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, April 10, 2019
Video Of Violent Misogynist Attack: Activists Condemn
A video that warrants the strongest possible content warning, featuring
an act of extreme violence inflicted upon a popular actress, has been
released on social media [Colombo Telegraph refrains from providing the
link to the video, in an effort to reduce clicks and further publicity
to it]. The actress, Piyumi Hansamali, is a popular public figure with a
very strong social media presence. The video shows a [cis] man
assaulting the actress, violently trampling her neck and chocking her.
It shows Hansamali being chocked and in a situation of extreme distress.
“This video is an expression of extreme violence, and content of this
nature should not be allowed on public social media without prior
moderation”, commented Uvindu Kurukulasuriya, founder and Editor-in-Chief of Colombo Telegraph.
“This kind of video violates the minimum ethics of a decent and civilised society”, commented Thiyagaraja Waradas, Senior Lecturer at the University of Colombo, currently doctoral scholar at the University of Bath.
Waradas
further added “an immediate inquiry should be carried out by the
Women’s Affairs Minister, and the state should take every action to
ensure that every single individual involved in this shameless act, as
well as its filming, projection, and social media dissemination, should
be brought in front of the law, so that the victimised party can have
access to due support and justice”.
Expressing outrage at this incident and the video, Senel Wanniarachchi,
a gender justice activist, author and scholar at London School of
Economics, commented: “Where is our collective outrage on the said
video? The fact that the man in question knew he can not only act in the
way he did, but also have evidence of his action posted on social
media, speaks volumes about the culture of impunity surrounding violence
against women and girls in Sri Lanka and the fact that Facebook allowed
the said video to be posted and reproduced online shows how this level
of impunity that exists offline is mirrored in the online spaces as
well”.
Gender justice activist, scholar and author Dr Chamindra Weerawardhana categorically
condemned the violent video, noting that: “There is a thesis propagated
by some that this entire video could be a clickbait publicity stunt.
This view, whether it is substantiated or not, is beside the point. The
whole point here is that there is a public video, where a cisgender
woman is being violently assaulted, with a man’s foot on her neck. This
kind of misogynist violence should have absolutely no place whatsoever
in our society. The biggest problem here is also that the men who did
this assume that their behaviour is permissible. This tells us that
there’s something deeply rotten about masculinities in Sri Lankan
society. This kind of video is an incitement to misogynist violence”.