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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, April 1, 2018
Tackling On-Line Hate Imperative: But Banning Social Media Counter-Productive!
The
role of social media has surfaced and often criticised in national
discourses, especially in the Post war period when a vicious wave of anti-Muslim hate and animosity, began to blow across the length and breadth of Sri
Lanka, on the heels of the end to a bloody 30 years of an ethnic war
waged against the State by the ruthless Tigers. This discourse became
sharper, especially during Aluthgama communal violence in the latter phase of MR’s tenure of office and also during the more recent Ampara/Diganaspate of anti-Muslim violence, for a mixed bag of reasons-both good and bad.
Ironically,
Aluthgama mini-1983 style Anti-Muslim violence in 2014 was the
culmination of a well-orchestrated hate campaign carried out by
extremist hate groups whose patron saints were in the higher echelons of
the MR government. Although the scale and violence during 1983’s anti-
Tamil pogrom was by no means an equal comparison, the Muslim community
in Aluthgama and
even beyond, in 2014 felt the same way how the Tamil community then
felt, and arguably still feel today close to four decades later. Similar
sentiments were reportedly echoed in a documentary titled Demons in Paradise”, directed by Jude Ratnam mostly reflecting on Tamil militancy during Sri Lanka’s civil war. Thus, after many such similar spate of hate attacks from Gintota to
Digana, even under this government which came to power to set the
climate right, an unbeatable sense of fear and insecurity overwhelms
Muslims in particular and minority communities in general, not knowing
when they will next be targeted by the hate groups or attacked. People
of all communities feel that this is no way to live and no way to
reconcile. Yet, with the escalation of hate speech especially
anti-Muslim hate, in the public domain(+social media) and resultant hate
attacks, with a laid back Government in denial, the signs are clear
that such hate peddling is moving from being a fringe activity to
mainstream. It will therefore be relevant to review the role of social
media in this context. Firstly, in order to initially look into its’
beneficial role , how both the government as well as the mainstream
media acted for example, during the Aluthgama violence, to keep away the
relevant details from the country and the international community,
would prove useful.
It should be recalled Ven Gnanasara of BBS,
in an inflammatory speech in Aluthgama when previously a tense
situation had arisen, hit out at the Muslim community as well as the
government for ‘betraying’ the Sinhalese people.He was heard speaking at
the gathering adding that that both the government and minorities need
to remember that the country had still a Sinhala police and a Sinhala
army – statements that gave way to cheers from the assembled crowds.
This fiery speech undoubtedly acted as a catalyst to these well-planned
attacks (or ‘Aba Saranai’) to many Muslim areas in and around Aluthgama.
An unofficial ‘news blackout’ was imposed by the government on
mainstream media with regard to reporting on the anti-Muslim violence
that erupted in the area. Highly placed officials informed editors of
news and print media in Sri Lanka to desist from reporting the ground
situation prevailing in Aluthgama, Instead, the media were told to only
inform the public about the curfew imposed due to a “tense situation”.
Even a blanket media blackout was ordered on the meeting that was held
between Muslim organisations and the Secretary to the Ministry of
Defence Gotabaya Rajapaksa, who was widely considered as having given
patronage to BBS.
Mainstream
newspapers thus falling line with the government’s desire to hide the
truth, refused to fully report on the Aluthgama reports, giving it very
little prominence , citing reasons ‘born of a desire to refrain from
inflaming communal tensions further in the light of the incidents’. The
editorial of the State newspaper, Ceylon Daily News (CDN), on 17 June
2014, downplayed the incident by claiming it was ‘isolated’ and was
being exaggerated. Keheliya Rambukwella, the then Minister of Mass
Communication and Information made a statement that was carried in the
CDN directing the media to ‘act with responsibility’, also insinuating
that the incident was being sensationalised. Colombo Telegraph reported
that CDN built a conspiracy theory around the violence that erupted in
the area, blaming a ‘foreign hand’ for orchestrating the anti-Muslim
violence. Daily News then Editor Rajpal Abeynayake, also drew
comparisons between the violence that erupted in Aluthgama and Beruwala
and the covert operations carried out by the US to create a regime
change in Cuba. He also heavily criticized social media users who
updated the ground situation in Aluthgama and Beruwala in the wake of
the clashes that Sunday onwards, describing them as ‘social media
vultures’ while accusing them of carrying out a ‘vicious misinformation
campaign’ while commending the mainstream media for ‘sensibly releasing
the news through a filter’.
