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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, October 25, 2018
Dealing successfully with the past needs a public and truthful process
Among those who
came to the OMP to make their representations at the public consultation
was Sandya , wife of Prageeth Ekneligoda
For reconciliation to become a reality in Sri Lanka, no section of
society should feel it is being marginalized or ignored. In a
recognition of the need for all of society to be engaged, the Office of
Missing Persons (OMP) is about to commence a campaign to generate
empathy for victims. The value of public processes in giving a place to
those whose sorrows have been long ignored to speak their truth was seen
at the public consultation organised by the OMP in Colombo last week.
This consultation was meant for people from the Western Province. The
problem of missing persons is not limited to the North and East nor to
the Tamil people. In the past three months since it was constituted, and
commissioners appointed, the OMP has been holding consultations in
different parts of the country.
The significance of the OMP’s consultation in Colombo is that it
highlights that its constituency is not limited to only the
disappearances that took place during the course of the war with the
LTTE. The OMP has no time bar and therefore covers earlier periods as
well. The OMP’s mandate includes the disappearances that took place in
the southern parts of the country during the JVP insurrections as well.
At the public consultation in Colombo most of those who made public
representations were those who lost their loved ones in the course of
the JVP insurrection that took place during the period 1988-89. Although
these events took place three decades ago, the memories still remain
and hope still remains in the hearts of those who come for redress. The
OMP is meant to locate the whereabouts of those who went missing or find
out what happened to them.
One of those present at the OMP consultation was Shantha Pathirana. He
said that his brother had been abducted in 1989. He had been working at a
government hospital when his brother was abducted and never seen again.
Their mother now wanted to block out the past, but Shantha wanted to
pursue the past. I asked him why. He said he wanted to know why his
brother was made to disappear. His brother was a trade union member.
Therefore the hospital authorities may have wanted him out of the way.
Shantha wanted to know whether the hospital authorities had been
involved. He wanted the law to take its course and those who made his
brother disappear to be brought to justice. He awaits the setting up of a
judicial process that would ensure accountability for severe violations
of human rights. This shows that the promise of the government in
Geneva in October 2015 to set up a special judicial mechanism to ensure
accountability is as much a need for the people of the South as it is
for those in the North and East.
POLITICAL STRATEGY
Amongst the others who came to make their representations was Sandhya
Ekneligoda who had lost her journalist husband in 2008 in Colombo when
he was abducted and never returned. Her public lament to the OMP was
that some of the suspects from the security forces who were involved in
her husband’s disappearance were now in remand custody. But the security
establishment was not cooperating in providing information. Despite
orders by the courts of law the information has been slow in coming and
she appealed to the OMP to step into the breach and get the necessary
information so that the case in court could proceed. The OMP is
constituted of members who have the will and determination to fulfil its
mandate. But they need to have political backing or else their efforts
and the work of the OMP and the larger reform process itself can
meander.
However, the political strategy of the government in dealing with
controversial issues appears to be to work on them outside the public
eye and get it passed into law and then let events take their own
course. This is a ticking the box approach. But this is not enough.
There also needs to be political accompaniment by political champions.
The newly legislated Office for Reparations is an example. The
legislation was passed in parliament by a slim majority, with most of
the parliamentarians not participating in the voting at all. The
legislation was prepared out of the public eye. It was not shared with
either the parliamentarians or the general public prior to emerging as
draft legislation. But this has enabled the opposition to take the upper
hand in the public debate that has opened up after the legislation was
passed in parliament.
The public untruths about what this legislation is meant to achieve is
an example of what can happen when there is insufficient public
discussion. This highlights the need for the truth commission that the
government promised in Geneva in October 2015 as part of its package of
four special mechanisms. Whether in Sri Lanka or internationally, the
passage of legislation that is meant to look after those who were
victims of past violence is an achievement that ought to be appreciated
by the people. Dealing with the violence of the past whether in a
personal or public setting is not easy to do. Dealing with the past
especially when it involved a war, terrorism, and severe human rights
violations that lasted for nearly three decades, necessarily requires
dealing with a divided past. There is a need for the truth to emerge, as
it can through the workings of the OMP and Office for Reparations and
by the still to be established truth commission.
FALSE PROPAGANDA
The new government institutions that have been established are now
functioning in a variety of areas related to good governance. These
would include the Office for Reparations, the Right to Information
Commission and the Office of Missing Persons. But the extent to which
the general public knows about them and their objectives is limited.
Therefore they start off on a negative note in the minds of most people.
Whether it is university students, business persons or grassroots
community leaders, these new institutions that are meant to assist Sri
Lanka in its democratic transition from war to peace are seen in a
negative light as being detrimental to the country’s national interest.
The false propaganda about the Office for Reparations is an example of
what can happen when there is insufficient information about a new
mechanism that is meant to deal with a divided past. Unless the
government takes the people along with it in the formulation of the new
mechanism, the door is left open for the opposition to create fear and
suspicion about it. The opposition has been claiming that the Office for
Reparations is meant to compensate the LTTE for its losses at the
behest of the international community. This was the view expressed by
students of Wayamba University at a discussion on the transitional
justice process last week that I attended. But when it was explained
that what will be compensated is the loss of human rights due to a human
being and to a citizen, and not the label, they understood and
appreciated.
Ironically, the JVP which failed to vote for the Office for Reparations
when it was being legislated in parliament has now come forward to be
its main political champion in the public sphere. The JVP leadership has
pointed out that racist elements had dubbed the Office for Reparation
Bill as a move to help former LTTE members as they wanted to instigate
communal disharmony. JVP Propaganda Secretary and MP Vijitha Herath said
that the Office for Reparation Bill had been given various
interpretations. But as he said the objective of the new mechanism is to
compensate those who have been affected by political and civil
conflicts irrespective of their ethnic or religious background.
As it enters its final year in office the government has many promises
to keep. The most important of these is with regard to the
constitutional reform process. Here again there is uncertainty in the
minds of the people regarding what the government’s intentions are with
regard to constitutional reform. There is uncertainty whether the
government wants to keep the unitary state or depart from it. There is
uncertainty whether the government will continue to give the foremost
place to Buddhism in the constitution or will move away from it.
Explaining the truth of the situation can win trust. The success of the
reconciliation process will depend on the extent to which the people
trust the government, the government speaks the truth to the people and
still succeeds in taking them along.


