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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, October 2, 2013
Black July: Relation Of Events At Kanatte And The Tiger Friday
We have argued in our account based on testimony cited that the outbreak
of violence at Borella had no direct rela- tion to the clamour to hand
over the bodies to the next of kin at Kanatte. The crowd was made up of
conflicting elements that had different motivations. While the relatives
did want the bodies of the soldiers, and gained much sup- port there
were others, who wanted to turn the occasion into an anti-government
demonstra- tion. Still others, such as Gunawanse, wanted to harness the
anger of the crowd and turn it against the Tamils. Gunawanse played on
the alleged mutilated condition of the bodies to in- cite the crowd,
demanding that the bodies be shown – ‘even a little dismembered finger’.
Was this protege of Minister Dissanayake acting en- tirely on his own?
Ratnatunga confirms that the dominant sentiment at the cemetery was
anti- government. Referring to the situation in the cemetery late in the
evening, Ratnatunga says “Anti-government epithets were liberally
strewn and were becoming the order of the night” (p.13). Given
Gunawanse’s reputation, it is clear that he was starting to play on the
grief and anxiety of the mourners, intending to move it in an anti-
Tamil direction.
Gunawanse did not succeed at Kanatte itself. It was later that an
anti-Tamil flavour began to creep in, when on the roads of Borella,
accord- ing to Ratnatunga, ‘the crowd began voicing vitu- perative
slogans aimed at the Government, the Tamils and the terrorists’.
Ratnatunga points to different motivations in the crowd, a section of
which moved to Borella and others to the President’s house along Kynsey
Road. It was now a differ- ent phenomenon from what it was at Kanatte.
While Ratnatunga absolves the Government of all responsibility for the
violence, our account highlights the role of mobs supported by the
government on the night of 24th July, whose role it was to attack Tamils
and Tamil establishments. Gunawanse’s task appears to have been to fo-
ment violence at the cemetery itself.
