A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, January 31, 2013
Midweek Politics: Geneva 2.0; Lessons Unlearnt
By Dharisha
Bastians -January 30, 2013
“I received information from
a third party. Either myself or the Government does not know anything about
Eknaligoda – it is only God who knows” – Former Attorney General Mohan
Peiris, in a statement before the Homagama Magistrate on 5 June 2012
On
Tuesday, 29 January 2013, three years and five days since her husband
disappeared without a trace, Sandhya
Ekneligoda tied a black cloth over her mouth and took her place at
the front row of the Black January protest in Town Hall.
Tireless
and unyielding in her quest to discover what became of her husband, Sandhya
Ekneligoda has become a crusader for Sri Lanka’s ‘disappeared’ and the face of a
small but vocal campaign against impunity and media suppression in the island
that media rights watchdogs say has seen nine journalists murdered and one
disappeared since President Mahinda
Rajapaksa came to power in 2005.
For
Sri Lanka’s media, January is a very black month indeed. A host of atrocities
against media personnel both during and after the war have occurred in the first
month of the year. Lasantha
Wickrematunge, founding Editor of The Sunday Leader was assassinated
on his way to work in January 2009.
Days
before his murder, a claymore mine exploded inside the studios of the Sirasa
Media Network. In January 2011, Gnanasundaram Kuhanathan, an editor of the
Jaffna based newspaper Uthayan was brutally assaulted.
And on 24 January 2010, Prageeth Ekneligoda vanished without a trace on his way to work, in the heat of a tight presidential race between incumbent President Rajapaksa and his former Army Chief, Sarath Fonseka. He has not been heard from since.
And on 24 January 2010, Prageeth Ekneligoda vanished without a trace on his way to work, in the heat of a tight presidential race between incumbent President Rajapaksa and his former Army Chief, Sarath Fonseka. He has not been heard from since.
In
November 2011, former Attorney General and Legal Advisor to the Cabinet of
Ministers Mohan
Pieris told the UN’s Committee Against Torture (CAT) that the
Government of Sri Lanka possessed information that Ekneligoda was alive and well
in a foreign country. He claimed that the campaign to secure the cartoonist’s
release was a farce.
Seven
months later, Pieris informed the Homagama Magistrate’s Court, where he was
answering summons in a Habeaus Corpus application filed by Sandhya Ekneligoda,
that his pronouncement before the UN CAT was based on information received by a
third party. The now infamous proclamation soon followed, as the former state
prosecutor stood in the same courtroom with the woman who had been seeking the
whereabouts of her husband unceasingly for over two years, that “only God knows”
Prageeth’s whereabouts.
The
same man now heads Sri Lanka’s Judiciary, where Sandhya is seeking redress by
obtaining a Court of Appeal Writ that will force the authorities to release
Prageeth from detention and bring him before a court of law.
The
‘disappeared’
But
at least the Ekneligoda disappearance remains alive, partly because of Sandhya’s
indomitable spirit and partly buoyed by the efforts of media rights
organisations in Sri Lanka and around the world to keep his case alive, Prageeth
remains a focal point of international concern. There are the families of
hundreds that have disappeared in the north and east, highlighted by the
Government’s own commission of inquiry on the final phase of the war, the
Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC)
that are seeking answers.
Far
from abating post-war, abductions and disappearances have continued, and a lack
of progress in any official line of inquiry and the even stranger phenomenon of
abduction victims turning up when the appropriate amount of international
pressure is exerted upon the highest echelons of the Government – in the case
ofKumar
Gunaratnam for instance – points to some degree of state collusion, human
rights activists say.
Some
of the abductions took place even after the Human Rights Council of the UN
flagged Sri Lanka for its appalling human rights record and adopted a resolution
in March last year urging the Government in Colombo to effectively ‘get a move
on’ regarding post-war reconciliation and accountability concerns, by
implementing the recommendations of the LLRC report and finding a mechanism to
investigate and prosecute the allegations of human rights abuses and excesses
during the final phase of the conflict with the LTTE.
To
coincide with the UNHRC sessions in Geneva last March, the Government of
President Mahinda Rajapaksa orchestrated massive demonstrations against the US
sponsored resolution, railed against Western conspiracies and denounced them as
being LTTE plots to tarnish Sri Lanka’s image.
Two
months later, the Sri Lankan Government agreed in theory to meet its
international obligations as set out in the UNHRC resolution. A national action
plan on reconciliation was drafted and the military began its own ‘inquiry’ into
allegations of excesses and violations of international humanitarian law.
