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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, September 1, 2018
Sri Lanka: Attitudes of the people must change to address the sufferings
“If we are to have a civilised country, we have to see that these things do not happen again”
( August 31, 2018, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Human
Rights Commission of Sri Lanka Chairperson Dr.Deepika Udagama said
attitudes of the people must change for the country to move forward and
adequately address the sufferings of families of disappeared persons.
“We should not look at this through a political or racist perspective,”
she said and pointed out that some harbour negative feelings toward the
OMP. Still, those trying to find their missing loved ones are called
traitors, while those responsible for the disappearances may be regarded
heroes”, she said.
Dr. Udagama said there must be a reckoning with this difficult past in
order for the country to progress as a nation.“If we are to have a
civilised country, we have to see that these things do not happen
again,” she said.
She was delivering the keynote address at the J.R. Jayewardene Centre in
Colombo yesterday to march the International Day of the Victims of
Enforced Disappearances. A large gathering of family members of the
missing persons, government officials, civil society members and
representatives of foreign missions were present.
“If anyone can listen to these stories and watch these images of the
struggle of families of the disappeared without being moved, there is
something terribly wrong with this country.”
Dr. Udagama stressed that much like the incessant pain of the friends
and family of the disappeared, human rights violations against these
individuals are unending. “Under international law, enforced
disappearances are continuing violations. From the moment a person is
deprived of their liberty, the violation continues,” Udagama said.
According to the United Nations Human Rights commission, enforced
disappearance is defined by three elements: “deprivation of liberty
against the will of the person, involvement of government officials, at
least by acquiescence, and refusal to acknowledge the deprivation of
liberty or concealment of the fate or whereabouts of the disappeared
person.” In Sri Lanka, many of these disappearances are in connection
with the civil war and the 1980s JVP insurrection. Years later, families
still wait for answers, in a purgatory between mourning and hoping.
Dr. Udagama attributes the slow progress, in part, to a lack of
consistency in the political system and unstable institutions. “In Sri
Lanka, democracy has not been properly established,” she said.
“The government changes and people change and things happen in a different manner. We have to strengthen our institutions.”