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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, March 31, 2015
Reconciliation requires the full commitment of a Sudu Nelum Movement
Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, during his recent visit to Jaffna,
reiterated a statement he made at a media conference in Colombo that the
government would deal with issues of the past through a truth and
reconciliation process. He said that former President Chandrika
Kumaratunga would lead the process and that it would be supported by
South Africa whose advice was being sought. The Prime Minister’s
announcement in the capital of the Northern Province, which was the main
battleground of the three decade long internal war, demonstrated his
decisiveness on a controversial issue, even in the run up to anticipated
general elections. The pressure from the international community with
regard to human rights and war crimes issues has continued despite the
change of government, which is why the new government is focusing on a
truth and reconciliation process at the outset.
The selection of the former president to lead the reconciliation process
brings to it a champion who, in the 11 year period of her presidency,
showed her ability to take on any political challenge without backing
down. She did not give up on publicly upholding the importance of Tamil
and minority rights even after her peace initiative with the LTTE was
rejected. Although she was forced to wage a high cost war which yielded
mixed results in terms of regaining territorial control, she will be
remembered for her valiant effort to build the political foundations for
peace through political reform. She was also able to win
elections while holding to her position that a political solution was
necessary.
Former President Kumaratunga’s great contribution to the unification of
the Sri Lanka polity came through her two-pronged strategy of meeting
the LTTE’s challenge. While waging war, she gave political leadership
to the "Sudu Nelum" (white lotus) movement which was a mass-based
educational campaign that was intended to enable each ethnic community
to understand each other’s political aspirations and engaged in mutual
accommodation. This educational campaign was politically led by the
present foreign minister Mangala Samaraweera, and took place through
seminars, workshops and street drama, among other methods in which top
university academics wholeheartedly participated.
POLITICAL BACKING
The Sudu Nelum educational campaign was complemented by the ‘Devolution
Package’ which was co-designed by two leading scholars, Prof G L Peiris
representing the government and Dr Neelan Tiruchelvam on behalf of the
Tamil polity. President Kumaratunga gave her full political backing to
the devolution arrangements which were also supported by the founder
leader of the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress M H M Ashraff. These leading
members of government took the biggest political educational movement in
the country’s history to the people in the face of the deadly
opposition of the LTTE, which assassinated Dr Neelan Tiruchelvam, and
also of Sinhala nationalists.
The success of the Sudu Nelum movement came from the involvement of the
top political leaders who provided a political vision and also actively
sought the involvement of civil society to take the message to the
general population. The mass educational campaign that reached down to
the community-level through small groups meetings and roadside skits
also reached national audiences through the mass media and enabled more
and more people to recognize that the root causes that had led to the
war needed to be politically resolved. Even as the war continued to
rage public opinion polls began to show that upwards of 70 percent of
the people supported the devolution of power as the foundation on which a
peaceful and sustainable solution could be built.
The truth and reconciliation process that the prime minister has
committed the government to is meant to look at the unaddressed issues
of the war’s end phase, the loss of life, the destruction of property,
and the fate of those who went missing, and whose absence is preventing
large numbers of families to find closure even five years after the end
of the war. The government’s choice of South Africa to assist in this
process is a judicious one. South Africa is a non-western country and
one that is an acknowledged leader in the world on the issue of truth
and reconciliation, having itself overcome great challenges and
achieving a success that hardly anyone thought possible. In addition,
South Africa has shown a commitment to assist Sri Lanka, continuing to
offer their assistance although the previous government blew hot and
cold on their offer.
CONNECTED CONCEPTS
The experience of South Africa is important as its truth and
reconciliation process was a holistic one and not simply one of ticking
boxes in a plan put on paper to score a pass mark with the international
community. It was a genuine effort to reach reconciliation at all
levels of society. It was intended that all the people should get to
know the truth, to repent and to forgive so that the future could be a
shared one even while the past was acknowledged. There was no attempt
in South Africa to say that accountability and reconciliation were on
different tracks. They were both on one track as acknowledging what
happened in the past and taking responsibility for it is necessary to
build trust for the future that the violations of the past will not
happen again.
The truth and reconciliation process needs to a well-engaged one in
which all the parties participate and cooperate. The process can
neither be forced upon nor opposed by any major party if it is to be
successful. One potential problem with a truth and reconciliation
process, and one that is domestic as the Sri Lankan government insists,
is that the Tamil polity suspects that it is a way for the government to
evade accountability for what happened in the past. Statements by some
government leaders that accountability and reconciliation are two
separate concepts add to their concerns. The present is built on what
occurred in the past, and therefore accountability for what happened in
the past cannot be separated from achieving reconciliation in the
present.
Sustaining reconciliation in the longer term, and ensuring it for the
future, calls for a political solution that addresses the roots of the
conflict. In South Africa, the truth and reconciliation process
followed the achievement of a political solution. Therefore in Sri
Lanka, the truth and reconciliation process, which is a transitional
one, needs to be tied up with the development of a just and mutually
acceptable political solution, which is what will give stability to
society. The Tamil polity’s willingness to cooperate in the truth and
reconciliation process will be increased to the extent that they feel it
is tied to a just and sustainable political solution. It will be
important for the government to show how a domestic truth and
reconciliation process is linked to the pursuit of a just political
solution, in a manner that resembles what the Sudu Nelum movement once
sought to do.