The LLRC And The Prospects Of Reconcilation In Sri Lanka
By Kumar Rupesinghe -August 21, 2012
It is now over three years since
the LTTE was
decisively defeated by the Government of Sri Lanka. Since then the government
and the international community have been grappling with the issue of winning
peace, addressing the causes which gave rise to the deadly conflict, issues of
accountability, and reconciliation. These issues have dominated the Sri Lankan
debate in the last few years.
Peace
in the conflict literature is not the absence of war. There are three kinds of
violence that are defined in the literature of conflict transformation. Johan
Galtung, suggests that these three types of violence are direct violence, i.e.
deadly violence used by both sides, structural violence, which is defined as
structures which perpetuate poverty, inequality and discrimination, and cultural
violence, defined as the denial of identity and the denial of the other. Whilst
direct violence has been used extensively by both sides in Sri Lanka, this phase
has now come to an end. However structural violence remains, with inequality and
discrimination experienced not only by the Tamils, but also Sinhalese, Muslims,
Christians and other minorities, through discrimination due to ethnicity, caste
or class. The Tamils in the plantations experience structural violence due to
super exploitation of their labour. Cultural violence also continues to dominate
the narrative in Sri Lanka, in different manifestations such as the denial of
identity, myths perpetuated such as the “Chosen People” narrative in the
Mahavansa, the concept of a “homeland”, which requires a separate state,
contestation as to the mythos of origins of peoples residing in Sri Lanka.
Self-fulfilling prophesies, chosen traumas fill the folklore of the peoples
living in the island. In winning peace, these narratives ,myths and ideologies
have to be taken into account. It is in such a landscape that we have to examine
the role of the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) as a vehicle
for winning peace but also as a symbol of contestation
The Lessons Learn and
Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) was a response to the concerns
expressed by the western powers, India and the Tamil Diaspora in the aftermath
of the war. It was to be just another Commission, condemned to the dustbin of
history, which was the fate of so many other commissions, in the past. A
distinguished panel was appointed by the President, and its members were seen as
those favourable to the Government of President Mahinda Rajapaksa and did not
think that it would be given serious attention. In short it was seen by the
detractors of the government, as an eye wash, an attempt to cover a multitude of
sins and omissions.
It
is undoubtedly the efforts of the USA and later India through the resolution
introduced in the UN. Human Rights Council that the LLRC took centre stage..
However, Sri Lanka was defeated at the UN Human Rights Council and it was a
clear indication as to the will of the international community.
After
the defeat of Sri Lanka at the UNHRC good
sense prevailed and a strategic shift was taken by the President, to renew
relations with the USA, and the western powers and India. The efforts of the
Weeratunge Committee, and the tireless work of its members, produced an
implementation plan, provides a measuring rod with key performance indicators on
the performance of the government, where the more contentious issues would be
taken up with the proposed Parliamentary
Select Committee. Sri Lanka is now under the radar screen of the U.N.
and the measuring rod will be the government’s own home grown implementation
plan. The Tamil Diaspora would continue with its agitation calling for an
international inquiry into war crimes but its efforts to draw the international
community into this strategy would lose momentum, if the government implements
the plan. Whether the Government has taken a strategic shift to win over the
western powers upon whom Sri Lanka is dependent for its markets or is a tactical
shift to buy time is yet to be seen.
However,
India expects Sri Lanka to implement the 13th
Amendment and as a first step it requires that elections are held in
the north as soon as possible. Having elections in the North makes good sense,
as it will be a major instrument in the reconciliation process. The Tamil
National Alliance and other Tamil parties must be given the
opportunity to govern the regions where they command a majority, and checks and
balances have to be developed with regards to police and land powers. Such a
step will relax pent-up frustrations and a sense of humiliation that the peoples
of the north experience. The argument that we must wait till 2013 for the
elections is based on a wrong premise-i.e. that the North must be developed,
with infrastructure and development so that a grateful Tamil population will
vote against the TNA. This is an erroneous theory based on fallacious arguments
that the economy can shift people’s identity through economic and infrastructure
developments. Further, the delay must not be interpreted as a way of changing
the demographic balance. It is important that we heal the wound and remove the
sense of humiliation of a beleaguered people. Humiliation is “about putting down
and holding down.” It is the “enforced lowering of any person or group by a
process of subjugation that damages their dignity.
To
remove the sense of humiliation, and heal the wound, the people and their
lenders must be co-partners in building the country with a shared vision and
value for all. Here the leaders of the country, not only the Sinhalese but also
the leaders of other communities, must work towards a process of accommodation
and trust. For this to happen the mindset of all the parties, relics of the
past, must be discarded to rebuild a new Sri Lanka. The challenge is how such a
paradigm shift can be achieved.
