Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Sunday, April 28, 2013


Monkeys also become victims of Mattala! Dogs have a field day!



Sunday, 28 April 2013 
The Mattala Rajapaksa International Airport that was constructed to promote eco tourism has now resulted in birds, peacocks, crocodiles and elephants losing their sanctuary and the latest victims of the airport are monkeys. Informed sources say that hundreds of monkeys have already been sacrificed by the airport.
In order to save money, high tension wires that carry a power of 33,000 Watts from Hambantota have been pulled across the sanctuary fro 13 kilometers. The wires have been drawn across the sanctuary without receiving the necessary environmental clearances by using Presidential powers. The monkeys in the sanctuary who are unaware that the wire they are treading on is a 33,000 Watt powered high tension line have been electrocuted in thousands. At least 20-30 monkeys have been electrocuted every day.
When ever a monkey is electrocuted, the power supply at the airport gets disrupted for a few minutes. Since the power supply to the airport is disrupted around 20-30 times every day, the sensitive radar system at the airport has been affected by it. There is now a threat of a complete breakdown in the airport’s electricity system since it has been switching off several times every day since March 18th.
The Mattala Airport authorities have identified this situation and have now convened a special meeting with officials from the CEB next week to discuss this matter. The airport officials have asked that the news be kept under wraps without allowing the websites that have attacked the airport get hold of the news.
The Mattala Airport official who gave us the information said that the options are to pull the high tension wire through another route without taking it through the sanctuary or to shoot and kill all the monkeys in the sanctuary.
The official said that the airport staff expected a directive from higher offices to poison the monkeys in the same manner directions were issued to close up the watering holes around the airport to prevent animals from getting close to the airport.
People in the area say that hundreds of dogs are now feasting on the dead monkeys. Chandrika’s loyalists intimidated The President is once again suffering from a “Chandrika terror” and is engaged in spreading false rumours about former President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunge where ever he goes.
The President is engaged in a programme to inspect ministries and he had visited Minister Nimal Siripala’s Ministry on the 26th. The Ministry had spent an additional Rs. 7-8 million beautifying the ministry premises before the President’s visit.
When the President visits a ministry of a minister he believes to be in close touch with Chandrika, he makes it a point to be very friendly with him and shares jokes while putting his arm around the minister’s shoulder. The President who had visited such a minister had put his arm around the minister’s shoulder and said, “Did you know that I looked into Chandrika’s game plan. She is trying to be the common candidate. Ranil told me that he would never allow such a move. The people who follow her will be lost if they listen to Mangala’s misleading information.”
The President is now looking relaxed since the former President had left for London a few days back. However, the President had asked the Sri Lankan High Commission in London to keep a close watch to see if Chandrika’s visit to London was connected with the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group (CMAG) meeting that was held on the 26th.

Workers to take to the streets against the government

Sunday, 28 April 2013 
Workers in the public, private and estate sectors have decided to launch an island wide strike action May 21st against the electricity tariff hike.
The JVP’s National Trade Union Center (NTUC), UNP’s Jathika Sevaka Sangamaya (JSS) and hundreds of trade unions have demanded President Mahinda Rajapaksa and the government to withdraw the electricity tariff hike before May 20th.
The Coordination Committee For A Joint Trade Union Alliance said that over 600 trade unions have decided to give the ultimatum to the government and resort to severe trade union action against the unfair tariff hike.
The committee today sent a letter to the President announcing its decision.
The strike on May 21st is expected to be the second largest mass agitation since the 2011 campaign against the private pension scheme proposed by the government to dip in to the EPF and ETF monies.



