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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, November 25, 2019
6 DAYS [ OF GOTABAYA RAJAPAKSA PRESIDENCY ] – SANJANA HATTOTUWA

AUTHOR’S NOTE: ON THE INVITATION OF THE EDITOR, I’VE WRITTEN TO THE SUNDAY ISLAND NEWSPAPER EVERY WEEK SINCE LATE 2015. NOT A SINGLE COLUMN SINCE THEN WAS REJECTED OR EVEN SIGNIFICANTLY EDITED, UNTIL THIS ONE. AS I NOTED ON TWITTER, THE EDITOR CITING “ORDERS FROM ABOVE” SAID THAT MY COLUMN WOULD NOT BE PUBLISHED.

24/11/2019
This isn’t the first time content anchored to Gotabaya Rajapaksa has
fallen foul of owners of a newspaper. For many years, I was a columnist
in ‘The Nation’ newspaper, under the then Editor Malinda Seneviratne.
Malinda’s politics differ vastly to mine, but as Editor, he didn’t edit
out a single word of what I wrote, repeatedly noting to me and others
that as Ed
I don’t know much about what has happen at the #Island news paper. But need to state openly and clearly that we (@GotabayaR campaign) don’t have any clue on this matter and don’t have any connection in ‘stopping @sanjanah ‘s weekly Column’. Please somebody clarify this. #SriLanka https://twitter.com/sanjanah/status/1197853719297003521 …
15 people are talking about this
itor, what he wanted in the newspaper was a diversity of opinion,
including those he disagreed with but presented well. Sadly, the
pressure from the owner increased – first to encourage me to obliquely
reference the Rajapaksas, then to focus on Mahinda but not on Gotabaya
and finally, to not mention Gotabaya at all. On a trip abroad and under a
temporary Editor, my column was stopped.
The fear of or deference to the Rajapaksas runs deep. In 2015, I was
invited by the Sri Lanka Insitute of Architects to write a piece for
‘The Architect’ magazine on ‘democratic space’. The Editor in Chief a
few weeks before publication noted that references to the Rajapaksa’s
were problematic and that the Sri Lanka Insitute of Architects was in
fact entirely partial to the hugely problematic beautification projects
in Colombo led by Gotabaya Rajapaksa as the then all-powerful Defence
Secretary. I ended up publishing the piece on Groundviews.
In this tweet we see the template for how the Rajapaksas will control
(and strategically also allow) critical dissent in Sri Lanka under a
Gotabaya Presidency. Moderates within the SLPP will either out of
genuine personal conviction or more coercive direction, publish content
that avers the Presidency and government have nothing to do with overt
censorship. In parallel, media owners, out of fear or seeking favour –
knowing full well their businesses run & rely on ads as well as
political servitude – will proactively jettison voices and authors they
deem inconvenient or risk raising the ire of the Rajapaksas. This
jettisoning will not be based on orders from the Presidency. The
President’s reputation and the Rajapaksa legacy is enough to instil
fear. Coupled with this, enhanced and pervasive surveillance will be
used to track tone, timbre and thrust of thought against or partial to
Presidency and government. Those who are critical will be monitored more
and silenced in ways that set an example for others to abide by or go
silent on account of.
The more violent suppression of critical voices may occur too, but I
think unlikely in a context where dissent will simply not have any
meaningful space to seed or spread, on social media or in the real
world. All the while, moderates like Dr. Herath, who I’ve known for
years, will – sincerely I believe – claim that no orders were given to
censor critical voices, creating plausible deniability for Presidency
and government around the most draconian censorship, hidden in the open.
If the fear, less than a week into Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s presidency is
such that just around 1,200 words is deemed too much criticism for a
newspaper to publish by the powers that be, the future of Sri Lanka’s
writers, activists, independent and investigative journalists,
thespians, actors, academics and citizens interested in holding those in
power accountable is bleak, at best. As I noted in my censored column
below,
The
Rubicon crossed on the 16th was more than an electoral victory for the
incumbent. It is the end of a Sri Lanka as we know it, and the birth of
something else in its place, which shares a name, but little else.
###
6 DAYS
The day after the 7th President was sworn into office, racism celebrated
a new birth on Facebook. Across many pages that played a key role in
President’s electoral bid, the message was simple and clear. Sri Lanka
was for Sinhalese Buddhists only, and his victory ensured the country
would remain thus. All Tamils were labelled terrorists. An electoral map
of districts that voted for the President’s opponent was juxtaposed
with a map of Eelam. The implication, explicitly noted or implicitly
projected, was that the opponent’s bid was to divide Sri Lanka and give
the Tamils what the LTTE wanted. And because of this ingratitude, the
suggestion was that the Sinhalese should inhabit these areas as well
since nothing good would ever come from Tamils. The Sri Lankan flag was
replaced by the Lion flag next to the Buddhist flag. Lions, in fact,
dominated the images across these pages. In other pages, the Lion
covered the entire map of Sri Lanka. ‘Lions are back’ proclaimed a
notorious page supporting the new President, with an image of him and
his brother on two ends, with a Lion in the middle. In the background to
the images of both men, maps of Sri Lanka covered by the Lion symbol.
In more explicit posts, Hakeem, Bathiudeen and Sampanthan were called
the f word, reminding them that the electoral result was an indication
the Sinhala race wasn’t dead. Many pages congratulated the new President
as the representative of the Sinhala Buddhists. Hyper-conscious of
public optics, the new President tweeted that “I am the President of not
only those who voted for me but also those who voted against me and
irrespective of which race or religion they belong to.” And yet, the
racism on the pages continues in the same vein. All the posts are hugely
popular.
