
masked by infrastructure development and intermittent handing out of
welfare. Development which forges on without taking into consideration
the many inequalities experienced by our communities only leads to
greater frustration and disillusionment.
Reconciliation is also about establishing a shared multi-ethnic identity
and equality is key to such an exercise. Where there is disparity in
treatment based on community lines, there is no space to forge shared
identities. To this extent, reconciliation is an internal affair. It
depends very much on a commitment and willingness to engage, which
unfortunately we are yet to experience.
The victory, four years ago on the 18th of May, in its very
first impressions brought a sense of relief that the bloodshed was over.
In the long term, it also bore hope for an opportunity to rebuild and
regain dignity of life. The victory that was commemorated last Saturday,
was a remembrance only of these first impressions. Security is not only
about the absence of war, it is also extant in the physical well being
of having a home, food and occupation. Without these components how can
people rejoice in being alive? The celebrations, on victory day, saw
no acknowledgement of milestones achieved in rebuilding and securing
dignity of lives of all those affected by the war. It saw no celebration
of a successful truth-telling mechanism that was helping communities to
heal. Moreover, it saw no mention of freedom, but emphasized an absence
of fear as its greatest achievement. It was also disappointing to
observe the assail by the state media on the remembrance ceremonies held
in the North, in spite of the LLRC recommendation for a day of mourning
to express solidarity and empathy with all victims, and the need to
ensure freedom to conduct religious ceremonies. It is a victory that is
being remembered only for its disturbing display of triumphalism – a
victory, which in a sense has lost its way. It has become another source
of difference between the communities in this country.
What was boldly paraded as a ‘Humanitarian Victory Day’,
must be evaluated against the reality that is. What is the humanitarian
victory that restrains a community from singing the national anthem in
its own language, a constitutionally protected national language? What
is the humanitarian victory that makes blanket declarations that there
have been no enforced disappearances, which fall on the ears of the
thousands of mothers and wives who continue to search for their loved
ones, and to this day, feel unsafe to share their stories? What is the
humanitarian victory that turns out, on a scale of 6000 acres, thousands
of Tamil speaking people from
their lands? The fear of losing one’s land is strikingly captured in
the poem quoted in the President’s speech last Saturday, “Never did we
know what fear was. Never were we bothered about life, but for our
land”. I imagine this is the very thought passing through the minds of
the thousands whose lands are sought to be acquired. These realities
have fuelled uncertainty and fear amongst a people who have lost much of
their productive lives to the strains of a protracted war and are still
to rebuild their lives four years on.
Sri Lanka has failed to seize the many opportunities that have come its
way to engage in true reconciliation. There has been no leadership on
reconciliation, protection of human rights and democracy. On the
contrary, the several measures to deny truth telling, the failure to
protect its citizens and failure to uplift the lives, especially of
displaced communities, continue to deepen the fissures of distrust and
disquiet. This failure is not the result of ill-wit or mismanagement,
but the existence of an overriding interest. This interest is manifest
in the accumulation of power, the 18th Amendment and the refusal to devolve meaningful control. This is also an interest that quells opposition through the control of media, impeachment, detention of political opponents and rule by threat of PTA.
It is a narrow parochial self interest which bodes badly not only for
the minority communities who must suffer the brunt of its effects, but
eventually also for the majority populace.
The author, M. A, Sumanthiran (B.Sc, LL.M) is a Member of Parliament
through the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), practicing senior lawyer,
prominent Constitutional and Public Law expert and civil rights advocate

