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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, May 7, 2019
IS terror in Sri Lanka: Govt dissimulates, as West consolidates

Even
as the US fights Islamic terrorism, it is accused at other times of
using IS as an asset. Analyst Saeed Naqvi in a comment on the Easter
Sunday attacks published in The Economic Times, refers to a New York
Times interview with Barack Obama, where the then US president admitted
to having delayed bombing IS when it reared its head in Iraq, so as to
put pressure on Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki to sign a SOFA
agreement. "In other words, ISIS was an American asset at that
juncture," Naqvi noted.
The horror of the new reality that the Islamic State (IS) terror group
has chosen Sri Lanka for its operations - for whatever purpose - is yet
to fully register with many. While that is understandable against a
backdrop of 10 years of peace, the government’s response to this new
crisis, with its dire security dimension, shows a level of internal
dysfunction that has left citizens aghast.
Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe has sought to shift the blame to
President Maithripala Sirisena while the President has pointed fingers
at the former Defence Secretary and the IGP who refuses to step down
(leading to speculation as to whether he has protection from some
quarter). Now, both the prime minister and the president are with one
voice saying that Sri Lanka ‘needs the help of foreign intelligence
agencies.’ This odd concurrence of opinion needs to be examined more
closely. Is there external pressure at work?
The prime minister had been reiterating the need for foreign
intelligence support in his several statements from the time of the
attacks. The president echoed that view on May Day, when he said he had
just received the interim report of the commission he appointed to look
into the causes of the tragedy. The call for assistance from foreign
intel agencies needs to be seen in the light of the US and UK already
having sent in teams to assist in the investigations, and Indian media
reports mentioning Indian assistance in the probe. It comes at a time
when Sri Lankan police and military are doing brilliant work in swiftly
tracking down suspects, detecting weapons, explosives and information in
almost every province. The US embassy statement said the US had sent in
teams from both the FBI and the US Navy’s USINDOPACOM. One needs to
ask, why is the US Indo-Pacific Command, which is part of the US
military, included?
PM’s statements
In his April 26 special statement the PM, no less than six times,
mentioned the need for foreign assistance and a new counter terrorism
law. "Sri Lanka has a very narrow definition of aiding terrorism" he
said. "Therefore, we find that our existing laws are insufficient to
deal with the extraordinary situation we are faced with." He told Sky
News UK in an interview that "In our country to go abroad and return or
to take part in a foreign armed uprising is not an offence here." And
that "We have no laws which enable us take into custody people who join
foreign terrorist group." In subsequent statements the PM urged the
swift passage of the proposed Counter Terrorism Act (CTA), claiming that
had it been passed the Easter Sunday massacre could have been
prevented.
The prime minister’s claims regarding the existing anti-terrorism law
have been challenged, both by the Opposition and by the public. An
academic from the Law Faculty of Colombo University in a widely
circulated tweet titled ‘Don’t lie Ranil!’ listed the laws that cover
involvement with foreign terrorists: the 1887 Penal Code (Section 2),
the 1987 Prevention of Terrorism Act (Section 11) and the April 2019
Emergency regulations 2120/5 (Sections 26 and 27). Given below is what
the recently enacted regulations say, according to a Gazette
Extraordinary on the Public Security Ordinance dated 22.04.19. Readers
may decide for themselves whether the prime minister’s claims are
correct.
Section 26:
No person or groups of persons either incorporated or unincorporated
including an organization, shall either individually or as a group or
groups or through other persons engage in -(a) terrorism ; (b) any
specified terrorist activity ;or (c) any other activity in furtherance
of any act of terrorism or specified terrorist activity committed by any
person, group or groups of persons, and any such person or group of
persons who act in contravention of this regulations shall be guilty of
an offence and on conviction by a High Court be liable to a term of
imprisonment of not less than ten years and after exceeding twenty
years.
Section 27:
(1) No person shall :-(a) wear, display, hoist or possess the uniform,
dress, symbol, emblem, or flag of; (b) summon, convene, conduct or take
part in a meeting of; (c) obtain membership or join; (d) harbour,
conceal, assist a member, cadre or any other associate of; (e) promote,
encourage, support, advice, assist, act on behalf of; or (f) organize or
take part in any activity or event of, any person, group, groups of
persons or an organization which acts in contravention of regulation 26
of these regulations.
(2) Any person who acts in contravention of paragraph (1) of this
regulation shall be guilty of an offence and on conviction by a High
Court be liable to a term of imprisonment of not less than five years
and not exceeding ten years.
The government’s proposed new Counter Terrorism Act (CTA) has been
opposed on the grounds that it could be used to suppress student unions,
trade unions, media freedoms and the Opposition. It is also faulted for
being lax in respect of terrorists, unlike the existing Prevention of
Terrorism Act (PTA). Critics argue that the government’s real objective
is to get rid of the PTA in compliance with the Geneva resolutions.
Strangely, in cases where the terror suspect is a foreigner, the new law
is said to prohibit action being taken without the consent of the
country in which the suspect is a citizen. The consideration that such a
provision could help protect ex-LTTE elements or sympathisers domiciled
abroad, raises questions as to whether the drafting of this law had
external inputs.
