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
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, January 1, 2019
Was Ms. Vijayakala Maheswaran Wrong?
For most of you, this could be stale news. But I thought of writing this piece even at a later time after Vijayakala Maheswaran’s
controversial speech. My first hand experiences in the North since June
this year made me write this piece. Being 6 months in the North on and
off (at least 3 weeks per each month) won’t be enough for me to come to a
right conclusion about the subject but I would report what I saw. I
don’t speak Tamil but can manage with the little English I know and
sometimes in Sinhala as I found many people I meet in the North can
speak some Sinhala. Besides, I think I am good at the universal
language, the sign language
I have no connection or whatsoever with the then State Minister of Women
and Children’s Affairs, Ms. Vijayakala Maheswaran. I even didn’t know
if such one ever existed before her speech came to the limelight. But
with all those hullaballoos about her “controversial” speech at Veerasingham Hall Jaffna on July 02, 2018, I thought of reading the full English translation of her speech “for the heck of it.”
Apart from the controversial and illegal part of “reviving the LTTE,” I
don’t find anything wrong in what she talked in the rest of her speech.
Ms. Maheshwaran must be really lucky not to be in jail for talking about
reviving a ruthless terrorist outfit that dragged the country back to
the Stone Age, literally. If this speech was made in any other sovereign
state, she would have been counting the bars in a cell by now. But Sri
Lanka is a funny country with funnier constitution which is less funny
than a Kushwant Singh’s sarcastic column! I would refrain from making
any comment about judiciary here as, at this age, I don’t have much time
left to be in a secluded cell for several years. I have better things
to in my life.
About child abuse/rape/killing which Ms. Maheshwaran talks, she is
right. It is true these were not committed by the Sri Lankan military
but mostly, the people of the neighborhood were the perpetrators. (There
are some allegations that Ms. Maheshwaran herself tried to save one
such accused of the high school girl Vidya rape and
subsequent killing being, I don’t know.) What I do know is that the
post-LTTE era has compromised the rigid law and order which had been
implemented in the North by the terrorists. So, naturally, maybe the
people might think that the “known devil” was better.
It was the same with the extensive substance abuse by the youth and the
men at large in the North. The LTTE was trafficking drugs to sustain
their organization but they did not sell them in Sri Lanka, well, at
least not in the North. Drug trafficking was one of their main ways of
illegal fundraising to the so called “liberation struggle” but they
ensured the drugs would not make their way to the North. But now, after
the conclusion of the bloody war, one can read from the press that large
hauls of drugs are being captured by the police and the Special Task
Force (STF) in the North and East. I myself have seen numerous times the
youth spend hours under street lights in Jaffna just loitering till
late hours of the night. I cannot see what they do but I just have a
friendly word or two and find most of them are intoxicated. I don’t
think this happened during the LTTE era. Terrorism should be condemned
at any level, but didn’t the women in the South themselves kind of
“approve” the rigid jungle laws implemented by “Deshapremi Janatha
Wyaparaya” – the terrorist unit of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP)
for that matter? People, especially women, love to see the men being
controlled at least by a terrorist outfit if the authorities cannot do
their job any better?
I am not a legal expert. But as everyone knows damn well, atrocities
were committed from both sides during and the immediate aftermath of the
war. There is no point in harping on these forever. A government
military has to abide by the international ethics of war no matter how
hard it is. They will be forced to retaliate when the opposite happens
from a terrorist group. But this is why a state military is trained how
to become a professional military. One cannot justify an illegal
retaliatory action a state military commits by pointing at a ruthless
terrorist or guerilla group’s heinous acts. This is where the state
military has to draw the margin. A terrorist organization has the luxury
of ignoring international war ethics. This is why they are called
“terrorists.” So, the better thing to do is to forgive and forget. There
are allegations and reportedly, hard evidence too, of atrocities
committed by both the military and the terrorists according to what I
read, hear and see. So, why not we go to a South African model Truth
Commission in which all parties are pardoned and integrated to the
society? It is never too late, even after 9 years of conclusion of war.