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, February 26, 2014
Reevaluating Sri Lanka’s LLRC Progress: Part One
Last March, The Social Architects (TSA) released its third report, “The Numbers Never Lie.”
The
report provided extensive information about the Government of Sri
Lanka’s (GoSL) progress in implementing the Lessons Learnt and
Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) recommendations. Again, TSA’s partners
undertook a similar survey this year. Using the data obtained last year
as a baseline, TSA will be releasing two companion reports reevaluating
Sri Lanka’s LLRC progress. This is the first.
This year’s survey was only conducted in the Northern and Eastern
provinces; this was done during January 2014. TSA’s partners surveyed
1,200 people this year, but 157 survey respondents were subsequently
disqualified. 376 other people who participated last year did not
participate in this year’s survey. This figure includes people who have
moved elsewhere or have been resettled. It also includes community
members who decided not to participate this year due to fear. Hence, all
1,043 people that were surveyed this year also participated in last
year’s survey. In order to accurately measure progress, TSA removed 533
people (those who did not participate in the 2014 survey) from last
year’s survey results.
TSA’s sample covers 8 districts, 36 Divisional Secretariat (DS)
divisions, 108 Grama Niladhari (GN) divisions and 264 villages. 368
survey participants are Woman-Headed Households (WHH). TSA’s
questionnaire (224 questions) has been designed to capture different
types of information. This includes factual data – such as information
about arbitrary detention, disappearance, death, injury and
compensation. Some parts – including questions on militarization and
sections dealing with political rights and language rights – capture
both factual data and perception data.
TSA’s survey findings suggest that – while some very limited progress
related to a few LLRC recommendations has been made over the past twelve
months – there are still concerns about matters such as political
rights, language rights, inclusive development and compensation, among
other areas. The country’s continued militarization, the concomitant
culture of fear which pervades the North and East, and the asymmetrical
implementation of the LLRC recommendations are also concerns. TSA will
delve more deeply into all of these topics in its next report.