The lie about US intelligence
Another questionable development in the wake of the Easter Sunday terror
attacks, relates to how the government tried to float the idea that
intelligence warnings had come from the US – in addition to India. The
only confirmed report pertaining to foreign intelligence warnings so
far, relates to the ignored police memo saying that a foreign
intelligence source had warned of attacks being planned by NTJ leader
Mohamed Zahran targeting churches and the Indian High Commission. Indian
media reports indicated the warning had come from India.
Minister Harsha de Silva however told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour that
intelligence warnings had come from both the India and the United
States. The following day Amanpour interviewed the US ambassador in
Colombo Alaina Teplitz, who denied there had been any US intel warning.
The relevant sections from the interviews, as reported on CNN’s website,
went as follows:
CNN interview with Harsha de Silva on 22 April 2019:
Q. Minister can you tell me which foreign intelligence briefed you, can you tell me how you got the information?
A. From what I understand it came from both India and the United States. That’s what I hear.
CNN interview with ambassador Teplitz on 23 April 2019:
Q. Yesterday on this program the Sri Lankan minister of economic reform
said it was the US and India – their intelligence and your intelligence -
that warned Sri Lanka. Could you confirm that that is the case?
A. Christiane we had no prior knowledge of these attacks. The Sri Lankan
government has admitted lapses in their intelligence gathering and
information sharing.
Both Minister De Silva and National Integration Minister Mano Ganesan
are reported to have said that ‘Intelligence authorities of the United
States and India’ gave warnings (Daily Mirror 23.04.19).
One needs to ask whether the government, by trying to circulate
disinformation suggesting the US had offered helpful intelligence, seeks
to prepare the ground for revelation of a much larger CIA presence in
the country than people are aware of. Is it more than a coincidence that
not one, but two ministers made the same incorrect claim in the
immediate aftermath of the bombings – one of them on a mainstream
American TV news channel?
Parliament and the public are yet to be informed as to whether the Sri
Lanka government has renewed the lapsed Acquisition and Cross Service
Agreement (ACSA) or entered into a Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA)
with the US. All that is known is that military ties with the superpower
are being strengthened at a rapid pace. The latest manifestation of
this was the so-called ‘temporary cargo transfer operation’ in January
where the US military used the BIA airport and Trincomalee in an
operation to fly in their military aircraft and ferry supplies to an
aircraft carrier of the 7th Fleet operating in the Indian Ocean. This
exercise was misleadingly sought to be portrayed as a ‘commercial’
activity although it is clear such an operation could not have taken
place without some bilateral military agreement being in place.
Fighting Jihadism
It is against this backdrop that the PM, and now the President, are
making public announcements of the need for the assistance of ‘foreign
intelligence agencies.’
On 29.04.19 a video, that experts believe to be authentic, was released showing IS leader Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi making reference to the Sri Lanka attacks. Soon after its release the prime minister in a press release said: "…Sri Lanka should join hands with the rest of the world to deal with jihadism. It will work with all countries that are against terrorism and share intelligence and expert knowledge."
The prime minister would surely know that ‘all countries that are
against terrorism’ do not necessarily agree on who ‘their’ terrorists
are, and do not necessarily work towards the same goals in the
strategies they adopt in relation to terror groups. Big powers work with
their allies or their client states to serve their own global strategic
interests. Even though it’s declared policy is to fight Islamic
terrorism, the US is accused of having armed and trained jihadi groups
in Syria, against the Assad regime. The US’s strategic goal in the
Pacific and Indian Oceans is, in the last analysis, to counter China
with the help of its allies. Sri Lanka, on account of its strategic
location, is now in the crosshairs of dangerous power games among these
big powers.
The defeat of IS in Syria was announced after the bombing of Bagouz,
where the group made its last stand. Baghdadi is seen in the video
telling his followers that the Sri Lanka attacks were ‘revenge for
brothers in Bagouz,’ and thanking God ‘that there were Americans and
Europeans among the dead.’ It is significant that US Secretary of State
Mike Pompeo in a statement on the Sri Lanka attacks said "this is
America’s fight too." This pledge is a two-edged sword as far as Sri
Lanka is concerned.
Even as the US fights Islamic terrorism, it is accused at other times of
using IS as an asset. Analyst Saeed Naqvi in a comment on the Easter
Sunday attacks published in The Economic Times, refers to a New York
Times interview with Barack Obama, where the then US president admitted
to having delayed bombing IS when it reared its head in Iraq, so as to
put pressure on Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki to sign a SOFA
agreement. "In other words, ISIS was an American asset at that
juncture," Naqvi noted.
The point here is not to say that Sri Lanka does not need the help of
other nations. Sri Lanka as a Non-aligned state has had the support of
countries in all regions of the world. The 2015 coalition (‘yahapalana’)
government however while paying lip-service to Non-alignment,
capitulated to the West and especially to the US, to a degree that put
sovereignty on the line, paved the way for proxy wars on its territory
and made the country needlessly vulnerable to big-power conflicts that
Sri Lanka itself has nothing to do with. It is this vulnerability that
has become the biggest threat to national security now. "A ghastly
tragedy can shake a nation" wrote Naqvi. "That is precisely when
powerful intelligence agencies move in with help, advice which, over a
period of time, becomes the kind of deep penetration which begins to
navigate policy."