Those
inquiries continue, the military says, even though the international community
continues to be dubious about whether Sri Lanka’s military, in an increasingly
militarised state is capable of investigating itself against such serious
allegations of atrocities.
For
the better part of the year 2012, any progress the Government has touted has
been limited mostly to words, especially in terms of genuine reconciliation that
would build trust between the communities and genuine will to understand and
hold to account those that may be guilty of excess in war time.
Resolution
– take two
Predictably
then, Sri Lanka finds itself where it is today, if anything having exacerbated
international concerns by a cavalier attitude to the principles of democracy,
rule of law and civil liberties, often dismissing them as ‘Western notions’ of
just and fair societies.
If
it was not already clear when the question of Chief Justice Shirani
Bandaranayake’s (then proposed) impeachment came up during Sri
Lanka’s Universal
Periodic Review in Geneva in November, the three-member US Delegation
visiting Sri Lanka this week made sure the writing was on the wall.
“The
United States has decided to sponsor a procedural resolution at the March 2013
session of the UN Human Rights Council along with international partners. The
resolution will be straightforward, it will be a procedural resolution, and it
will build on the 2012 resolution which called on Sri Lanka to do more to
promote reconciliation and accountability,” Deputy Assistant Secretary of
State James
R. Moore told journalists in Colombo earlier this week.
Just
to clear up any doubts, his counterpart for Defence for South and Southeast
Asia, Vikram
Singh also made the following observation about how much the concerns
of the international community have grown because of the Government’s decision
to impeach Bandaranayake in breach of an order by the two highest courts in the
country and despite the outcry both within and outside the country that the
process was deeply flawed.
“I
think it’s safe to say that the impeachment of the Chief Justice which was
mentioned before as a concern has also contributed to a desire to ensure that
the record stays fresh in Geneva,” Deputy Assistant Secretary Singh said.
Interestingly, upon landing in Colombo last Saturday (26), the first meeting the
US State Department delegation held was with representatives of the Tamil
National Alliance.
For
two hours, TNA Leader R.
Sampanthan and MPs M.A.
Sumanthiran and S. Sridharan discussed issues pertaining to the Tamil
community in the north and east and accused the Government of dragging its feet
on meeting the political aspirations of the Northern Tamils.
The
next day, the delegation toured Jaffna where they met with the military command
and interestingly, Jaffna Bishop Thomas Soundaranayagam, another vocal critic of
the Government’s snail’s pace on reconciliation and building normalcy in the
post-war phase.
The
delegation returned to Colombo and acknowledged that there had been ‘some’
progress but a lot more work left to do, especially in terms of providing
answers to the families of the disappeared. This was a central theme of the
LLRC’s report too, leading the incumbent regime to believe that the Commission
Report had ironically become its own worst enemy.
Déjà
vu
There
is a strange sense of déjà vu building as the weeks inch closer to the opening
of the 20th Session of the Human Rights Council on 25 February this year. The
sessions will continue for nearly a month and the second US-sponsored resolution
is likely to be tabled in early March.
Already,
the Government’s most vociferous mouthpiece on Western conspiracies, Wimal
Weerawansa has condemned the visiting State Department delegation as
US spies. Weerawansa is a Government Minister, but continues to voice these
opinions publicly and without censure from the regime, and is likely to lead the
campaign against the second resolution and its proponents in the weeks
ahead.
External
Affairs Minister G.L.
Peiris meanwhile, denounced the international efforts to make Sri
Lanka live up to its post-war obligations as an ‘economic revolution’ by the
LTTE rump at a political event in Hambantotarecently.
The Government says it is ready to face its next major challenge in Geneva and hectic preparations are underway to present Sri Lanka’s case before the Human Rights Council, led for the most part by Presidential Special Envoy on Human Rights, Minister Mahinda Samarasinghe.
The Government says it is ready to face its next major challenge in Geneva and hectic preparations are underway to present Sri Lanka’s case before the Human Rights Council, led for the most part by Presidential Special Envoy on Human Rights, Minister Mahinda Samarasinghe.
Samarasinghe
is reportedly appalled at the decision of the External Affairs Ministry to issue
a strong letter to UN Human Rights Commissioner Navinetham
Pillay following her remarks on the impeachment of Chief Justice
Bandaranayake, believing it would hurt rather than help Sri Lanka’s cause when
the High Commissioner tables her report before the member states of the Council
a few weeks from now.
The
irony attached to the rule regime is that while it comprises those handful of
individuals that could insert a degree of sanity to the bull-in-a-china-shop
approach Sri Lanka has taken in her engagement with the UN and the Western
world, few of them remain willing to make their case before the powers that
be.
