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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, November 9, 2016
Clarifying The Bond Controversy – Joint Opposition Throwing Dust In Our Eyes
From day one of their defeat on January 8th, the seedy camp of the
former regime employed an age-old tactic to face the inevitable large
scale corruption and criminal charges brought up against them. This is
the strategy of throwing dust in the eyes of the potential enemy-in this
case the people who have to make their judgment. Confuse the people and
give a try at making the latter believe that it is the yahapalanaya
government who are really corrupt-not their good selves. Brazen liars
these corruption masters have been.
This well-known tactic of dust-throwing is said to be an old Mohameddian
trick to ward off an oncoming enemy. I quote from a story that I had
read somewhere and saved: “One day the Koreishites surrounded the house
of Mahomet, resolved to murder him. They peeped through the crevice of
his chamber-door, and saw him lying asleep. Just at this moment his
son-in-law Ali opened the door silently and threw into the air a handful
of dust. Immediately the conspirators were confounded. They mistook Ali
for Mahomet, and Mahomet for Ali; allowed the prophet to walk through
their midst uninjured, and laid hands on Ali. No sooner was Mahomet
safe, than their eyes were opened, and they saw their mistake.”
The Joint Opposition are
doing this pretty well, one must admit. They also keep repeating the
dust-throwing at every little opportunity they can muster. In this way, the
dust-throwing is coupled with the Goebellian theory of repeating a
false position to such an extent that that position will be accepted by
the people. The Sri Lankan media, in general, has lost its
critical sense and are as prone to be beguiled by deception as the
ordinary masses are.

I am not saying that the people and the media do accept that the ten year regime of Mahinda Rajapaksa was
a model of moral perfection. They may, mercifully, never accept that
stance- given the extent of moral turpitude of the previous regime.
However, people can get to the point where they believe that
corruption is the norm or way of life of all Sri Lankan
politicians-whichever side. “So then, what’s all this fuss?”- the people would think.

