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, September 7, 2016
Government consolidates relationship with international community – next steps
The visit last week to Sri Lanka of UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon was
in contrast to his previous visit in 2009, a few weeks after the
country’s three decade long internal war came to its violent denouement.
With the aftershocks of the war still subsiding his visit was neither
encouraged nor welcomed by the then government. This time around the Sri
Lankan government actively sought the visit of the UN Secretary
General. It had achievements to show, and highlight, as they were
oriented to good governance and reconciliation. Mr Ban Ki-moon
appreciated the passage of the 19th Amendment to the constitution
whereby the newly elected president voluntarily relinquished some of the
extraordinary powers vested in the presidency. He also referred to the
Right to Information Act which brings Sri Lanka to the fore of
transparent government in terms of its potential.
In a speech he delivered during his visit the UN Secretary General said
"This is my first visit to Sri Lanka since 2009, when I saw great
suffering and hardship. Hundreds of thousands of people were displaced
and in need of humanitarian aid after the terrible conflict that tore
the country apart…Today, the picture is very different. I congratulate
the Government and people of Sri Lanka for the progress you have made."
The aftermath of the war’s end in 2009 saw the incarceration of about
300,000 people who had been living in the battleground areas of the last
phase of the war. These included tens of thousands of children, nursing
mothers and the elderly and feeble. With single minded zeal to
safeguard the country from terrorism, these war survivors were held in
barbed wire camps in primitive conditions to ensure that LTTE members
amongst them could be weeded out.
What seems to have impressed the UN Secretary General most of all was
the visible difference he saw in the north of Sri Lanka that has
occurred between2009 and 2016. When he visited Sri Lanka in 2009 he
personally witnessed the incarceration of the 300,000 people. He also
saw the vast destruction that war had brought to the north of the
country. This time when he visited the change is remarkable. There is
considerable reconstruction that has taken place with the road system
better than it ever was in the past and with construction boom of new
buildings, both by government and private investors. There is freedom of
movement and freedom of speech. Freedom from fear is almost total,
except for the apprehension that the present situation may not be
sustainable and the past will come back to haunt the country.
OPEN GOVERNMENT
The rebuilding that has been taking place in the north, and which
favourably impressed the visiting UN Secretary General is not a recent
phenomenon. The large scale investments in infrastructure, including
roads and public buildings, began shortly after the war ended under the
previous government. It was unfortunate that the suspicions of the then
government towards the Tamil people and international community meant
that they did not trust members of the international community to come
and see for themselves how life had changed in the country after the
war. The previous government even debarred the handpicked team of
investigators appointed by the UN Secretary General to visit Sri Lanka
to investigate the last phase of the war. If they had been permitted to
visit Sri Lanka and collect their information they would have seen for
themselves that changes for the better were taking place after the war.
The major transformation in Sri Lanka at the present time is the
openness of the government to the international community in all
aspects. The passage of the Office of Missing Persons Act through
Parliament shows that the government is serious about keeping its
promises regarding the transitional justice process. The government is
aware that it co-sponsored the UN Human Rights Council resolution on
achieving post-war reconciliation and upholding of human rights, and
therefore needs to keep its side of the agreement. It also knows it has
to honour economic contracts, such as those with China, even if they
were signed by members of the previous government on unfavourable terms
to Sri Lanka. In addition, Prime Minister Ranil Wickemesinghe is
travelling to different countries taking with him the message that Sri
Lanka can become an example of post-war reconciliation and economic
development.
Last week Sri Lanka hosted the 6th annual Defence Seminar which was
appropriately titled "Soft Power and its Influence on Global Issues" and
was attended by leading military commanders and scholars from around
the world. The country defeated separatist militancy through the use of
hard military power. The thrust of Foreign Secretary Esala Weerakoon’s
concluding speech was that Sri Lanka’s soft power will also be how to
win the peace and ensure that the country’s security forces are a
respected and trusted part of the state alongside other institutions of
good governance and rule-based systems such as an independent judiciary,
public service, election commission and human rights commission. From
January 2015 onwards, with the election of a national unity government
headed by President Maithripala Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil
Wickremesinghe, Sri Lanka has been on a course of democratic transition
that has brought a shift in policy and in thinking on issues of
governance and the protection of human rights meet international
expectations.
DOMESTIC CHALLENGE
Now that the government is winning the hearts and minds of the
international community, it is necessary to focus its attention on
achieving similar success with the local population. At the time it
defeated the previous government headed by former President Mahinda
Rajapaksa, the new government generated enormous goodwill and positive
expectations, particularly from those sectors of the population who felt
under threat from the ethnic nationalism of the previous government
which utilized the hard power of the state to intimidate and suppress
them. However, this goodwill is in danger of being eroded due to the
failure to implement changes on the ground. In recognition of the
disillusionment that can set in, President Maithripala Sirisena’s
affirmed that the problem of displacement will be addressed within three
months in an effort to win the hearts and minds of the Tamil people.
There is also a need on the part of the government to keep the general
public informed about the reforms it is planning both with respect to
constitutional reform and the reconciliation process. It was reported
last week that the government has fast-tracked the process of drafting
the new Constitution. The Steering Committee which is drafting the
constitutional proposals has decided to hold meeting on consecutive days
so as to complete its task as early as possible. Four out of six
sub-committees appointed to work on different aspects of the
Constitution have submitted their reports to the Steering Committee
headed by Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe. The remaining two
subcommittees were requested to submit their reports by the end of last
week. The Steering Committee will incorporate the recommendations before
compiling the final report to be presented to Parliament.
However, the general public knows little or nothing about the content of
these constitutional reform proposals. This was reflected in a civil
society meeting which was addressed by an opposition parliamentarian
also last week. The theme of the discussion was the lack of transparency
in the constitutional reform process and the dangers that can arise
from it. He had said that there was a proposal to have a special
constitutional court that would not be under the Supreme Court in
matters of governance, and this could lead to authoritarian rule. The
problem with the present lack of transparency is that it enables the
opposition to make the case that both the constitutional reforms and the
reconciliation process are jeopardizing the sovereignty and unity of
the country. The less than enthusiastic local media coverage of the UN
Secretary General’s visit reflects this suspicious thinking within the
larger society whose hearts and minds are yet to be won over to the
government’s political reform process.