The Land Of Miracles

By Tisaranee Gunasekara -April 28, 2013
Colombo Telegraph“I think we are blind….. Blind people who can see, but do not see” -Jose Saramago (Blindness)
Miracles happen in the ‘Wonder of Asia’.
Last week, the lawyers representing Parliamentarian Duminda Silva – on the basis of multiple diagnoses by eminent physicians – assured a court of law that their client was a grievously sick man. The judge was told that Mr. Silva’s left side was paralysed, his brain function down by 40% and his recovery contingent on immediate quite retirement into the bosom of his loving family.
The AG’s Department – as much of a Presidential appendage as the post-Impeachment Supreme Court – had no objections to bail. Thus persuaded, the judge gave bail to this key suspect in the Kolonnawa quadruple-murder case.
Then the miracle happened.
When Mr. Silva left the hospital, amidst the cheers of his supporters, he was fully recovered. There was no sign of a partial paralysis or brain damage; he radiated rude-health and cocky-wellbeing.
Silva left the hospital
Mr. Silva has been accused of child abuse and murder, but let none call him an ingrate. His first task upon leaving hospital was to pay his obeisance to the Rajapaksa Siblings– the God Fathers who saved him, twice.
In a lawful country, the lawyers and doctors who provided the court with false information about Mr. Silva’s health would have been hauled before a judge. In today’sSri Lanka, no harm will come to those who helped a Rajapaksa-pet to escape justice. On the contrary, the lawyers and doctors who enabled this charade will be suitably rewarded.
Before approving bail, the judge warned Mr. Silva not to intimidate the witnesses. The Witnesses witnessing the miracle of Duminda Silva must be intimidated already. Any witness with an ounce of grey-matter would know that the Ruling Siblings are not going to allow any harm to come to their pet and that giving evidence against Mr. Silva will be almost as foolhardy as giving evidence against the Rajapaksas.
That would suffice to intimidate any witness, and make him forget what he saw, or remember it differently.
The miracle of Duminda Silva will be followed, sooner or later, by the miracle of Sampath Chandrapushpa, the main suspect in the murder of Khuram Shaikh. Plenty of witnesses will be found to swear that Mr. Chandrapushpa, instead of launching a murderous attack on a defenceless man, was actually trying to save him from some unknown assailants; or that he was never present at the scene of crime, but was at home all the time, gift-wrapping Christmas presents for orphaned-children, or at a temple meditating on the impermanence of life and worldly glory, in the company of Namal Rajapaksa (who is another meditation-buff, according to Sinhala papers). Whatever the tale, this other Rajapaksa-pet too will get away with murder.
And Mr. Kamalesh Sharma, he of wondrous insight into Rajapaksa Sri Lanka, can have the pleasure of shaking the hand of Mr. Chandrapushpa when he attends the Hambantota Commonwealth. Because, as the Chairman of the Tangalle Pradesheeya Sabaha, Mr. Chandrapushpa will be an honoured invitee to this Rajapaksa mega-show.
‘Be faithful to us and thou will be granted eternal impunity’: that is the First Rajapaksa Commandment.
Liar, Liar…
Parliamentarian Duminda Silva may or may not be partially paralysed; but the Lankan judicial system certainly is. He may or may 40% brain-dead, but the Lankan society certainly is.
Had the Rajapaksas wanted, the Duminda Silva saga could have been handled slightly less blatantly. He could have been taken home quietly; there could at least have been the pretence of a gradual recovery. But the Rajapaksas are so intoxicated with their own power, so confident of their capacity to get away with any crime, so contemptuous of popular-intelligence that they do not see any reason to maintain appearances.
In England and France, before the discovery of germ-theory, people believed that the touch of a monarch could cure illnesses[i]. Do the Rajapaksas think a sufficient number of Lankans are gullible enough to gulp a similar tale about Duminda Silva? Or is it that they no longer care, because impunity has become second nature?
Will the Northern PC poll be held, actually, or will it be postponed at the last moment? If it is held at all, will it be another ‘Humanitarian Operation’?
Will the Rajapaksa regime fulfil the expectations of Commonwealth Secretary General or will Kamalesh Sharma join the long list of international players who were duped by the Siblings?
Will the President honour his promise to reduce the electricity bill next year?
Will they this? Won’t they that?
Reflect on the Duminda Silva miracle, and the answers to these and every other question about what the Rajapaksas will or won’t do will become crystal-clear.
The Rajapaksas do not want to leave power. Actually, they cannot afford to leave power. The Siblings also believe that power is their right, their due.
They will do anything to stay in power, to prevent anyone from violating their eternal right to absolute power.
That includes being licentious towards your die-hard loyalists. Since the Mervyn Silvas, the Duminda Silvas and the Sampth Chandrapushpas are willing to break the law on behalf of their masters, they must be allowed to break the law, now and then, on their own behalf. That is their reward for mindless obedience and perfect sycophancy.
The birth of the 18th Amendment constitutes the best case-study in Rajapaksa purpose and modus operandi.
When the proposal to remove presidential term-limits was floated immediately after the 2010 parliamentary election, the Opposition protested; top monks expressed concern and even some UPFA members demurred. Instead of steamrolling the opposition, the President deflected it by deliberately turning public attention elsewhere. He commenced negotiations with the Leader of Opposition, purportedly about a new constitution.Ranil Wickremesinghe, beleaguered in his own party by those who wanted to oust him, jumped at this opportunity of playing statesman. The President dangled the carrot of removing the executive presidency, and the UNP gulped it wholesale.
The eternal optimists dreamed of consensual politics and national governments.
While this drama was being enacted in the public square, behind the scenes, the Legal Draughtsman’s Department and the AG’s Department (both Presidential appendages) were preparing the 18th Amendment.
The stratagem worked. Believing that the Rajapaksas would not dare to remove the term-limit provision, the UNP occupied itself with endless infightings, when it was not engaged in meaningless negotiations with the President about replacing the executive presidency with an executive premiership. The fate of Gen. Fonseka consumed the time and the attention of the JVP and the DNA, understandably.
Then, suddenly, without any warning, the charade ended. President Rajapaksa informed the Opposition that he intends to remove presidential term-limits and run for a third (and, the Grim Reaper permitting, a fourth and a fifth…) term.  The, Opposition, blindsided again, was unable to mount an effective campaign. And the 18thAmendment, one of the most anti-democratic pieces of legislations ever, was born.
The Rajapaksas lie; they cheat; they make false promises. Those are not anomalies but integral components of their standard operational procedure.
And whenever necessary, they engineer mass-hallucinations about a dire-threat or a diabolical-enemy.
They fashion miracles out of our fearful-gullibility; and thrive.

