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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, February 6, 2015
New Sri Lanka president renews troop deployment orders
Sirisena’s election last month had been expected to lead to a lessening
of the numbers of troops in towns and cities — particularly in former
war zones — which had been a prominent feature of his hardline
nationalist predecessor Mahinda Rajapakse’s tenure.
During the build-up to his election victory, Sirisena promised to
confine the military to their barracks and call them out only in the
event of an emergency or a threat to national security.

Sri
Lanka’s President Maithripala Sirisena (L) attends the country’s 67th
Independence Day celebrations in Colombo, on February 4, 2015 ©Lakruwan
Wanniarachchi (AFP)
But, according to a presidential decree seen by AFP, Sirisena has now
renewed a monthly authorisation for the deployment of troops across the
island.
"By virtue of the powers vested in me, I, Maithripala Sirisena, do by
this order call out all the members of the armed forces…for the
maintenance of public order," read the order.
The presence of large numbers of troops is particular contentious in the
mainly Tamil northern and eastern provinces that bore the brunt of a
37-year separatist conflict, which was brutally crushed by the army in
May 2009.
During a speech on Wednesday to mark the 67th anniversary of the former
British colony’s independence, Sirisena had stressed his desire for a
national reconciliation which Rajapakse is accused of failing to
deliver.
Tamil lawmaker Suresh Premachandran said the president should explain
why he felt it necessary to call out troops nearly six years after the
end of the war.
"We have been asking for the withdrawal of troops from the north and the
east, but this order only serves to continue the army presence,"
Premachandran told AFP.
"I strongly believe that there is no need to deploy troops anywhere in the country."
"He (Sirisena) promised change but if he is going to continue what the previous government did, then we are back to square one."
The Free Media Movement (FMM), a leading local rights groups, said it had expected Sirisena to confine troops to barracks.
"We think this is a retrograde step in dismantling the role of the
military in our day to day life," FMM spokesman Sunil Jayasekera told
AFP.
Sri Lanka lifted a state of emergency in August 2011, two years after
security forces crushed Tamil Tiger rebels and declared an end to war
but the previous government had deployed the military alongside the
police.

Sri Lankan military personnel march during the country's 67th
Independence Day celebrations, in Colombo, on February 4, 2015 ©Lakruwan
Wanniarachchi (AFP)

