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, April 24, 2015
When Migrants Flee Progress, Not War
Nearly one-fifth of people crossing the Mediterranean are leaving a country touted for achieving the Millennium Development Goals. Turns out, a better life requires more than a U.N. checklist.

Each migrant trying to cross the Mediterranean in a rickety boat has his
or her own reason for risking the journey. But for people who study
Africa, one overall lesson quietly emerges from this mass movement: Man
cannot live by MDGs alone.
I’m talking about the Millennium Development Goals, the eight targets
the United Nations drew up as benchmarks of successful development back
in 2000. The U.N. set precise goals for poverty alleviation, education,
and health care that poor countries, supported by Western donors, could
tick off a list — the supposed building blocks of a better life.
Ironically, the deadline set for achieving the MDGs was 2015, the very
year in which Europe has been confronted by a mass exodus of refugees
voting with their feet.
Some migrants are fleeing violence in Syria and Somalia; some are West
Africans who worked in Libya and now find it too dangerous to stay. But a
significant share comes from African countries neither wracked by civil
unrest nor embroiled in war. Counterintuitively, many of these nations
perform extremely well on the MDG front.
Take the Red Sea nation of Eritrea, which accounts for the greatest
number of migrants to Europe after Syria, an extraordinary figure given
its population of just around 6 million. According to the U.N. refugee agency, 34,561 Eritreans crossed the Mediterranean in 2014.
Bizarre as it may seem, I often encourage Western friends to take
holidays in Eritrea, this country so many are now fleeing and which I
myself can’t access, for want of a journalist visa. It’s safe, clean,
and cheap, and it boasts some of Africa’s best roads and most dramatic
scenery, and the continent’s most beautiful capital city. Back in 2013,
President Isaias Afewerki’s government patted itself on the back for
achieving three health MDGs ahead of schedule: reducing infant
mortality, improving maternal health, and combating HIV, malaria, and
other diseases. It expects to check three more off the list by the end
of this year.
Of course any statistic published by a notoriously secretive
administration that allows no real parliamentary oversight or media
scrutiny should be taken with a pinch of salt. But the U.N. Development
Programme’s representative in the country, Christine Umutoni, has hailed the government as a model for Africa, and aBBC documentary crew that
recently managed to obtain an entry visa — as rare as hen’s teeth for
foreign media — confirmed the impression of a well-run health service.
The point is: All that just isn’t enough. Eritrea, run by a former
communist rebel movement that seized power in 1991, may well offer its
citizens excellent medical care. Claims that it knows how to protect its
people from East Africa’s frequent droughts and resulting famines may
even be true. But the government has failed dramatically to deliver on a
range of less quantifiable needs that hold the key to human
fulfillment.
There’s no independent media or political opposition in the country.
Religious freedom is narrowly curtailed. A multiparty constitution has
never been ratified, no presidential elections staged. Both men and
women must do military service, which is often open-ended. If you’re
lucky enough to get demobilized, there’s no private-sector economy to
soak up your labor and provide you with skills. Asmara is an elegant
cage — a suffocating place to live.
Africa is struggling to digest a massive youth bulge, and youngsters are
instinctively aspirational. They want the chance of a better existence
in their own lifetimes, not promises of some distant utopia. While
governments such as the one in Eritrea may score impressively when it
comes to keeping youth fed, vaccinated, and literate (the MDG emphasis
is on primary education, of course, not the tertiary education likely to
produce rebellious students), they routinely frustrate deeper needs.
Indeed, the paradox is not unique to Eritrea. Since the end of the Cold
War, a new generation of African leaders has emerged that wins the
consistent and enthusiastic backing of the U.S. Agency for International
Development and Britain’s Department for International Development for
delivering on the MDGs, even while these leaders show open contempt for
civil society, human rights groups, and the free press. “Democracy is a
luxury we can’t afford,” is the implicit message to Western partners.
Over the past two decades, the former rebel leaders once hailed as
spearheading an “African Renaissance” have steadily morphed into a
generation of New Securocrats.The iron-fisted policies unveiled by
leaderships in Ethiopia, Rwanda, and Uganda win the tacit support of
Western allies whose worries about Soviet expansionism have been neatly
replaced by fear of the spread of Islamic fundamentalism.
“Africa Rising,” the recent buzz phrase adopted by investors excited by
the economic potential of the continent’s growing middle class and the
spread of modern technology, has distracted attention from a series of
reactionary trends. In east, west, and central Africa we are seeing
elections rigged not once, but repeatedly; the establishment of de facto
royal dynasties; and draconian legislation aimed at closing down the
non-governmental sector, muffling the press, and stamping out
homosexuality. Annual reports by human rights organizations make for
grim reading.
Back when the U.S. President George H.W. Bush promised “a new world order”
premised on liberal values, such developments would have alarmed
Western partners. Now they generate shrugged shoulders from diplomats
and development officials who regard them as part of the realpolitik of
the modern era.
The MDGs were designed, in part, to give Western donors and African governments apolitical,
uncontroversial common ground upon which all could agree. Clean water,
primary education, decent health care — who wouldn’t want those, after
all? But the message coming from the migrants crossing the Mediterranean
is: “Oh, sure, we want those. But we want far, far more.” And who can
blame them?
FILIPPO MONTEFORTE/AFP/Getty Images
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Thavam

