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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, October 21, 2012
Political Activity Stifled; Authoritarian Agenda Swells
The
meeting was captioned as a campaign to secure the release of Lalith
and Kugan, two FS members who were abducted in Jaffna about 11 months
ago, but the purpose was not merely to shed tears about its own cadres. The
emphasis was on highlighting the repression of Tamils, on a daily basis in the
North where abductions and disappearances continue unabated. Out of sight of
Colombo society, folks in Jaffna are facing intimidation, confiscation of lands
and humiliation. The reports are first hand from FS cadres working among Tamil
youth for over a year despite threats and attacks by the military. The video
showed gatherings of Tamil women carrying placards and chanting slogans
demanding to know about their abducted sons, husbands and men folk. All this
corroborates what the TNA has
been saying in parliament and conveying to the international community, and is a
wake up call to Colombo on a theme the media prefers to pay little attention
to.
These
young chaps are not going to be intimidated; Rajapakse and
the military have caught a tiger by the tail! The FSP made no bones about
explicitly accusing the military of abducting and holding Lalith and Kuhan in an
army camp and made mention of eye witness sightings. A fortnight ago burnt oil
was thrown on FSP’s Dimithu Attygalle and two others while campaigning in Jaffna
and police foot-dragging and indifference told a stark story. The cops know who
the attackers are but will not go into camps or make arrests. When Attygalle
and Premkumar
Gunaratnam were abducted and tortured in March in Colombo, Gothabhaya did
not conceal from the Australian High Commissioner that his forces were the
perpetrators.
Unlike
in the first six years of the Rajapakse Administration when some attempt was
made to hide sate involvement in abductions, now it is blasé. A “So what! Who
the hell cares?” attitude pervades; state terrorism is on the loose, flagrant
arrogance compounded by unconcealed impunity. The hubris of threats to the
judiciary and manhandling of the JSC Secretary are symptomatic of siblings drunk
on power. Sadly for those who remember the old left, today’s Vasudevas, DEWs and
Tissas will drain the last dregs of this goblet of shame before they make their
exit rolled in Dead Left shrouds. Alas, such are the joys and perks of
ministerial office.
The
question that many ask is when or where will this stop? Are we on an inexorable
road to dictatorship, or will an explosion involving parliamentary and
extra-parliamentary arenas spell the end of the Rajapakses? There is no open and
shut answer to these questions; the political analyst must consider options and
weigh possibilities. Let me have a jab at gauging what I think the Rajapakse
game plan is, and then pronounce why I think their well laid schemes will “gang
aft agley”.
Towards a Corporatist State
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