As
the Government tightens its grip on power domestically, it appears to have
increasingly taken the view that it can conduct its foreign affairs in much the
same, boisterous and domineering way it deals with the local electorate.
If the Rajapaksa regime seemed petulant and belligerent in the run up to Geneva in 2012, it promises only to get worse as Sri Lanka enters the Geneva 2.0 phase, where it is likely to find many friends that stood stoically beside them in 2012 are scrambling to abandon ship.
If the Rajapaksa regime seemed petulant and belligerent in the run up to Geneva in 2012, it promises only to get worse as Sri Lanka enters the Geneva 2.0 phase, where it is likely to find many friends that stood stoically beside them in 2012 are scrambling to abandon ship.
In
fact, this is a point repeatedly driven home in the last few months by Sri
Lanka’s ‘friends’ in the world, such as Japan. The country is not currently a
member state of the UNHRC,
but unbeknownst to most, Tokyo played a part in tempering the support for the US
backed move in Geneva last year.
When
progress was slow on the issues raised at the UNHRC in 2012, the Japanese
Government offered a few words of wisdom to Sri Lankan officials, including the
fact that it was necessary that Colombo ensured that its friends had something
to work with by the time UNHRC rolled around again in March 2013.
New
Delhi saves the day
The
message has also been echoed repeatedly by New Delhi, which intervened at the
eleventh hour in March 2012 to dilute the language of what was previously a
stronger resolution drafted by the US. Yet still peeved by New Delhi’s decision
– partly motivated by pressure in its emotive South – to vote in support of the
US backed resolution, Sri Lanka has done little to assuage India’s fears that
the current administration in Colombo has no real desire to offer a permanent
political solution to the island’s Tamil minority.
Conversely
in fact, Sri Lanka is preparing to slap New Delhi in the face in the coming
months by proposing to repeal the India-designed 13th Amendment that offers some
autonomy to the provinces over some governance subjects. The move is
particularly irksome from New Delhi’s perspective because since the end of the
conflict in 2009, the Sri Lankan Government, led by President Mahinda Rajapaksa
no less, has vowed to base a final political power sharing solution to the
island’s ethnic issue, by building on the 13th
Amendment.
But
as far as the regime is concerned, the 13th Amendment is no longer viable,
especially following the fracas of the Divi Neguma bill when the Supreme Court
ruled that each Province in the country had to endorse the legislation before it
could be considered constitutional and then ruled further that the Northern
Governor could not endorse it in the place of a democratically constituted
Northern Provincial Council.
The
rulings not only sealed the fate of Chief Justice Bandaranayake who led the
bench that delivered the determinations, but also underscored for the Government
that even one Provincial Council that would be controlled by the TNA and within
the Tamil’s Party’s political ambit, would be too great a liability from the
point of view of consolidating power.
Under the circumstances, with the Government preparing to bring a 19th and 20th amendment to the Constitution, the first to shorten the tenure of a Chief Justice and the second – possibly – to repeal 13th Amendment, it is unclear whether there will exist provision by September 2013 to conduct a poll in the north to constitute a Northern Provincial Council. This is despite repeated promises by the Government to Washington and New Delhi – promises that were reiterated to the visiting US delegation – that a poll will be held by September this year.
Under the circumstances, with the Government preparing to bring a 19th and 20th amendment to the Constitution, the first to shorten the tenure of a Chief Justice and the second – possibly – to repeal 13th Amendment, it is unclear whether there will exist provision by September 2013 to conduct a poll in the north to constitute a Northern Provincial Council. This is despite repeated promises by the Government to Washington and New Delhi – promises that were reiterated to the visiting US delegation – that a poll will be held by September this year.
Under
the circumstances, if it becomes a little too hot to handle in Geneva this
March, the way it did in the preceding year, there is no longer a guarantee that
New Delhi will be the ungrudging saviour it proved to be in the last minute in
2012. As it did in the run up to March last year, pressure from India’s south
has also begun to build, with the Karunanidhi-led DMK party from Tamil Nadu
calling on the Central Government to support the resolution in Geneva.
India
vs. Ranawaka?
It
is in this backdrop that the main Opposition UNP charged on Tuesday that the
primary motivation behind the reshuffle of the cabinet earlier this week was the
removal of Minister Champika
Ranawaka. Ranawaka was previously heading the Ministry of Power and
Energy which was transferred to Minister Pavithra
Wanniarachchi in the reshuffle.
According
to the UNP, Ranawaka’s removal was due to pressure from India, which continues
to insist on the commissioning of the Sampur coal power project. Ranawaka,
partly due to his nationalist positions and also because he had actual
reservations regarding the project’s feasibility and efficiency was opposed to
the project being driven by New Delhi.