[i] Especially Scrofula, a skin disease also known as the King’s Evil.
Duminda’s bail order given effect


By Mike Andree-April 26, 2013,

Colombo Additional Magistrate and District Judge Ranga Wimalasena yesterday gave effect to Colombo High Court Judge Lalith Jayasuriya’s order by releasing the 11th suspect in the Baratha Lakshman murder case, Parliamentarian Duminda Silva on bail.

This followed submissions by Duminda Silva’s lawyer, President’s Counsel Hemantha Warnakulasuriya that though his client had been released on bail, the doctors had not discharged him from hospital. He said that even during the last two days the case was taken up, Duminda Silva had been absent as Senior Consultant Neuro Surgeon Dr. Maheshi Wijeratna had said that the patient was not fit to attend Court and it had been accepted by the Court.

The President’s Counsel stated that the very fact that he had been incarcerated had aggravated Duminda Silva’s recovery and impeded his progress.

He said the fact that he was surrounded by jail guards, had adversely affected his client’s progress. "Therefore, he has been advised to live in a very hygienic environment among his relations. Dr. Keith Goh has stated, very clearly, in the medical certificate that "any adverse factors, stress and the slightest impacts will not only reverse the progress that he has made, but will also be life threatening."

Counsel Warnakulasuriya requested the Court to give effect to the High court bail order and permit the Court’s Registrar, under special circumstances, to visit the Nawaloka hospital and obtain Duminda Silva’s signature to the bail bond as he had not been discharged from the hospital as yet.   

The Magistrate, having considered the submissions, accepted Premalal Silva, a leading businessman and Proboda Silva, his brother, an engineer by profession as sureties. The magistrate thereafter read the bail conditions of the bond and impounded Duminda Silva’s passport. Thereafter he made order to the Registrar of Court No. 09, Indika Gunasekara, to proceed to Nawaloka Hospital and obtain Duminda Silva’s signature on the bail bond and then inform Welikada prison authorities that he had been released on bail.

Up to the time of going to press, Monitoring MP of the Defence and Urban Development Ministry, Duminda Silva, was still at the Nawaloka hospital as the doctors had not discharged him.

President’s Counsel Hemantha Warnakulasuriya appeared for the accused along with Attorneys-at Law Weerasena Ranahewa, Premasiri Perera and Hansadewa Samaradiwakara, instructed by Mrs Vijitha Wickramasekara.

Foreign woman raped by UPFA ruled PS chairman speaks

logoMONDAY, 22 APRIL 2013 
The foreign woman who was raped by a group including the Chairman of UPFA ruled Tangalle Pradeshiya Sabha after murdering her fiancé, 32 year old British Red Cross worker Khuram Shaikh, in the Nature resort Hotel in Tangalle on Christmas eve in 2011 has told her story for the first time.
24 year old Victoria Alexandrevna, the Russian fiancée of the murdered British national recalling the horrible memories of the incident has said that the gang of thugs stripped her and raped her after murdering her fiancée. She has said she has no confidence that justice would be done for the Crimes in Sri Lanka. However, she had said that she was determined to fight for justice.
The Chairman of UPFA ruled Tangalle Pradeshiya Sabha Sampath Chandrapushpa and others in the group were arrested and released on bail.
Related news:
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Hail!

By Rasika Jayakody -April 28, 2013 
Colombo Telegraph
Rasika Jayakody
He was never the
first to shoot
first to kill
first to flee
first to return
first to con
first to perform miracles
first to molest democracy
first to squeeze the breast
of rule of law
and smile innocuously.
He will not be the last too.
He was always
somewhere in the middle,
in the middle of a shady deal
called ‘Politics’,
in the middle of a 21 million tombstones
called ‘citizenry’,
in the middle of the last breath
of justice,
in the middle of a forgetful history
that always repeats itself
as a farce.
Picture by Sanka Vidanagama
Duminda’s note of thanks
Sunday, 28 April 2013 
UPFA parliamentarian R. Duminda Silva who is also known as K. Duminda has told the media that the doctors at Nawaloka Hospital were far better than the doctors at Singapore’s Mount  Elizabeth Hospital.

Silva, who was unable to even stand straight when he returned to the country due to his delicate health condition, yesterday made this statement to the media when he left the Nawaloka Hospital to visit Temple Trees.
K. Duminda has said that it would have been far better if he was treated at the Nawaloka Hospital after being shot in the head without being taken to Mount Elizabeth Hospital in Singapore in an air ambulance spending millions.
Duminda has said that he was grateful to the specialist black magicians at the Nawaloka Hospital and the senior officials at the CID who had treated him to get well fast.
K. Duminda has said that he was forever indebted to the President, the Defence Secretary, the current Chief Justice and unbiased CID officials like Mahesh Perera and Mathurata for misleading the media, the judiciary and the people since he was shot. He has added that he would no “enter the game” shortly. 

