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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Back to 500BC.
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, May 6, 2020
FROM ALUTHGAMA AND POST-EASTER SUNDAY TO COVID-19: MUSLIMS AGAIN AT THE MARGINS- SHREEN SAROOR

The entire world is grappling
with the COVID-19 pandemic. Although Sri Lanka has had only seven deaths
so far, we too are scrambling to contain the outbreak. Social
distancing, face masks, curfews for weeks, home-quarantine, detention,
cordons and contract tracing constitute the new normal against this
dangerous virus. In this uncertain time, it is critical not to alienate
and discriminate against minority communities. Arbitrary and
discriminatory actions in response to the virus not only threaten ethnic
harmony but, by making victims scared to come forward, they risk
exponential spread of a virus that knows no ethnic boundaries.
Sri Lanka has managed to keep
the spread at reasonably low tide in comparison to many other developing
countries. While preventive measures could have begun earlier, the hard
work of all those on the frontlines who have kept the virus in check so
far is to be celebrated. At the same time, however, the government’s
COVID-19 emergency measures, particularly in a context without a sitting
parliament or functioning judiciary, have weakened the necessary checks
and balances. With an executive determined to rule through the military
and ad hoc measures often run by family members, civil liberties and
democratic institutions are at grave risk. There is reason to fear that
exceptional measures to control COVID-19 – notably the contact tracing
technologies in the hands of security and intelligence forces – will
result in the normalization of intense surveillance of society at large
and more effective policing of dissent.
Another danger in the
government’s approach to the virus, however, is already putting lives
and freedoms at risk. In recent weeks, the Ministry of Health amended
the circular regarding disposal of bodies of deceased COVID-19 patients.
A circular released on 27 March, consistent with previous health
regulations, allowed cremation or burial within 24 hours. This changed
with the Ministry of Health’s Provisional Clinical Practice Guidelines
on COVID 19 Suspected and Confirmed Patients, dated 31 March, which made
cremation the only option. Muslim religious norms do not permit
cremation, and the amended circular has caused great distress within the
community.
Until 30 March, the Ministry of
Health webpage listed burial as a safe option for COVID-19 victims –
but the death of the first Muslim victim saw a rushed cremation that
made the guideline disappear overnight. The victim passed away on 30
March around 7 pm at Negombo base hospital, and the cremation was
completed overnight, without permitting any family member to see the
body. (It is perhaps no accident that the forced cremation occured in
Negombo, a location of the ISIS-inspired terror attack that killed 142
worshipers and maimed many others at St. Sebastian’s Church on Easter
Sunday the year before.)
Thereafter, the
Director-General of Health Dr. Anil Jasinghe, who supervises all medical
doctors attached to government hospitals, acted swiftly and subtly to
change the said guidelines to make cremation the only option – just days
after he had appeared on television and confirmed to the viewing public
that burial was safe. The revised cremation-only rules were made public
on 1 April. The speed of the change and the overnight removal of the
previous guideline suggests it was done to justify the wrongdoing on the
30th, which the family and Muslim religious and community leaders had
protested against strongly. The family of another victim who died on 1
April was pressured to sign a form stating they consented to the
cremation of their loved one.
On 1 April, at a meeting of
many political party leaders and Muslim MPs, including those from the
Prime Minister’s own SLPP party, this issue of burial was taken up but
not treated with the sensitivity that it deserves. Dr. Jasinghe was
present at the meeting but provided no scientific reason to disallow
burial. Muslim leaders at the meeting requested the prime minister to
appoint a committee of experts in the field to look into the burial
option. Although the PM provisionally agreed to this proposal, nothing
has been done so far.
On April 3rd the largest body
that represents government doctors, the Government Medical Officers
Association (GMOA), wrote to Dr. Jasinghe asking him to consult a team
of experts on the issue of burial, while drawing attention to the fact
both Sri Lankan law as well as WHO guidelines permit burial. To date,
there has been no expert consultation.
The current government’s
guidance is inconsistent with that of the World Health Organization
(WHO). On 24 March, the WHO released guidelines for safe handling of
deceased COVID-19 bodies. As the WHO states, “It is a common myth that
persons who have died of a communicable disease should be cremated, but
this is not true.” Because COVID-19 is a respiratory illness of the
lungs primarily transmitted through droplets (unlike Ebola or Cholera),
“dead bodies are generally not infectious.” Those preparing the dead
body for final rites must wear protective equipment, and those who view
the dead body must wash their hands. But with these precautions taken,
“people who have died from COVID-19 can be buried or cremated.” In
creating its science-based guidelines, the WHO emphasized that countries
and healthcare systems should respect and protect the “dignity of the
dead, their cultural and religious traditions, and their families.”
Contrary to what happened in Negombo, the WHO also recommends avoiding
hasty disposal of COVID-19 dead bodies.
On 4th April 16 civil society
organizations and 167 citizens wrote to President Gotabaya Rajapaksa,
Minister of Health Pavithra Waniarachchi, Director of General Health
Services Dr. Anil Jayasinghe, Health Ministry Chief Epidemiologist Dr.
Sudath Samaraweera, Chairperson of the Human Rights Commission Dr.
Deepika Udugama, and Chief Judicial Medical Officer Dr. Ajith Tennakoon.
