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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, July 31, 2014
Black July in Sri Lanka, Yesterday and Today
- Thursday, 31 July 2014
USTPAC
marks 31st anniversary of anti-Tamil violence in Sri Lanka, highlights
the denial of justice to the victims of Black July and urges
international action.
July 2014 marks the 31st anniversary of "Black July 1983," the pogrom
against the Tamils living in Sri Lanka, carried out with total impunity
by Sinhala Buddhist mobs with the encouragement and support of the
Government of Sri Lanka. Unites States Tamil Political Action Council
(USTPAC) joins Tamils in the United States and the rest of the world,
and somberly remember and commemorate these dark days with religious
observances and reflection.
Approximately 3000 Tamils were murdered in the pogrom -- some burnt
alive --, tens of thousands of Tamil homes and businesses destroyed,
hundreds of thousands of Tamils displaced, made refugees and forced to
live in makeshift camps. July 1983 was preceded by many acts of violence
against the Tamils, their culture and their heritage, including the
destruction of the Jaffna Library and its valuable collection of ancient
Tamil documents.
"Black July was a watershed event that signaled to the Tamils that they
would have only a subservient place in a Sri Lanka ruled by the majority
Sinhala Buddhists, for their exclusive benefit," stated Dr. Karunyan
Arulanantham, President of USTPAC. "The message of exclusion and
subservience was reinforced by the then President J.R. Jayawardene, who
made a televised speech even while the violence was going on, not to
speak a word of sympathy to the Tamil victims, but to justify it as
something the Tamils deserved," observed Dr. Arulanantham.
Tamils this year will also sadly remember that the attitude and mindset
of the Sinhala Buddhist majority in that country that made Black July
possible still prevails, and now targets not only the Tamils, but also
the Muslim, Christian and Hindu communities in the island. Sinhala
Buddhist mobs, led by Buddhist monks and with the tacit support of the
police and armed forces, destroyed Muslim property and killed four
Muslims with impunity in the violence in June in Aluthgama.
The violence against the Tamils has now become mainstream government
policy to be carried out by the Sinhala Buddhist army of occupation in
the North East. "Tamil lands are expropriated, Tamils are denied the
right to mourn their dead, Tamil children and women are raped with
impunity, all while an ex-military governor appointed by the president
holds executive authority and the largest military per capita in Asia is
stationed in the traditional Tamil homelands," charged Dr.
Arulanantham.
The bloodletting that began in July 1983 continued till May 2009 with
the killing of over 75,000 Tamil civilians in the final months. In March
this year, the UN Human Rights Council adopted a resolution calling for
an international investigation of alleged war crimes and crimes against
humanity in Sri Lanka.
"Tamils and non-Sinhala Buddhist communities in the island cannot hope
for justice from the Government of Sri Lanka. Their hope lies in the
International community and its desire to see decency prevail in all
countries of the world," concluded Dr. Arulanantham.