Duminda Silva who destroyed 4 families visits President – Hirunika

SUNDAY, 28 APRIL 2013 13logo
Only President Mahinda Rajapaksa can give a judgment regarding Parliamentarian Duminda Silva who left Navaloka private hospital yesterday says Miss. Hirunika Premachandra, the daughter of murdered president's adviser Bharatha Lakshman Premachandra.
She said" Duminda Silva who destroyed four families visited the President. Duminda Silva, who was said to be in a critical condition and was receiving treatment according to medical reports has been suddenly cured by a 'miracle' which indicates that blatant lies have been the winner in Sri Lanka says Miss Premachandra.
"A person, said to be in a serious condition, whose skull had been replaced and had been told that he should not be exposed to germs is walking down the streets surrounded by a large crowd. Isn't he exposed to germs then? Even the lawyers, JMOs and doctors have lied. We're the ones who lost everything. What happened here proves that only lies are victorious in Sri Lanka. I emphasize that the President should take the responsibility for everything happened," she added.
Miss. Premachandra said this at a media conference held at her residence yesterday (27th).

Video: Duminda all smiles



MP Duminda Silva is seen smiling when he left the Navaloka Hospital this morning. A massive crowd that had gathered outside the Hospital to welcome him was seen shouting slogans. Pix by Waruna Wanniarachchi / Video by Indika Sri Aravinda and Sanath Desmond.