They urged the government to amend the 31 March circular mandating
compulsory cremation. They also expressed alarm that media reports
regularly identified the religion of COVID-19 patients, contributing to
an outpouring of hate speech in both mainstream and social media blaming
the Muslim community for the spread of COVID-19.
On 8 April 2020, four U.N.
Special Rapporteurs, whose mandates cover religious freedom, mental
health, minority rights, and protecting human rights in
counterterrorism, wrote to President Gotabaya Rajapaksa. They criticised
the Ministry of Health’s amended circular as arbitrary and
discriminatory – not only is the cremation mandate not based on science,
it also disproportionately impairs the Muslim minority’s right to
freely practice their religion. The requirement of cremation is also
counterproductive, they argue: by “provoking the reluctance of families
and communities to report COVID-19 cases in fear that they may be unable
[to] ensure proper funeral or burial rights for their loved ones,” the
disease is more likely to spread.
The government’s response to
COVID-19 must not be viewed in a vacuum. A year ago, Sri Lanka suffered
its worst terrorist attacks when IS-linked extremists bombed churches
and luxury hotels. The previous government had intelligence reports that
Zahran Hashim intended to carry out attacks on churches and tourist
sites, but these warnings were completely ignored. The blasts killed 269
civilians, 45 of them children, on one of the Christians’ holiest day.
There has been no effort to create a safe space for communities to mourn
and offer condolence. To date. no one has been prosecuted for this
heinous crime, but people’s understandable fears have strengthened the
power of the military and security agencies and increased anti-Muslims
attacks and hatemongering.
After the Easter attacks,
Muslims faced immediate retaliation. Although Kathankudy Muslims had
long warned government officials about Zahran, Muslims throughout the
country became victims in the aftermath of the attacks. The same
anti-Muslim sentiment that propelled riots and mob violence in Aluthgama
and Dharga Town in 2014, and again in Kandy district in 2018, sparked
violence against Muslim homes, businesses, and places of worship. In
Hettipola, a tiny town where Muslims had always lived alongside their
Sinhalese neighbors in peace, mobs threw kerosene bombs at homes and
mosques, forcing Muslims to run for their lives. Many Muslim women
reported seeing police officers stand by as buses of Buddhist extremists
arrived to join the riots. Rumors spread unchecked that Muslim
restaurants were poisoning the food or that Muslim doctors were
sterilizing Sinhala women. In Negombo, mobs threatened refugees and
asylum seekers from Muslim countries, pressuring landlords to evict
whole families overnight.
Authorities eventually stepped
in and made pleas for calm, but not before lives and businesses were
shattered. Hate monger-in-chief Gnanasara Thero, in jail for contempt of
court, received a presidential pardon and immediately warned of a
“carnival” if a Muslim minister and two governors did not resign their
posts. A ban on wearing face-veils – which had played no role in the
Easter bombings – made every Muslim a perceived outsider and left many
women afraid to leave their homes. Hundreds of Muslim men were rounded
up under Emergency Regulations and the Prevention of Terrorism Act
(PTA), based on nothing more than owning Qurans or notebooks with Arabic
script.
Nothing has been done since to
reach out to these communities and rebuild trust. After the U.N. Special
Rapporteur for Freedom of Religion Ahmed Shaheed visited Sri Lanka, he
cautioned that “Prior impunity has strengthened the anti-Muslim groups.
Weak and un-coordinated responses to anti-Muslim violence have seen the
rise in violence and attacks on individuals and the communities in some
parts of the country.” The Government categorically rejected these
findings on 3 March as “inaccurate,” dismissing outright what the Muslim
minority and human rights groups know to be true. In recent days,
Hejaaz Hizbullah, a well-known attorney, has been arrested under the
PTA, leaving Muslims even more uncertain as to how to speak out without
fear of retaliation.
Prior to the election there was
a talk about “one country and one law”. Muslim women’s rights activists
had fought hard to reform the Muslim Marriage and Divorce Act to be on
par with Sri Lanka’s other marriage laws, and the ground was set for
such a reform. Instead of carrying forward the process, however, the
current government appears ready to abolish the law, which shows how
tolerant this government would be and how prepared it is to accept the
diversity and pluralism in our societies. Two private media channels
currently appear hell bent on branding Muslims as the introducers,
carriers and spreaders of COVID-19 in Sri Lanka. This has alienated
Muslims further, and if continued at this rate, the hate campaign can
curtail the community from coming forward voluntarily to report cases.
It has also created a picture for many Sinhalese of Muslims as
unpatriotic and untrustworthy. This is an image that the extremist Bodu
Bala Sena (BBS) and its allies and certain politicians have been
aggressively promoting since the end of the war.
This much we know to be true: a
virus cannot distinguish a Muslim from a Tamil or a Sinhalese, a
Buddhist from a Catholic or Christian. To control its spread, it is
critical for the government to take a science-based approach. Citizens
must trust the government and feel safe to seek prompt medical attention
when they have symptoms. The current cremation mandate and social
ostracisation of Muslims affected by COVID-19 will serve none of these
goals. Instead, enforcing arbitrary directives in conflict with the WHO
will only deepen distrust and prevent Muslims from seeking prompt
testing and medical attention. It would be foolish to imagine that this
global virus, which knows no international borders, can run unchecked
within one community without affecting public health outcomes for us
all. For the safety of all Sri Lankans, if nothing else, now is the time
to build trust and ethnic harmony, not sow division.
(Shreen Saroor is a human rights activist and founder of Women’s Action Network)
