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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, April 27, 2015
Mahinda Rajapaksa's denial
Fragments.
by Uditha Devapriya-Sunday, April 26, 2015
In
an interview with AFP last Wednesday, Mahinda Rajapaksa has denied any
involvement with the Bodu Bala Sena. He has called the organisation a
Western conspiracy that alienated Muslims. We can assume it wasn't just
the Muslims it alienated, but let's leave that for later. For now, we
can take this statement in either of two ways. We can think Rajapaksa is
suffering from selective myopia, given that he didn't make any
statement like this while in power.
We
can also think he's gaining humility. Now in politics humility rarely
counts. This we know. It's only natural that this statement will be
greeted with disbelief, not just by his detractors but by his supporters
as well. That's what makes it all the more tragic.
When the former president secured an unprecedented majority in
Parliament in 2010, he had the best chance to democratise the country he
delivered from terrorism. He didn't do that. Instead he passed through a
constitutional amendment that he thought would ensure unlimited rule
but which proved his undoing in the end. He alienated anyone and
everyone who wasn't part of his family. He listened to those he
shouldn't have listened to. And, perhaps most tragically, he let abuse
off the hook, even with abusers who are now with the government and are
lambasting him as though they’ve become lily-white angels.
I have always believed that if there's something wrong with the Sinhala
Buddhists, it's that they fall prey to political agenda rather quickly.
When the Aluthgama riots were in full swing, both the BBS and Jathika
Hela Urumaya (the former more than the latter) didn't help. What they
did was to inflame a situation that could have been corrected. Easily.
They let emotion prevail and excluded reason. That didn't help, clearly.
Rajapaksa should have known better, on the other hand. But he listened
to wrong advice. That too proved his undoing. And it's not hard to see
how. When the Aluthgama riots boiled over, there was an opportunity open
to him. He could have made a statement. He could have eased tension. He
could have stopped the riots and rioters. But he didn't. Why?
In his interview with AFP, he points out a name. Patali Champika
Ranawaka. He accuses the Minister for having defended the BBS. True.
Ranawaka did himself no favours during the Aluthgama riots. It was
Rajitha Senaratne, the Old Left, Dilan Perera, and Wimal Weerawansa (in
that order) who named names and accused the organisation. The JHU didn't
incite violence, but it didn't help sort out the mess either.
The former president says that it was Ranawaka's act that alienated
minorities. That is only partly true. Ranawaka was not Rajapaksa’s
right-hand man. If he was the statesman we wanted him to become he
should have disregarded Ranawaka and resolved Aluthgama. He didn't.
Playing the blame-game doesn't help, therefore.
It also doesn't help that his family were perceived to be colluding with
the BBS. That's what makes his involvement-denial all the more
self-contradictory. Still, his assertion that the organisation worked
against his interests is spot on. Better late than never, after all.
Yes, he should have acted against the BBS when he had time and they were
against his interests. But then again, there were other things he
should have done. He left them all undone. We now know where that lead
him.
And if recent events are anything to go by, there appears to be very
little substance in what he's saying now. When Gotabaya Rajapaksa was
summoned to the Bribery Commission there were supporters waving a
perverted National Flag. This points more at overzealous protesters than
at those they were supporting, but the move clearly backfired. If the
Bodu Bala Sena was involved with this that makes the AFP interview even
more self-contradictory.
Mahinda Rajapaksa must substantiate assertion. If he wants to deny
collusion with the BBS he must do so to the public. He must clarify and
reveal what really happened during Aluthgama. He must name names. He has
the support of the Sinhala Buddhist community but he must have the
foresight to embrace all and alienate none. That is why the BBS needs to
be out. It may be a short-term plus-factor but in the long run it won't
help. This he must realise. At once.
Uditha Devapriya is a freelance writer who can be reached at udakdev1@gmail.com