On Day 3, Major General Kamal Gunaratne was appointed as the new
Secretary of Defence. I last wrote about Gunaratne in October 2017,
after encountering a speech of his at a Viyathmaga public
meeting, made in front of the man who is now President. The video of
his speech is still on YouTube. Gunaratne’s comments were directed at
those like myself who remain deeply committed to a new constitution. The
translation of the comments made in Sinhala, noted in my column, are
worth repeating in light of the position he now holds.
Gunaratne wants those who support a new constitution dead, because he
proposes they are in fact traitors. He normalises death to traitors as
something natural, and inevitable. He wants a return to the height of
the JVP’s violence in the late 80’s in order to create the context to
deal with those who support a new constitution. His desire to punish
traitors extends post-mortem. Mirroring the humiliation the JVP meted
out to its political opponents even after being murdered, he wants those
who were in favour of a new constitution to not even be given a proper
burial. He doesn’t want Buddhist priests to bless them or even to visit
their homes.
The Viyathmaga audience
claps loudly and enthusiastically at Gunaratne’s comments. As noted in
the Hansard and reported in international media, Gunaratne is alleged to
have murdered an employee at the Sri Lankan Embassy in Brazil. Other
news reports capture his time at a leading international school in Sri
Lanka, and the terror to both parents and children that ensued.
Gunaratne joins the Commander of the Sri Lankan Army, Shavendra Silva – a
man whose bulky frame serves primarily to carry the weight of
allegations of war crimes against him – as the chief architects of
national security, aided by state intelligence services and a deep or
dark state entirely partial to the Rajapaksas.
On Day 4, the new President was framed in a set of extraordinary photos
at the Dalada Maligawa in Kandy. Flanked by Buddhist monks, Nilame’s and
the ornate, ostentatious regalia of Kandyan pomp and pageantry in full
display, the new President, dead centre, projected himself, comfortably,
as a King. The same day, Shani Abeysekara, till that day the Director
of the CID, was demoted as a personal assistant to a DIG, one of the
lowest ranks in the Police force. Abeysekara was in charge of cases
involving the Rajapaksas, including the murders of Lasantha
Wickrematunge, Thajudeen and the disappearance of Eknaligoda.
On Day 5, a day after the new President’s brother was sworn in as Prime
Minister, the entire website of the PM’s office was wiped clean. Nothing
remains of the old site as a vital repository of public records linked
to the former incumbent’s years as PM. Exactly a year ago, during the
constitutional coup, the then illegal PM did precisely the same thing.
When the coup failed, the site was restored. This disturbing proclivity
to completely delete history, erase public records, wipe clean
government sites of any and all material framing or focused on political
opponents informs the new President’s approach to governance.
On Day 6, I woke up wondering what the multi-billion rupee investments
on surveillance, through bilateral agreements with China, Israel and
Russia – now entirely in the hands of the new President and his team –
would lead to. Counter-intuitively, the new President’s time in office
could well be the most peaceful Sri Lanka’s seen yet. The disbanding of
extremist Buddhist groups, self-censorship of journalists, abject fear
felt by all minorities and the very real fatigue of civil society to
fight against however many years or even decades the first family will
remain in power almost guarantees that opposition to the Presidency will
be muted, at best, within the country. Pervasive surveillance spanning
human, communications and digital media, aided and abetted by all telcos
present in the country, will result in a public sphere were
inconvenient truths and dissent will be controlled, contained or
censored. Coordination amongst and collaboration of any opposition to
the Presidency will be tracked. At the same time, because the new
President’s PR is a cut above anything else in the country, vast sums of
money will be spent on propaganda for consumption within the country,
and marketing campaigns to promote the country abroad. With markets
rebounding, investor confidence returning, tourism promotion, branded
content, sponsored ads, paid tours of celebrities and a country without
any visible manifestation of internal strife, the new Presidency stands
to be marked by what in common parlance the people wanted – a leader who
took care of garbage and made a city look clean. On that score, the
President will deliver. Entirely lost will be a focus on rights and
accountability. Any focus on these, and the barbarians no longer at the
gate, but inside Temple Trees, will be let loose silently, to devour
their prey in the dead of night, so that the carcasses in the morning
are a reminder of how little dissent means in a country moving forward,
with intellect, meritocracy and Buddhism at the helm.
All this is more the failure of Wickremesinghe and Sirisena than the
success of the incumbents. Shavendra wasn’t appointed by the new
President. One wonders if the former government was waiting for an
astrologically sound hour to release the findings of Shani Abeysekara’s
investigations. None of the allegations made in public about the
corruption of the Rejapaksa regime by the leading lights of the former
government were backed up by investigations that led to indictments. The
Parliamentary Select Committee report’s capture of the former
President’s ineptitude and the PM’s lack of leadership are criminal in
nature and negligence. The public had had enough, and understandably so.
The inheritance of incompetence though is shared, and therein lies the
rub. Not everyone who voted in the new President is a racist, or even
close. But the vote to place him in power will result in a renewed reign
of racism. Many see 2005-2015 as what Sri Lanka will return to. I do
not subscribe to this. White vans may not need to come back, and
journalists will not need to be murdered. Knowing the nature of the
beast and the popular support it enjoys at present, no one will dare say
or do anything to upset it. The result of this will be the entrenchment
of the Rajapaksas and the normalisation of everything that is abusive,
corrupt, violent, exclusive, authoritarian, sexist, communal or
majoritarian.
The shift of popular discourse and the public imagination to embrace the
tenets of authoritarianism as essential to and inextricable from stable
governance is a legacy future governments will not be able to
roll-back, or even want to. The Rubicon crossed on the 16th was more
than an electoral victory for the incumbent. It is the end of a Sri
Lanka as we know it, and the birth of something else in its place, which
shares a name, but little else.
24/11/2019 – Sanajanah.wordpress.com