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
The Hindu mess and N. Ram’s tweet on the raw (or RAW) matter?

I was simply appalled when N. Ram’s quick tweet on this raw matter, not only defending The Hindu correspondent but also accusing the government or the President of falsehood.
( October 22, 2018, Sydney, Sri Lanka Guardian) A.S. Panneerselvan ran a story this morning in The Hindu (00.00am,
22 October 2018) titled “Don’t blame the messenger,” referring to the
controversial front page report of the same newspaper five days ago by
Meera Sirinivasan on “Sri Lankan President Sirisena alleges that RAW is
plotting his assassination,” with the pretentious claim “for a
responsible media organisation, telling the truth is imperative even if
it means reporting tactless utterances.”
The Hindu or Meera Sirinivasan is the messenger. What is the message?
Reporting a news is perfectly acceptable or even imperative, after
reasonable verification that the initial journalist had done. However to
claim that report is the absolute truth, or nothing but the truth, is
farfetched and unwarranted. Subjectively of course the journalist who
reported the news or even the whole newspaper establishment may consider
the story is the truth. But that claim is questionable, unless they are
Gods, because the information has particularly emerged under
questionable circumstances which the newspaper and the journalist/s are
quite privy to.
Questionable Circumstances?
What are these questionable circumstances?
First, there had been reportedly a heated argument between the President
and the Prime Minister of Sri Lanka surrounding proposed development
projects with the partnership of India.
Second, there had been reportedly some accusations and exchange between
the President and some Ministers belonging to the other party of the
coalition, the UNP, on the ongoing CID investigations on the alleged
assassination conspiracy against the President and the former Defence
Secretary.
It is well known that the Minister of Finance and Media, Mangala
Samaraweera, publicly dismissed the conspiracy allegations, whether it
has had any impact on the ongoing investigations or not. Therefore, the
information coming under such circumstances should be circumspect, not
to take the news as the final truth.
Panneerselvan has sufficiently defended the colleague journalist under a
separate section of the article (“The act of verification”) and there
is no issue of that defence except his questioning of ‘the President’s
incredible statement,’ as if he not only believes that the President
made such a statement,but also implying the accusation is not credible.
The second implication is the most questionable.
The following is what the Indian Prime Minister’s office has stated in
nutshell after President Sirisena’s telephone call on the matter.
“The
Prime Minister appreciated the prompt steps taken by the President and
his Government to firmly refute the malicious reports by publicly
clarifying the matters. He also reiterated India’s emphasis on
‘neighbourhood first’ policy and the priority the Government of India
and he personally attach to developing even stronger all-round
cooperation between the two countries.”
It should be noted that the statement names “the malicious reports” not only referring to The Hindu, but also to many other news reports in Sri Lanka, apparently emerging from the same sources.
What is the Message?
It is a mindboggling question why Panneerselvanis appealing in his
today’s article “Don’t blame the messenger?” The reason is not clear or
ambiguous. There can be two implications.
First, don’t blame the messenger for exposing the ‘incredible statement’ of the President.
Second, don’t blame the messenger for exposing a possible RAW involvement in the alleged conspiracy.
Of course the second does not emerge from the initial report of Meera
Sirinivasan, but from Panneerselvan’s report today. He says:
“It
has never been easy for reporters covering neighbourhood politics to
report on the roles of agencies like the Research and Analysis Wing
[RAW] and Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence. As a reporter who has
covered most of India’s neighbouring countries for nearly three decades,
I can safely say that these agencies are named in most of the covert
and overt operations — sometimes based on facts, sometimes based on pure
hypothesis, and sometimes to suit domestic political realities.”
Is the above passage an indication that the President’s ‘incredible
statement’ may be ‘credible’ under circumstances of, if not fact, but
based on hypothesis? Or is it to ‘suit the domestic political realities’
that the report is made. However, it appears that it is the way at
least Panneerselvan is operating or writing, as he says.
Under these circumstances, his initial claim that “responsible media
organisations tell the truth” is questionable. I might be a last person
to condemned media freedom, even if they tell lies, knowingly or
unknowingly. I am an author of the “Lima Declaration of Academic
Freedom” acclaimed by UNESCO, and academic freedom is not dissimilar to
media freedom.
Therefore, this is a friendly spat to remind the ‘colleagues’ not to
claim for ‘truth’ instantly,but to find, report and interpret facts and
allow the law enforcement and particularly the judiciary to find the
reasonable ‘truth’in this type of a case. Or allow the truth to emerge
through a process, without jumping on a hurried ‘truth.’
Ram’s Tweet
I am not a person searching or getting involved in the social media. It
appears they have absolute freedom, I mean the social media, even Donald
Trump tweeting and tweeting on all matters on earth.
But I was simply appalled when N. Ram’s quick tweet on this raw matter, not only defending The Hindu correspondent,
but also accusing the government or the President of falsehood. The
question is not about the President or the government, but again N.
Ram’s claim about the ‘truth.’ This is what I am particularly
questioning. There were two tweets on the same day on the 19th.
First: “Our
Sri Lanka Correspondent verified what she had learnt with multiple
independent sources before publishing her report. Let them issue their
lame denials, try to wriggle out of what was said — but we stand by our
Correspondent’s meticulously fact-checked story.”
This is fairly ok, as I have already stated, defending The Hindu correspondent. N. Ram is not only the former Editor in Chief of The Hindu but also the Chairman of the Kasturi & Sons Limited, the publisher of The Hindu. Therefore, the concern is understandable. However, the second tweet is more questionable about the alleged truth.
Second: “Another
case of saying something wild & bizarre, expecting it to remain
within a closed room, and then blaming the media for the furore caused.
The Hindu did its job — truth-telling.”
What is this ‘closed room’? The Cabinet meeting of a friendly
neighbouring country which is supposed to have collective responsibility
according to the democratic parliamentary norms, both India and Sri
Lanka are supposed to follow.
Apart from The Hindu’s
so quick jumping on ‘truth-telling,’ there is an apparent defence of
RAW of any wrong doing, in Ram’s second tweet, by saying the alleged
accusation is “wild and bizarre.” How does he know or so sure? This is
not merely about a matter of fact, but of principle.
(Laksiri Fernando is former Professor of Political Science and Public Policy, University of Colombo)

