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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, July 28, 2013
Ettappans And Don Quixotes In Sri Lankan Tamil Politics
One must despair about the destiny of the Tamils of Sri Lanka when one
reads the words of a Ranawake, Wimalawansa or a Mahindapala or a
Seneviratne, or a Peiris and Amerasekere and Gunasekere,or one or other
of various Silvas and even Ratnajeevan Hoole—not to speak of the internet commentators of doubtful wisdom or insight.
One must however feel a sense of despair too when one reads the
outpourings of certain members of the overseas Tamil community with
grandiose titles that they have given themselves and their fellow
travelers. Reading the words of these overseas cabals one feels that the
Tamils of Sri Lanka should worry more about the Don Quixotes among them
rather than the Ettappans.
In Cervantes’s masterpiece the good Don imagines himself a knight and
engages in various fantasy activities including seeking a duel with a
windmill.
The late lamented leaders of the ITAK used
to describe those who disagreed with them with words like these on
public plat forms and look where it took them. Some of their fanatical
followers took them at their word and in the end turned on them and
too. Some of their latter day followers are too ready to fix these
labels of traitor and Ettappan on those who disagree with them and have a
different agenda for the Tamils. The latest exercise of this form of
labeling is from “Diaspora Tamil Activist“. He compares Justice Wignesavaran with
a certain traitor and then puts forth certain proposals that any Tamil
chief minister should follow. He wants the CM to ask the international
community to investigate the conduct of the Sri Lankan Army and the Sri Lankan state for war crimes and to have Sri Lanka condemned in international councils. Read More
Basil, Wigneswaran And Trust Building For Reconciliation!
This definition is reminded as two politicians from the Government and
the Opposition, worrying over trust has revealed “the extent to which
absence of trust remains an obstacle to ethnic reconciliation in Sri
Lanka.” (The Hindu reporting Minister Basil Rajapaksa),
while concomitantly the Tamil National Alliance’s (TNA) Northern
Provincial Council (NPC) Chief Minister (CM) Candidate- former Supreme
Court Judge CV Wigneswaran- has told media (Lakna Paranamanna in Daily Mirror) that he firmly believed “trust can be built through mutual understanding.”
The Minister has reiterated his heightened mistrust on devolution saying
“Sri Lanka would never risk a provincial government forming its own
“army” through devolved police powers (PP).” Yes, it could happen only
if the government does not implement powers clearly demarcated in the
Reserved List and some powers in Appendix II and if NPC blocks
implementation by some means. Distrust emerges again!
There had been pro-government politicians commenting that sharing land
and PP to the Provincial Councils (PCs) would lead to separation. Is it
jockeying distrust? Minister Rajapaksa has been charitable by dropping
land powers – not mentioning even once- in his presentation. Did he mean
that land powers were already devolved? Or, is he silently distrusts
such finality? May be, ignoring Appendix II, he considers that the
National Land Commission has to fulfill its functions consonantly with
List II – “National Policy on all Subjects and Functions”.