The
UNP claims that during Minister Peiris’ visit to New Delhi last week, for the
Sri Lanka-India Joint Commission, he pledged to move on the power project and
informed Indian officials that Ranawaka had been dragging his feet. The
Opposition Party claims that Ranawaka was sacrificed in exchange for India’s
limited support at the UNHRC, should another resolution from Washington
materialise there.
Neither
the Government nor the Indian High Commission have denied or confirmed the
claim, but political analysts are unanimously convinced that Monday’s reshuffle
of the cabinet was motivated primarily by the need to shift Ranawaka from the
Power and Energy Ministry.
Secondary
to that reason was the apparent system of rewards that was obvious in the
appointments and promotions, to those members of the Government that had played
a key role in the impeachment. All of the Deputy Ministers who were promoted for
instance, were signatories to the impeachment motion against Bandaranayake. Some
sources say that the motivation behind Ranawaka’s removal from the Power and
Energy Ministry was also the fact that the JHU strongman had refused on
principle to sign the impeachment motion, although he and his party voted for
the resolution to oust Bandaranayake in Parliament on 11 January.
The
much-anticipated appointment of a new Prime Minister, given D.M. Jayaratne’s
failing health, did not occur in the reshuffle. According to Government sources,
the new appointment may come with a little less fanfare in the coming months.
But the regime has consistently allowed senior SLFP members to hold the
premiership, in part to silence the party’s old guard that continues to have
serious concerns about the concentration of power in the hands of the ruling
family.
International
concerns are also building about a growing divide between Buddhist and Muslim
communities, with the monk-led Bodhu Bala Sena leading a campaign of agitation
against Halal food products and Muslim enterprises. The movement, whose members
also led a violent protest against the Bangladesh High Commission in Colombo
late last year, recently attempted to storm a clothing store in Maharagama and
barged into a tourist hotel down south a few days later, because it allegedly
had a Buddha Bar in its premises.
Other
more disturbing expressions of religious hatred came from Kuliyapitiya, where an
organisation calling itself Hela Sihila Hiru held an ugly demonstration last
week, sporting symbols and expressions deeply offensive to Muslims. Eyewitnesses
say policeman merely observed, while the demonstrators paraded the images in
front of Muslim business establishments.
Audience
with the President
The
regime’s response to the blatant incitement of communal violence was ludicrous.
Instead of instructing its law enforcement arm to arrest and prosecute the
persons attempting to create communal tension, it provided the Bodhu Bala Sena
priests an audience with the President at Temple Trees on Sunday morning. The
meeting included a coterie of senior ministers and Government officials.
They
were asked, nicely, to refrain from creating religious tension, a claim they
vehemently denied. The Bodhu Bala Sena representatives reportedly denied being
part of the attacks on the Bangladeshi High Commission and disassociated itself
from the Maharagama and Kuliyapitiya incidents. The denials were despite widely
available video footage of their obvious involvement in many of the ugly
incidents.
It
defies reasoning that the Government, that has little trouble with enforcing the
law on dissenting groups, pavement hawkers and shanty-dwellers, with an iron
hand when necessary, believes that the answer to the problems the Bodhu
Bala Sena and its affiliated groups pose is to invite them to tea and
ask them politely to desist. But there are more sinister reasons to believe that
there is a covert hand in the intolerance of this ‘new enemy’ of the Sinhala
Buddhists.
At
a recent meeting with a Muslim delegation of politicians and civil society
activists, a high ranking regime official admitted to having supported the
vigilante cause of the Bodhu Bala Sena and groups like the Sinhala
Ravaya in the past. The official admitted that it appeared now that
the movement was taking on a form and life of its own. Whether this new life is
something the Government will remain passive about, remains to be seen.
In
the short term, the silence is deeply damaging to its purported claims of being
committed to reconciliation and trust-building between the majority and minority
communities. It is if anything, irrefutable proof that it lacks the will to
address minority concerns and ensure minorities are safeguarded in post-war Sri
Lanka.
Like
the damaging impeachment of Shirani Bandaranayake and the continued climate of
impunity that allow disappearances, abductions and suppression to go unchecked,
the Government’s attitude to a growing problem of religious disharmony will do
Colombo no favours in Geneva 2013 or all the UNHRC sessions and censures to come
in the foreseeable future.
In
the long term, the deafening silence of the rulers in the face of something that
if left to metastasize could lead to decades of violence and bloodletting may
well be the country’s next great tragedy.
Courtesy
Daily FT