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
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, June 24, 2013
Holding CHOGM in Sri Lanka “absolute sham” – Dr Saravanamuttu
Speaking
at the London School of Economics, Saravanamuttu detailed continuing
abuses committed by the Sri Lankan state, saying the government’s
actions were sustaining the sources of the continuing conflict. Although
the war ended in 2009, the country was far away from a post-conflict
situation, he said.
The Executive Director of the
Colombo-based Centre for Policy Analysis has slammed the hosting of the
Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Sri Lanka later this year.
Dr Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu called
the awarding an “absolute sham” and criticised that Sri Lanka, a
government accused of war crimes, will be the chair of the Commonwealth.
Speaking
at the London School of Economics, Saravanamuttu detailed continuing
abuses committed by the Sri Lankan state, saying the government’s
actions were sustaining the sources of the continuing conflict. Although
the war ended in 2009, the country was far away from a post-conflict
situation, he said.
Quoting a source from Jaffna, he said that “things look better but feel a lot worse”.
Saravanamuttu further detailed the
collapse of the Rule of Law and the continuing and increased religious
intolerance, highlighting that Buddhist group Bodu Bala Sena enjoyed
political patronage from Gothabaya Rajapakse.
Also speaking at the event was Asanga Welikada, also of the CPA and a teaching fellow at the University of Edinburgh.
Welikada spoke of the “illiberal
democratic” nature of the state, one that is ethnocratic and negates
pluralism. He explained that the opposition UNP knew it had no chance of
winning elections unless it won over the Sinhala heartland and it was
for that reason the party recently outlined its constitutional
principles and “recommitted to the unitary nature” of the state.
Welikada said it was “impossible” to come to a pluralistic settlement
and that there was only a theoretical possibility of the recognition of
the existence of separate nations on the island.
Also speaking at the event was
Uvindu Kurukulasuriya, a Visting Fellow at the LSE and former Director
of the Sri Lanka Press Institute and Press Complaints Commission of Sri
Lanka, before he was forced to flee. Kurukulusuriya detailed past and
ongoing instances of the restriction of press freedom on the island,
including the recent attacks on Uthayan newspaper.