Saturday, April 27, 2013


Whence Sri Lankan Tamils And Whither Sri Lankan Tamils

By C.V. Wigneswaran -April 27, 2013 
Justice C.V.Wigneswaran
Colombo TelegraphAjnaana Timiraamdhasya Gnaanaanjana Shalaakayaa
Chakshuru Miilitam Yena Tasmai Shrii Gurave Namah
Honourable Chairman, Distinguished Members of the Diplomatic Corps, Honourable Parliamentarians, my dear Brothers and Sisters!
Recently, I was called upon on different occasions to address different groups of the legal fraternity. The present period, as you know, is the most perilous in the history of our justice system, and to date the crisis remains unresolved. The future of an independent judicial system seems bleak, and despite the immense courage shown by some of its members, the community seems to feel despondent and desolate.
Delivering an Oration on the topic of “Whither Sri Lankan Tamils?” today, I address a community that is in an exponentially worse situation. The precarious position in which the Tamil speaking community is placed today is highlighted by the aftermath of my recent speeches.
Whilst many had sent me messages of congratulations on the occasion of one of my speeches, a State sponsored Newspaper thought it fit to print the most unprofessional epithets. Worse still, the newspaper had no compunction in casting Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake and the speaker today as essentially LTTEproxies. A tenuous link was drawn to cast a discourse on judicial independence as an “Eelam Project” thus seeking to demonise the entire discourse. If the legal community cannot escape being cast as LTTE proxies for pointing out severe shortcomings in the working of the judicial system, what hope does the Tamil community have? Is it possible for Tamils to discuss frankly the problems faced by them without being labeled as LTTE?
The habit of this type of labeling reminds me of a passage in Animal Farm. Even though Snowball had been driven out of the farm, his spectre was raised whenever convenient. As Orwell narrates
He stole the corn, he upset the milk-pails, he broke the eggs, he trampled the seedbeds, he gnawed the bark off the fruit trees. Whenever anything went wrong it became usual to attribute it to Snowball. If a window was broken or a drain was blocked up, someone was certain to say that Snowball had come in the night and done it, and when the key of the store-shed was lost, the whole farm was convinced that Snowball had thrown it down the well. Curiously enough, they went on believing this even after the mislaid key was found under a sack of meal. The cows declared unanimously that Snowball crept into their stalls and milked them in their sleep. The rats, which had been troublesome that winter, were also said to be in league with Snowball.
This is typical in any sort of fascist society. The tactic is simple – you identify a vilified group and attribute all ills to it. As the regime is against that group, any voice of dissent must be in league with that vilified group – or so the logic runs.
Therefore let me start this lecture by stating initially that Tamils were discriminated and victimised almost from the beginning of the last century, long before the phrase Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam was ever coined and long before its leader saw the light of day. Those belonging to the majority community of this Country must not fall for this diabolical habit of referring to all who profess minority rights as LTTEers or LTTE sympathizers.
Bandaranaike and Chelvanayagam
The term LTTE has become the bogey man behind whom many cover up their naked aggression and dictatorial demeanour. I do understand it as a ploy adopted to silence minorities from articulating their miseries and misgivings. But the pernicious tendency must be done away with.
It must be remembered that none of us have condoned violence of any sort whether it be by the State sponsored hoodlums, the Military forces or by youngsters of whichever community. At most we have stated that the violence of the youth among the minorities as well as the down trodden among the Sinhalese, have been direct results of the violence of the State and its handmaids, its discriminations and diabolical deportment. Identifying the cause of a reaction is not the same as espousing such reactionary behaviour.
It is useful to bear in mind the causes for our recent unfortunate history. The members of the majority community must not forget the pogroms and riots of the past against the minorities directly referable to State sponsorship. They should not forget the loss of nearly a lakh of books, including rare manuscripts that were offered as oblations to the Fire God in one night, with a senior Cabinet Minister staying a stone’s throw away from the Jaffna Library, at that time said to be the best Library in the Eastern Hemisphere. Let them not forget or ignore the hardships Muslims are today put into, thanks to the lethargy and indifference of the Police Force and powers that be who could have prevented such hardships if they so desired.
Before dealing with “Whither Sri Lankan Tamils” let me start with “Whence Sri Lankan Tamils”.
We Sri Lankan Tamils, it must be noted, were never a minority. We were made a minority. It is not essential to go into the question of whether Tamils were here a thousand years ago, two thousand years ago or were the original inhabitants. The recent revisionist historians should note that, as recently as ninety years ago, the then Sinhalese leaders Sir James Peiris and E.J.Samarawickreme having promised Sir Ponnambalam Arunachalam, that they would support the demand for a Tamil Seat for the City of Colombo, repudiated their pledge after winning the election.
They directed the Sinhalese Electorates created under the 1921 Constitution, drafted almost entirely by Sir P. Arunachalam, to nominate only Sinhalese candidates for election. The ground on which they objected to the provision of any safeguards for the Tamils, was that (I quote)
“the Tamils like the Sinhalese and unlike any other people of the Island were in themselves a majority community and as such had no reason to be classed with the minorities nor to stand in need of any safeguards”.
 This gives credence to the fact that
“the Sri Lankan Tamils far from being a minority have from remote ages been and continued to be a full blooded majority in their ancient homelands where their own kings and potentates had held unquestioned sway”.
Mr.M.Vythilingam, former Principal of Hindu College, Chavakachcheri states in his Book entitled “The Life of Sir Ponnambalam Ramanathan” at page 534 of Volume II published in 1977 as follows –
“ It was when the evil genius of a foreign conqueror subdued the whole Island with its separate and sovereign people , pulled down age-old national frontiers and for no other reason than his own ‘supervisory convenience’ made the Island a single political and administrative unit, that the Tamils became a minority in the conglomerate mass of the Island’s population”.
The Tamils of the North under the leadership of Hon’Sabapathy were reluctant to accept Territorial representation under the British, preferring the Community based representation, for fear that in a unified Ceylon due to the excess of Sinhalese held Territories, the latter would outnumber others and Laws detrimental to the minorities would be passed. It was Sir P.Arunachalam who spoke to Hon’ Sabapathy and convinced him that Territorial Representation would not be detrimental to the Tamils since the Sinhalese leaders had solemnly promised him a Seat for the Tamils in Colombo to prove their goodwill and genuineness towards the creation of a truly National State of Ceylon. But once the Sinhalese leaders got the consent of the Tamil leaders for the passing of Territorial Representation vis-à-vis the 1921 Constitution, they went back on their words.
