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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, September 25, 2014
Asia: Poverty As The Absence Of Protection
(An article issued on the occasion of receiving the Right Livelihood Award - 2014)
( September 25, 2014, Hong Kong SAR, Sri Lanka Guardian) There are many ways of looking at poverty and its causes.
The most common way is to see poverty as the absence of the most meagre
of resources for living. In other words, it is the lack of a minimum
income. On the basis of this perception of poverty, the solution
commonly suggested is to supplement this lack of income with
contributions by the state. And, the approach proffered by states, and
even by the United Nations in terms of the Millennium Development Goals,
in discussions on poverty alleviation, is to find ways to improve basic
income needed for living.
Often missing from such poverty alleviation discourse, purely concerned
with a minimum improvement of basic income, is the cost that the poor
have to pay, as a result of the absence of protection. What is meant by
absence of protection? This absence is the non-existence of a public
justice system capable of protecting the poor from the onslaught of
predators in society.
Any study that focuses on such predators of the poor is bound to produce
a shocking picture of man’s inhumanity to man. There are a large number
of forces that scavenge from a poor man’s income and resources for
their enrichment. The role of moneylenders who extract high rates of
interests from the poor is well known. What is often not discussed is
the way a “bad system” of administration of justice can create an ever
greater burden on the poor.
The police, in many developing countries, rely on the poor for
supplementing police officers income. This is a known fact. The power of
arrest is often utilized as a means to force the poor to pay bribes to
law enforcement agencies. Years of work at the Asian Human Rights
Commission, in 12 Asian countries, has resulted in the collation of a
body of information on the ways the poor are harassed by law enforcement
agencies. When poor persons are arrested, often for no good reason,
their close circle of family members and friends are forced to bribe the
police and security agents, in cash or kind to obtain their release and
to ensure that they will not be tortured in custody. Often, the way in
which the poor pay such bribes is by borrowing money on high rates of
interest or by selling whatever few possessions they may own.
When these poor persons are brought before the courts by unscrupulous
police, they again encounter a large number of predators. Lawyers head
this list. Other predators include the touts in the courts, court
clerks, and even some judges. If a poor man is remanded for some time or
sent to jail, then his or her family would also have to bribe the
jailors, with the hope that he/she may be granted some relief while in
detention.
Add to this brief description of predators the various pseudo-religious
servants (or witch doctors) to whomt the poor resort in times of
desperation.
AHRC-ART-075-2014-02.jpgA public system of justice is meant to protect
all individuals, including the poor, from being harassed and harmed.
Such a justice system protects all individuals under a framework of law.
It is the criminal justice system that provides this protection. Such a
system is meant to protect individuals from those who may try to harm
their life or limb; defraud them one way or another; or engage in any
other form of illegal exploitation of people. Within such a system,
predators are the ones who stand to suffer.
Where such a system exists, the poor, like everyone else, have
opportunities to improve their income. And, most crucially, they do not
have to share the little income they have on predators.
One of the major causes of poverty, unaddressed during the state and
international discourse on poverty, is the failure of states to create
and maintain a public justice system, that is capable and willing to
protect all individuals in the jurisdiction from attack and predation by
others.
Anyone concerned with improving the incomes for the poor must be
concerned with the type of public justice system available to them.
Where the public justice system is weak or does not exist – which is the
case in almost all developing countries – it should be the primary
objective of all agencies concerned with poverty alleviation to
institute or radically improve the system.
A critical contemporary challenge is to find ways to influence all
concerned international agencies contributing to the improvement of the
lives of poor, so that they may understand the importance of creating
and maintaining public justice institutions that help protect the poor.
What this calls for is a change at policy levels in strategies of
poverty alleviation. The minds of all policy makers need to be opened to
enable them to consider the problem of poverty, not only from the point
of view of economic criteria but also from the point of view of
political and social criteria, within which the problem of the missing
public justice systems should be given prime place.
This is a challenge to all humanitarian organizations in the world. It
calls for richer understanding of humanitarian tasks, in terms of
poverty alleviation and poverty eradication. This challenge for an
understanding well beyond the mere doling-out of money or simply
introducing programmes, such as credit facilities to the poor. Lobbying
and advocacy for establishing and improving public justice systems must
find place on the humanitarian agenda.
Naturally, human rights organizations too should be able to look beyond
mere calls for investigations and prosecutions of human rights
violations. They should play more active and dynamic roles in promoting
ways to create and maintain credible and functioning public justice
systems.
An outstanding contribution to this discourse is a book written by Gary
Haugen and Victor Boutros, The Locust Effect – Why the end of poverty
requires the end of violence, published in 2014, and already a best
seller. This book is devoted to demonstrating the link between poverty
and the need to protect the poor from violence through the establishment
of effective public justice systems.


