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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, May 4, 2020
Post Covid Scenario: Bangladesh At Cross Roads
So far as we in Bangladesh are concerned this writer is convinced of closest possible relations with India will be beneficial for Bangladesh.
-19 has put many countries, rich and poor, in an unpreferred position to
fathom the future politico-economic course for their respective
countries.
Are they to abandon the system and institutions they had embraced for
decades that had become in course of time their own? Some had digressed
from the ones they had liberated themselves from, often due to feel they
are different from their colonial masters whose main aim was extraction
from the colonies to enrich their metropolis. The scale of extraction
was immense and to the detriment of the disposed, not due to lack of
resources but because they did not have the guns to fight the
colonialists.
Though the colonialists viewed themselves superior to the natives
Polish-British novelist Joseph Conrad in his Heart of Darkness asserts
that there is little difference between "civilized people" and those
described as "savages." Heart of Darkness implicitly comments on
imperialism and racism. Perhaps Joseph Conrad would put the
circumstances as the dictator who decides whether London (in Heart of
Darkness) was any better than Africa the dark continent inhabited by
“uncivilized” people.
As the newly developing countries were trying to find their identity so
did Marxism and Maoism were finding their own battle not so much on
ideology but whether industrialized capitalists were sucking the blood
of the common men or as Mao, revolutionizing rural China, felt that not
the industrialists but the feudal lords were sucking the blood of the
farmers. Both Karl Marx and Mao Zedung were fighting the same battle
from different contexts. Mao’s China has now been transformed into the
second richest country in the world with vast geo-political armor in its
grasp.
So political scientist have started a debate on the fate of the world in
post-coronavirus world. Would we see Harvard’s Graham Allison’s
description of Thucydides Trap which Allison described as a situation
“when a rising power like Athens, or China, threatens to displace a
ruling power like Sparta, which had been the dominant power in Greece
for a hundred years, or the US, basically alarm bells should sound?”
Nowadays many hear the loud sounding of the alarm bells warning the
world of an impending “Thucydides Trap”. Chinese President Xi Jinping
has chosen Belt and Road Initiative as the vehicle for spreading China’s
influence in Asia and Africa and to convert the world into a multipolar
system in which China as the second richest nation in the world will
play a significant role in global affairs. The problem arises with Xi
Jinping’s insistence on the primacy of the Chinese Communist Party in
all affairs which with the advancement of technology would be able to
peep into the bed rooms of the Chinese people.
China’s intrusion into the recent agitation in Hong Kong contrary to the
agreement of “one country Two system” signed at the time of the British
handing over of the colony to China is a blatant example of Chinese
interference in Hong Kong. Xi Jinping’s authoritarian bent can be gauged
from his analysis of Nikita Khrushchev’s 1965 speech on destalinization
which in the Chinese leader’s opinion had opened the door to multiparty
political system in then USSR. The point to ponder is when people have
more disposable income the urge for more freedom of choice becomes
inevitable. Chinese of this generation would not like to see a Tiananmen
Square massacre not by foreign troops or by their own.
Outwardly China is a showpiece for the world to see. Yet the rural areas
have been denied the gains of development. Inequality among different
segments are increasing. According to WIKIPEDIA China’s current mainly
market economy features a high degree of income inequality. According to
the Asian Development Institute, “before China implemented reform and
open door policies in 1978, its income distribution pattern was
characterized as egalitarianism in all aspects.”
Wikipedia continues to add that in December 2009 34 out of 50 leading
economists thought that inequality would impede sustainable development.
Harvard Economist Kenneth Rogoff also cautioned on the problem of
income inequality, commenting that “There is no doubt that income
inequality is the single biggest threat to social stability around the
world, whether it is in the United States, the European periphery, or
China.”[ Income inequality is argued to be a menace to social stability,
and potentially causes a disappearance of middle class capital that
would impede China’s economic growth. In a bold statement ] Hu Angang,
an influential researcher in China, warned that further increases in
regional disparities may lead to China’s dissolution, like in the former
Yugoslavia.
Given the above situation one has to be cautious about BRI Initiative.
Western governments and journalists want definitive information on BRI.
The consider statements like "The Belt and Road is a $900 million/$1
trillion/$5 trillion dollar initiative spanning 65 countries, 60% of the
world’s population, 75% of energy resources, and 30% of GDP” as more
propaganda than plan of action. Some find it intriguing that Malaysia,
Myanmar, Pakistan, Sierra Leone, Kyrgyzstan, among other countries have
canceled, downsized, or postponed key BRI projects, and the initiative
seems to be going through a period of retreat to an extent that some
researchers are suggesting that BRI may have seen its peak.
