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 23, 2016
SRI LANKA: SCRIBES AS SCAPEGOATS

Image (c)Sri Lanka Brief.
A bad workman’s tools and the media have one thing in common; they get
blamed for others’ failures. The Rajapaksa government vilified its
critics as ‘traitors’ and the present administration brands all
dissenters ‘racists’.
Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe launched into a tirade against the
media the other day in Parliament as usual. He is apparently under the
impression that the raison d’être of the media is to devise ways and
means of scuttling the government’s efforts to achieve what it described
as national reconciliation. He seems to think hell is now empty because
all the devils have crept into the local media institutions. He,
however, is not alone in bashing the media.
Some lesser politicians, intoxicated with power, also indulge in
inveighing against the media, taking as they do cover behind their
parliamentary privileges. The question is what those who are so keen to
bring about reconciliation did to prevent the 1983 anti-Tamil pogrom
backed by the then UNP government of which they were prominent members.
They did not utter a word in protest when the majestic Jaffna
bibliotheca packed with rare, invaluable, weighty tomes was burnt down,
did they? ….
The Rajapaksas who were blamed for goon attacks on the media while they
were in power have taken up cudgels for journalists. It was in their
heyday that journalists such as Lasantha Wickrematunga were brutally
murdered, and MTV, Siyatha TV and the printing facilities of The Sunday
Leader and the Udayan came under arson attacks. Adding insult to injury,
President Mahinda Rajapaksa appointed Mervyn Silva his Media Minister.
The media fought quite a battle to knock some sense into Rajapaksa, who
reluctantly changed his mind. We pointed out in this space that the
Arachchi would have to take the blame for what his ferocious pet dog was
doing. Silva also specialised in character assassination and would
indulge in vilifying the then key Opposition figures with impunity to
please his political bosses. Public resentment welled up and found
expression in a massive protest vote which dislodged the Rajapaksa
regime last year. Rajapaksa’s pet dog is now snapping at his own feet!
Minister of Law and Order Sagala Ratnayake told Parliament on Saturday
that 15 journalists had been killed between 2006 and 2015. This is a
damning indictment on the Joint Opposition, which is now championing
media freedom and democracy. Similarly, the UNP must explain why it has
not ordered a probe into the then Chief Opposition Whip and UNP MP
Joseph Michael Perera’s special statement in Parliament in July, 2008
that the attacks on journalists under the Rajapaksa government were
carried out by a special army team controlled by the then Army Commander
Lt. Gen. Sarath Fonseka, who is now a minister of the ‘yahapalana’
government!
The government’s anti media frenzy has taken a turn for the worse. A
television station has been closed down and the ground is apparently
being prepared for throttling another on some flimsy pretext. Those who
have no qualms about justifying the illegal sale of MPs’ duty free
vehicle permits and mega bond scams, releasing terrorists and
manipulating the judiciary to take ruling party politicians off the hook
have made an issue of alleged violations of the terms of licences
issued to television stations!
The Rajapaksas’ efforts to justify their undemocratic actions such as
the incarceration of the former war winning Army Chief Fonseka and the
‘impeachment’ of the then Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake came a
cropper. Likewise, the discerning public won’t buy into claims being
made to justify dictatorial actions of the incumbent government on a
witch hunt against its critics. The government’s ability to muster a
two-thirds majority in Parliament by showering bribes on MPs in the form
of ministerial posts, cars, plum jobs for their kith and kin should not
be confused with popular support. The Rajapaksa government, too, had a
two-thirds majority in the House, but it came crashing down, didn’t it?
The government finds itself in the dock and people will deliver their
verdict at a future election. It may postpone local government
elections, but it will have to hold them eventually.