This trait of the Political Leaders has been visible right throughout the last ninety years. The non-implementation of the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution, whether beneficial or not as far as the Tamils are concerned, is hardly surprising when it is viewed in the context of the abrogation of the Bandaranaike-Chelvanayagam Pact and the abrogation of the Dudley Senanayake- Chelvanayagam Pact. Unfortunately the political leaders of the majority community have declined to forego the advantage they obtained by the passing of the 1921 Constitution which gave them the whip hand against the minorities. In recent times having got the help of various countries, mainly India, to overcome the insurgency of the Tamil Youth, promising to solve minority problems in return, the slogan is that minorities must not ask for too much! The Muslims are the latest group of minorities taught that lesson.
So from our recent past history we perceive an important issue. The Sinhalese political leaders, having admitted the individuality of the Tamil speaking areas with their distinct culture, language, religions and defined areas of habitation, are now refuting all that since it had been possible for them to use their majority in Parliament to intrude into such areas, colonise them and in recent times to dominate all aspects of civil life of the local inhabitants through their armed battalions. This trait has been prevalent in the majority community political leaders from whichever party they come from. It is a trait in their leadership to speak with forked tongues. I am puzzled by this fact, given that the Sinhalese with whom I have lived all my life, having been born, bred and educated in Colombo, are not given to this kind of duplicity.
But the reality of the situation today when we are examining the question “Whither Sri Lankan Tamils” is that lands traditionally owned or occupied by Tamil speaking people are being forcibly inhabited by outsiders. Many temples, churches and mosques at which local inhabitants worshipped for long periods of time have been destroyed or are in danger of being destroyed and new places of worship whose votaries are not locals but armed military men and their cohorts have been established with the might of the State.
Cultural degradation and social degeneration are being surreptitiously engineered. History is being distorted to find the necessary excuses to embark upon such pre-planned adventures. New antique nomenclatures have been found for recent constructions in the North and East. Demography is consciously and continually being intermeddled with. The fundamental differences that existed between two Nations for centuries, which were appreciated and adjusted upon by and among such National Groups until recent times, are now being consciously erased and effaced to make way for a single Nation in the image of the Sinhala majority.
In a Memorandum Mr.S.J.V.Chelvanayagam submitted on behalf of the Tamils to all the Delegates attending the 20th Commonwealth Conference in Sri Lanka in 1974, he referred to this tendency in the following words which appear very relevant and topical in relation to the circumstances today too, when we are again going to host another Commonwealth Conference soon in our Country nearly forty years later. He said-
“The Sinhalese leaders have one objective of converting the bi-national, bi- lingual, multi religious state of Ceylon into a uni-national state with one Nation –the Sinhalese, a uni-lingual state with Sinhala only and with one religion Buddhism – involving genocide against the Tamils. This is substantiated by the following statement to the Press by a Cabinet Minister of the present Government and reported in the Ceylon Daily News of 27th August 1974- “In fact one of the things happening now is that many Indian Tamils who were earlier isolated are now learning Sinhala and even adopting our names and religion. This is part of the social assimilation”.
May be nowadays Ministers are more discreet and do not openly say so. But the pernicious attempts are continuing.
The information gleaned from several reputed news sources is that 16 out of 19 Divisions of the Sri Lankan Army are stationed at present in the Northern Province. The ratio of soldiers to civilians in Vavunia is said to be 1 is to 3.Further, I am informed that Sri Lankan Military owns a Ferry Service, a 180 acre Farm, owns several Hotels and Resorts and also innumerable Restaurants and Cafes. They are in charge of Whale Watching Trips undertaken by Tourists, they run two Airlines, they manage three Cricket Stadiums, one Golf Course among many other undertakings, which local Civilians should be involved in.
It is possible that the powers that be could deny all this as they have been denying every crime committed by their armed forces or for that matter even a single civilian casualty in International Fora. Recently a Member of Parliament from the North was taken to the Fourth Floor to question him as to how he got similar such information. What cannot be denied are that a Military Man, who is not from the North, is the Governor of the Northern Province, that there is Military presence everywhere in the Northern Province even after four years almost have passed since the end of the War, and that there has been no election to the Northern Provincial Council even though promises were made that it would be held.
It appears that the powers that be are reluctant to allow a democratically elected local administration to function lest the tremendous powers wielded by the Central Government presently, might get affected. It is possible that a democratically elected Provincial Council might want the recall of the Military Man from the Office of Governor and the immediate garrisoning of Troops who are interfering with the day to day life of the people of the Northern Province. Whatever the powers available to the Provincial Council under the Thirteenth Amendment might be, such a situation will not be conducive towards the Centre’s Subjugation Project.
What prevents the powers that be from granting the legitimate political and civil rights of the traditional inhabitants of the Northern Province? I have spoken to well meaning Sinhalese to find out their point of view. They say a Sinhala majority Government fears that if you grant the Tamils their legitimate rights they would make that as a springboard for separation. The idea is to keep the Tamils well under control, commit even crimes against humanity, but nip any attempt to organise themselves into a political force.
The idea is to assimilate them with the Sinhalese by colonising their areas with Sinhalese whether Civilian or Military, convert them to Buddhism by constructing Buddhist places of worship with the help of the armed might of the Military, make them learn Sinhalese and Buddhism, lure them and condition them to look upon the Sinhalese as their saviours, employ outsiders in any economic undertakings in the North and East, create dissensions among their political leaders and by many other means. The construction of carpeted roads to the North and East is said to be an auxiliary measure undertaken to help achieve such diabolical results.
In other words the very modus operandi adopted is what the International Covenants say should not be undertaken by States. If undertaken such activities would give the affected community the moral right to secede.
Allen Buchanan in his book “Secession –The Morality of Political Divorce” (1991) at page 154 states thus-
“ Thus to say that under certain conditions a Group’s need to protect itself from unjust threats to the existence of its members or to escape the continued perpetration of injustices against it by the State can generate a valid claim or right to territory on the part of the Group, is simply to say that circumstances have come into existence which supply adequate moral grounds for according the Group this protected freedom to control the territory. In other words, even if it were the case until now that the Group did not have a right to the territory, a sound moral case can now be made for concluding that it is permissible for the Group to exercise control over the territory and that others have a very weighty obligation to respect its efforts to do so.”