Even if BRI partially succeeds we are far from answering the question of
global construct in post-covit-19 situation. Some middle of the roaders
reluctant to commit themselves either way have surmised: Humans can
rein in their instincts and build societies that divert group
competition to arenas less destructive than warfare, yet the
psychological bases for tribalism persist, even when people understand
that their loyalty to their nation, skin color, god, or sports team is
as random as the toss of a coin. At the level of the human mind, little
prevents new teammates from once again becoming tomorrow’s enemies.
(This Is Your Brain on Nationalism Foreign Affairs).
If many nations face identity crises relating which path to choose in
post-pandemic world a guideline could be the state of the economy. Most
of the developed economies are expected to contract. In the case of the
US 26 million Americans have applied for unemployment benefits while the
legal immigrants have paid more taxes and are considered dependable
workers. This puts them in the eye of the storm as the object of
“stealers” of jobs that average Americans consider to be their
birthright. This is no different in Europe. In war devastated Europe
many immigrants were invited as “guest workers” to clean the toilets and
sweep the streets that full blooded Europeans refused to do. When the
European economies could stand on its own feet no doubt due to the
efforts of the locals the “guest workers” were encouraged to go back to
their “home” that they had left decades back. Their descendants who were
no less French or Germans refused to go to a country they had only
heard of and had never even seen. When the crunch comes in spades
justice flies out of the window.
In Post-Brexit the rights of the non-British Europeans is going to be
one of the thorniest points to be settled between Boris Johnson and his
EU negotiator. But then Britain and EU are on the same page of liberal
democracy. In the case of the US and China it is the opposite. How can
the world in particular the developing countries be coaxed into the
illiberal camp just because of yet insoluble pandemic disease? One may
refer to the US hubris of “American Exception” which was noted by Alexis
de Tocqueville in his book “Democracy in America”. Later on successive
writers, notably Seymour Martin Lipset and in varying degrees Joseph
Nye, Robert Kagan, Neil Campbell Ferguson have voiced American
Exceptionalism. Lipset in his article (American Exception-A Double Edged
Sword) quoted G.K.Chestersen: "America is the only nation in the world
that is founded on a creed. That creed is set forth with dogmatic and
even theological lucidity in the Declaration of Independence. . . ." As
noted in the Introduction, the nation's ideology can be described in
five words: liberty, egalitarianism, individualism, populism, and
laissez-faire”. Lipset himself said: Being an American is an ideological
commitment. It is not a matter of birth. Those who reject American
values are un-American.
From Monroe doctrine to the First World War to the Second Great War and
henceforth the American leadership has remained constant. Vladimir Putin
however cautioned about the danger of teaching a people that they are
exceptional.
The real undeniable truth is that the world has become multipolar as G7,
G20 and other regional organizations testify. In neck of the woods
South Asia would feel comfortable to cooperate with India though not at
the exclusion of China a behemoth in the region. Despite bumps
Bangladesh shares common history, India’s assistance in 1971 War of
Independence argument notwithstanding that Indian refuge to one million
Bengalis was not only due to humanitarian consideration. Her aim was the
dismemberment of Pakistan. Geopolitical consideration must have played a
role. But should we then forget incessant efforts by then Indian Prime
Minister Indira Gandhi on our behalf and the number of vetoes given in
the UNSC by then USSR to thwart the Western plan to force a political
settlement with the murderous Yahya regime whose marauding army carried
out the most barbarous genocide that can be matched only with Hitler’s
annihilation of millions of Jews in the Second World War?
We have differences with India and we shall have in future more so with
the present set up in Delhi which is following a Hindutva policy while
housing 200 million Muslims in the country. But then it is for the
Indians to decide whether article 370 and declaration of Ladakh as union
territory, Constitution Amendment Act, and policy on National Register
of citizens after more than seventy years of India’s independence are
acceptable. Prime Minister Norendra Modi will have to face an electorate
with an economy projected to grow around 2% in 2020 and 2021, huge
unemployment and hunger in certain places.
So far as we in Bangladesh are concerned this writer is convinced of
closest possible relations with India will be beneficial for Bangladesh.
( The writer, Former Secretary and Ambassador, Bangladesh)