Privately
owned newspapers such as the Island and the Daily Mirror too presented
very little information on the incident. In fact, the Island’s editorial
on 16 June 2014 insinuated that the blame lay with the Muslim
community, as it claimed that participants at the BBS ally were attacked
first. The Daily Mirror newspaper edited by Champika Liyanarachchi also
failed to report on the violence for over five days and then thought it
fit to publish a series of pictures in its newspaper of Sinhala homes
that had been damaged in the violence while Minister
Champika Ranawaka was on a visit to a Sinhala settlement in the Dharga
Town area in its weekend edition. The report came under the title US
creating another Taliban in Sri Lanka – words of Champika who claimed
the US was not taking a stronger stance on Muslim extremists operating
in Sri Lanka. Journalists of the newspaper told Colombo Telegraph; ‘It
was a grave miscarriage of justice to fail to report on the fate of
Muslims while attempting to portray the victimisation of the Sinhala
community alone. It has exposed our prejudice. We are standing for
aggressors of minorities we will stand up for the majority community but
never ever for the minorities. “We could have balanced it and written
about it but we just stayed silent”. Thus, the mainstream media’s
version of events ultimately began to resemble quite closely the
government’s official version. The online journals like Colombo
Telegraph and Ground-views in contrast, played a constructive role.
It
was to the credit of the social media which then emerged as an
alternative channel of information. Independent journalists were
instrumental in reporting—in real time—the events in Aluthgama , and
were freely sharing information and updates to produce raw and unedited
version of events as they unfolded using social media platforms such as
Facebook and Twitter. The extraordinary controls that the government
exercised over the mainstream media did not appear to extend to social
media. Such information was thus ultimately instrumental in generating
public awareness of the Aluthgama riots both within the country and
beyond as well. This intervention was called for, as the Defence
Ministry even instructed all civil society organisations to refrain from
holding press conferences, workshops and training for journalists.
Workshops on investigative journalism organised by Transparency
International Sri Lanka were subsequently called off following protests
and disruptions by organised mobs. Although the Defence Ministry’s
letter did not possess the force of law, it intimidated organisations
and even appeared to endorse the disruption of civil society events. The
Defence Secretary observed: ‘The final threat to Sri Lanka’s national
security is the emergence of new technology-driven media, including
social media sites such as Facebook, Twitter and other websites…..Those
with vested interests can exploit social media, causing problems in Sri
Lanka or any other country, by circulating certain ideologies online and
mobilizing and organizing people. This can be done with a minimal
physical presence, and therefore constitutes a threat that is difficult
to contain through the traditional tools of national defence’. The
timing and terminology of the defence establishment’s campaign thus had
obvious links to its anxiety over how independent journalists reported
on the Aluthgama riots.
It
is relevant to mention that it was also the social media platforms
which were instrumental in advancing Maithripala Sirisena’s campaign,
framed as a campaign for good governance to promote national
reconciliation and a clean administration, which led to the remarkable
regime change in 2015, due to MR’s government’s inaction and collusion
with respect to religious violence in the post-war era. Social
media was thus able to successfully counter -balance state control over
the mainstream media as well as help in fighting a corrupt and racist
regime. It is also perhaps the only unrestricted channel through which
state -sponsored religious attacks can be documented and reported on to
inform the public of ongoing attacks and prompt resistance. Moreover,
social media platforms were crucial to ‘counter-messaging’, which helped
defuse the build up of hate speech in the public domain to a certain
extent, although insignificant in the face of organized hate. Thus, the
positive power of social media cannot be overemphasized in today’s
digital age particularly in the context of tackling hate in a society.