Thus the type of activity which the State is embarking upon seems to be the very basis for a Group of people to clamour for secession and an antithesis to reconciliation and peace. This is a vicious circle, which the State does not seem to be taking into consideration, may be due to the political ambitions of individual politicians. It is therefore in the best interests of the State to grant civil and political rights in conformity with domestic and International Law relating to every Group of persons living in this Island.
The very repression adopted to prevent a clamour for separation, might give rise to the International Community becoming convinced that separation is the only solution to the Group affected. The ground situation could convince them that external self determination is to be preferred to internal self determination in the light of what they observe.
While educating the powers that be of the dangers that lie on the path they are treading it is our duty to re-examine the manner in which we should deal with the situation that has arisen.
There are those of us who believe that if you gain the confidence of the Sinhalese leaders, if you could convince them that the Tamils would not want to separate, then they would grant their legitimate rights. Is that correct? There was a time when many of the Muslim leaders from the East, including my friends M.H.M.Ashraf and Mashoor Mowlana, cut their teeth on the Federal Party platforms under the tutelage of Thanthai Chelva.
But when they found that the Bandaranaike – Chelvanayagam Pact was abrogated and even the Dudley Senanayake –Chelvanayagam Pact was thrown to the winds they became convinced that discretion was the better part of valour. They did everything to please the Sinhalese leaders. They more or less distanced themselves from the Tamils. There was considerable annoyance consequently among the Tamil youngsters due to this. But did such activities help our Muslim brethren in the long run? What they are undergoing today is only too well known. The wrath of rogue elements among the Buddhist Clergy which forced the abrogation of the Bandaranaike -Chelvanayagam Pact has now turned on the Muslims.
Thus it would be seen that ultimately it depends on how the members of the majority community view each community in relation to their day to day activities. Soon after Independence they felt the Tamils had more than their share of Government Jobs, were filling the higher educational institutions and that they were buying up lands in the South and prospering at their expense.
So the first step taken mainly against the Sri Lankan Tamils was to introduce the Sinhala Only Act. The introduction of Sinhala as sole State language had its adverse effect on the continuance of Tamils in Public Service. There was exodus of those in service and intake of Tamils into Public Service became lesser and lesser not to mention the initially direct and subsequently disguised restrictions on Tamils entering Univeristy.
Then as follow- through there were pogroms and riots starting from 1958 and culminating in the 1983 riots. The result was that the houses and lands of Tamils in the South were either destroyed or taken over by force by locals or abandoned or sold off for a pittance by the Tamils. There was a time when around half the paddy lands in Tissamaharama in the South were owned by Tamils. My father at that time was a Government Public Officer working in Tangalle.
After the riots and pogroms the Tamils left those areas in large numbers. Kathirgamam was a place of Hindu worship when I was a young boy where persons of other religions too came. Now most Hindus are occasional visitors to Katharagama.
Now the feeling of the members of the more vocal sections of the majority community is that the Muslims are flourishing. Hence the attack on the Muslim community. Successive Sinhalese political leaders have conveniently turned the frustrations of the Sinhala people towards successful communities, in order to deflect those frustrations targeting their mismanagement and corruption.
So you will see that the tactic of gaining the confidence of the majority community has not worked. Ultimately it is the viewpoint of the majority community at a given period of time which would prevail. When that happens there is nothing in Law to protect us. Even the Judiciary consisting of members of the majority community in large numbers sometimes allows extraneous considerations to colour its judgments.
Then there are Tamils who ask the question why not we consent to attend the Parliamentary Select Committee. I am not a member nor spokesman for the TNA in Parliament. But I fully endorse their view and share their apprehension to joining the bandwagon in a Parliamentary Select Committee. So many Committees of assorted names have burned the midnight oil to bring forth many useful suggestions to solve the Tamil Problem. None of them have been accepted nor acted upon.
All that the TNA asks if I understood them correct, is that there must be working documents to start with which take into account what had been discussed hitherto. Any discussion must proceed from the point of progress already reached. I believe the Government is reluctant to fix on any working documents in order to deliberately deny the progress already made and to start everything right from the beginning. For example after driving away the locals from certain areas in the North and East and bringing in outsiders and planting them there, the Government in a fresh round of deliberations could formulate new statistics and put forward new proposals erasing off boundaries earlier reached.
It would also give the more articulate minority Sinhala parties who are dear to the current leadership an opportunity to torpedo the talks and tarry progress. But let me state this. With its two third majority in Parliament the present Government is in a powerful position to solve the problems of the Tamils legally and legitimately if only it has the will and willingness to do so. Mr.J.R.Jayewardene had that opportunity. But he preferred to aid and abet the 1983 Riots and extend the life of Parliament.
This Government preferred to abolish term limits on the Presidency and do away with independent public institutions. If only half the propaganda that is expended in sustaining a Dynastic Project is expended on educating the Sinhalese, popular support for devolution would be easily forthcoming.
There are also those among Sri Lankan Tamils who advocate the close liaison with the Diaspora Tamils to embarrass the Sinhala majority Governments in Sri Lanka. They feel they must prepare for another war. If King Walagambahu could have fought eight times to get back his kingdom they feel why not again. It was India which stood in the way of the Tamil Youth making any progress in the war and therefore if the widow of Rajiv Gandhi leaves politics or forced to leave politics, India would not be so virulent they feel. They are emboldened by the feelings presently prevailing in Tamil Nadu in South India. They hope and pray that the next Government in India would not be Congress led.
It must be understood by these people that embarrassing the Government of a Country and taking up arms against it only aggravate feelings. The death, damage and destruction caused by feelings of animosity in the recent past have been colossal. If we understand the fear, distrust and consequent hatred, feelings of insecurity and complex feelings of inferiority complex and motives of selfishness and self aggrandizement that drive the leaderships among States to act in the most brutal manner towards their brethren in the same Country, we would pity them rather than hate them.
