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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, June 11, 2014
No Future Without Respect For Law Enforcement
( June 11, 2014, Hong Kong, Sri Lanka Guardian) The
major problem affecting all Sri Lankans now, and which is likely to
affect future generations, is the complete failure of law enforcement
and resulting lawlessness. While virtually everyone is aware of this
problem, it is not subject to conversation.
For the few who are vocal on matters of public interest, the sole
concern seems to be regime change. This is, of course, something any
reasonable person would agree with. However, the survival of the regime
itself rests on the breakdown of law enforcement in every area of life
and on the regime’s capacity to rely on lawlessness in order to
guarantee its own survival.
What may be worth reflecting on is the aim achieved by causing the
failure of all possible avenues for law enforcement by those who want to
prevent any challenge to their power. Generating lawlessness is a
political scheme. Like the prevention of the advance of an opposing army
by destroying bridges or railway lines, a regime in power can defeat
all who wish to oust it from power by ensuring that its opponents have
no legal ground to stand on.
Under these circumstances, some may consider that the only option left
is to resort to illegality themselves. However, such a strategy can
itself play into the hands of a regime that stays in power lawlessly.
Such a regime can attack its opponents with ferocity, unrestrained by
any legal criteria or limitation. The violence through which the regime
achieves its objectives may be horrendous.
However, there is nothing that can be achieved by way of retaliation.
The lawless regime paralyses all possibilities of investigations and
judicial interventions. The more demand there is for investigations and
redress, the greater will be the resistance of the lawless regime to
such moves.
Lawlessness affects everybody but the people affected most are poor and
vulnerable groups. Incomes can be reduced to the point of making
survival difficult. Even if real incomes remain the same, lowering of
value can be done by various inflationary policies. The poorer the
vulnerable groups get, the more that they have to turn to various
‘solutions’, such as borrowing at exorbitant interest. The result is the
loss of whatever little property and possessions they have. Through
various methods of increasing prices of essential goods, such as milk
powder for children or medicine, the poor can be driven to accept the
only alternative left, which is death. The more such things happen, the
less talk there is about it.
Such things become normal.
And, when the problems are this deep, the kind of political alternatives
suggested by the opposition appear more like gimmickry or mockery.
People beset with such deep problems find no attraction to such kind of
political opposition.
Unfortunately, the result is again in favour of the lawless regime. The
people’s lack of faith in the opposition political parties generates the
reason for the survival of such a regime. It does not exist on its own
merit but due to the weaknesses of those supposed to oust it from
power.
Thus, the breakdown of law enforcement and the resulting lawlessness is a
vicious chain. It goes on and on. It creates more and more misery, more
unimaginable evil. By destroying whatever possibilities exist within
the law, it can extend its survival.
This has become the modus operandi of survival of many regimes
and such regimes learn from each other. The lawless cooperate with the
lawless. That is the kind of challenge people face under the present
circumstances.