Mahatma Gandhi and Thanthai Chelva in their days had understood this background. Hence they have in effect said –
Do not hate the enemy. But do not cow down to the wrongs perpetrated by them. Even at the expense of your pain and predicament try to educate the wrongdoers of the right course of action so that they will change their views.
It must be remembered that violence gives opportunity to the State to destroy the lives and properties of those seeking justice. They are able to justify their actions by referring to such violence on the part of those clamouring for justice. Therefore a path of Ahimsa and Satyagraha was recommended by them.
Hence it appears the Sri Lankan Tamils have reached a critical stage in their life where they need to assess the present situation properly. The plus point we have is the fact that International Community appears to have realised what had been taking place and more particularly what is taking place in Sri Lanka.
They have realized the diabolical double-tongued display of those who are at the helm of affairs in this Country. But merely by Internationalising our predicament we could not possibly bring favourable results. Our agitations for internal self determination must proceed simultaneously.
But for that, our minus point is that the Tamil speaking people in Sri Lanka are disunited. We still continue to think selfishly and are bent on continuing to tread the beaten path. The path of parochialism; the path of exclusivism; the path of separatism; the path of chauvinism; has been our way.
It is time to remember that our spirit of exclusivism which relegated an inferior and insulting position to a section of our people, in its Karmic boomerang gave power and weight to individuals hailing from various stratas of our society to whip us with, in recent times. What has taken place has forced more and more of our people to leave our shores and seek solace elsewhere. The schism created in our society and its adverse effects on account of two charismatic political leaders of the past G.G. and Thanthai Chelva, even several years after their demise,had been humourous if not disgraceful.
We Tamils must realize that sooner we achieve a reconciliation of our diverse views the better it is for us. Let us disagree by all means but let us not allow those disagreements to spoil our unity. This applies to the unity we maintained with the Muslims during Thanthai Chelva’s time which needs to be renewed. We need them and they need us.
We must accept the fact that injustice was caused to the Muslims when they were forcibly sent out of their places of residence in the North. We need to stand with the Muslims now when they are being shabbily treated by the powers that be. I am glad the leader of the TNA spoke up for the suffering Muslims recently.
What prevents unity is self oriented thinking, and the machinations of the scheming. Our people must stand firm against not only their personal biases but also the inevitable and insidious means by which divisions would be brought upon them – they will appeal to your religion, region, caste and tempt you with bribes. But we should stand firm.
Can anyone deny the fact that it is the desire to retain their individual importance as a Party and thereby themselves that has presently given rise to differences of opinion among the constituent Parties of the TNA?
While talking of Tamil rights and Tamil aspirations, retaining personal or Party benefits is what drives us. But we could learn from our past. Did the Militants who had carefully built and nurtured monuments for their dead brethren only a few years ago ever dream what might happen to them and to the monuments in a few years’ time?
We must realise we reap what we sow. And this is a universal principle articulated in the Holy Bible. Therefore it is my view that we must purify our means and have pure thoughts about our ends too. Tainted means would usher in tainted ends. Though the youngsters tried violence as a means for their ends it was put down by violence – may be greater violence!
Our future lies in the salvaging of what is left after the massive destruction that overtook us, and protecting them for the future. What has gone is gone. But we have got to face up to the marginalisation that is rapidly taking place -the hurried social assimilation that is being foisted on us. We have to look at the situation in all its dimensions and perspectives and ask ourselves the question what should be our individual and collective contribution thereto.
All of us, individuals or Political Parties, have a part to play. We have got to formulate a collective approach. We have to think pragmatically and strategically as to the multi dimensional approach needed. We should focus on the most vulnerable among us – those who have no homes, those who have no access to their properties and those without livelihoods.
Legal challenges, despite the slim chance of success in the current environment, to illegal State ventures should be mounted. It is vital that the education of the Tamil children shackled by the so-called standardisation and brutalised by the war, are restored to its former glory. Justice for those who lost all during the war and accountability for those who caused it must be pursued.
As it is clear that the State will not do anything to curb the repression and violence unleashed on all those who show dissent, these issues must be Internationalised. We should endeavour to get members of our Diaspora to contribute to the development, ensuring of course that their respective governments guarantee their security when they visit here.
The revisionist history project must be countered –to do this archaeological finds must be preserved, newer methods such as DNA evidence used, careful record of current modifications maintained and formal Research Centres established. It is imperative that we engage with the Sinhalese people and educate them about our shared history and make them aware of the injustices meted out to the Tamils.
May be the publishing of English and Sinhala language daily Newspapers in the North might be an option to be pursued. But our manner of approach must be with love and understanding. We need not tread the path of combative hostility. We should make them realise that we love the red fertile sands of the North as much as they love the verdant green of the West, that we love the white sands of the East as much as they love the golden sands of the South and that the Tamil Speaking people of this country are co-owners of this land, not tenants.
Even in an atmosphere of hopelessness what could give us courage is that we are to rearrange and reassert our means in a non violent manner. We shall hold no enmity towards those who are attempting to destroy an ancient civilization and its universally acclaimed Classical Language, due to their ignorance and inability to understand life and its ways. Let us follow a path of non-violence, but firmly convinced that our struggle for emancipation is a just cause.
We owe it to the millions of our forefathers who lived in the Northern and Eastern provinces for centuries with their own culture, religions and language, indeed even before the Sinhala language saw the light of day in the sixth century after Christ, that we continue their way of life devoid of the negative effects that have been introduced among us in recent times but taking confidence in the credo set forth in the Purananooru, a product of the Sangam Literature period, two thousand years ago –Yaathum Oore;Yaawarum kelir;Theethum nandrum pirarthara Vaara- which meant All villages are ours; All of humanity our brethren; What happens to us is the consequence of our own actions!
Thank You.
C.V. Wigneswaran
*S.J.V.Chelvanayagam memorial lecture delivered on April 26, 2013 at New Kathiresan Hall, Colombo 4 to mark the 36th death anniversary of S.J.V.Chelvanayagam, Q.C