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, November 2, 2014

Netanyahu's Not Chickenshit, the White 


The administration is a coward for not saying what it really thinks about the special relationship with Israel.

I ve been reluctant to say much about this week's tempest in a teapot -- i.e., the U.S.-Israeli flap over "chickenshit-gate" -- because the flap itself is of little strategic importance.
Netanyahu's Not Chickenshit, The White House Is by Thavam

The Berlin Wall fell 25 years ago, but Germany is still divided

A woman and a man walk along the painted East Side Gallery, a former part of the Berlin Wall, and are reflected in a rain puddle in Berlin, Germany, 08 July 2014. The weather forecast predicts more rain for the following days. EPA/PAUL ZINKEN
 October 31
Washington PostIt can be hard for visitors to Berlin to imagine where the Berlin Wall once separated Germany's communist East from the U.S.-friendly West. Today, commuters run to catch a metro where trains stood for nearly 30 years. Curried sausages are sold and illegal (but popular) parties are celebrated in empty warehouses just feet from where East Germans were shot by their own countrymen as they tried to cross the border to the west.
View Photo Gallery —Germany will soon celebrate the 25th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall.
Berlin demonstrates how it will illuminate the former course of the Berlin Wall from Nov. 7-9 to mark 25 years since it was toppled. (bauderfilm/ Kulturprojekte Berlin GmbH /WHITEvoid 2014)

Climate change 'irreversible' if fossil fuels stay dominant

Channel 4 News
SUNDAY 02 NOVEMBER 2014
Climate change 'irreversible' if fossil fuels stay dominantThe world is at risk of soaring temperatures by the year 2100 unless gas and coal reserves are left in the ground, warns an international report on climate change.
Climate Change 'Irreversible' if Fossil Fuels Stay Dominant by Thavam

In North Korea, fear takes hold over new foreign threat: Ebola

World’s toughest measures against the disease have been imposed in a country far from west Africa, and with few tourists
North Korea fights Ebola
Medical staff dressed in protective suits wait by an ambulance, at the Sunan International Airport, in Pyongyang, North Korea. Photograph: Wong Maye-E/AP
 in Pyongyang-Sunday 2 November 2014
The Guardian homeYoung children sit on the laps of medical staff, watching intently as a briefing describes the dangers of Ebola. Foreigners and citizens arriving at the capital’s airport are held in quarantine for weeks. Tourists are banned outright.
The world’s most draconian measures against the disease have been imposed not in the worst-affected west African countries, nor their neighbours, but in North Korea, thousands of miles from the outbreak.
They are increasing the isolation of a country already known for its tight controls on contact with outsiders, and risk damaging its fragile economy.
The Guardian was among the small number of foreigners allowed to fly in after the ban on tour groups but before the imposition of quarantine on all those entering from abroad. The fear is tangible; a factory and a research centre which journalists were due to visit cancelled the invitations, citing Ebola concerns.
“It’s Ebola hysteria,” said one foreigner in the country. “People are really scared.”
Each night, the country’s television news broadcasts a lengthy section on the disease, filling the screen with images of grieving families, ailing patients and medical workers in protective gear – as well as some coverage of its own measures, including footage of the session at the children’s hospital.
On Friday the state news agency KCNA announced in a one-sentence news report: “A brisk hygienic information service goes on in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea to prevent the outbreak of Ebola.”
But the news bulletins appear to have alarmed rather than reassured many North Koreans.
“People are asking foreigners for information; they don’t understand Ebola and don’t really know what it is,” said a westerner in the capital.
At Pyongyang’s airport, groups of uniformed soldiers toiled at “Korea speed” – a zealous pace – to complete the gleaming new building that will soon replace the small, dingy terminal. It is evidence of the country’s recent push to attract more international visitors, like the kitschily accomplished aquatic performances at the capital’s dolphinarium, and the sizeable Mirim Riding Club, where tourists can trot around a sawdust-strewn arena with a trainer for $40 (£25). Both are lauded as projects for the people, but promoted to foreigners.
Those plans to expand tourism – earning precious foreign currency – are now on hold indefinitely. The Yanggakdo Hotel, one of the few hotels in Pyongyang where foreigners may stay, was largely deserted, though some Chinese business travellers and a handful of westerners remained. Chinese croupiers in its casino said they had seen few guests.
Some believe the stringent Ebola measures reflect the state’s enduring suspicion towards the outside world, even as it tries to benefit from contact. Others think the real causes are more prosaic, citing the poor state of the country’s health system and the adoption of similar measures when the respiratory disease Sars hit the region in 2003.
“I understand the logic of what they are doing, even if it seems extreme. They don’t think they can control any outbreaks of anything like that and with Sars and avian flu they developed what for them are now standard operating procedures,” said Hazel Smith, an expert on North Korea at the University of Central Lancashire.
“If there was someone with Ebola coming in, it wouldn’t be easy to avoid contagion: they have problems with electricity, running water and disinfectants.
“Sars was close and they were one of the few countries in east Asia that avoided it. They think this approach has proved successful in the past; the question of whether [Ebola] is relevant to them is another matter.”
She noted that there had been intense debates in other countries over what precautions were appropriate. Australia and Canada have introduced visa bans on people from Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, the countries worst affected by Ebola. Other countries have introduced screening for travellers arriving from those places. But none has taken measures even approaching those in North Korea.
The country announced it was banning all tour groups on 23 October. It also began refusing entry to citizens of countries that had had Ebola cases: a Beijing-based Spanish cameraman was told he could not make a scheduled trip.
Two individuals from African countries – both far from the outbreak zone – were ordered into quarantine after arrival in Pyongyang, though one has since been allowed to leave.
An unknown number of North Korean citizens who have returned from abroad have also been quarantined, although it is not clear if the measure applies to all countries or specific ones. North Korea has diplomatic ties with Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone.
Kim Yong Nam, the head of the country’s parliament, has been touring Africa, visiting Sudan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Uganda and Ethiopia with other senior officials including the minister of public health.
On Thursday the country tightened measures further, announcing that all foreigners entering the country would have to undergo a three-week quarantine period.
Foreign visitors who entered in the days before the quarantine announcement were told that daily temperature checks were compulsory.
The DailyNK website, which relies on sources inside the country, has also reported internal travel restrictions preventing many North Koreans from visiting the capital and requiring others to obtain a health certificate before making the journey.
“It’s very much a trade-dependent economy, and especially trade with China now is absolutely crucial for the daily life of citizens at every level of society,” warned Andray Abrahamian, executive director of Choson Exchange, a non-profit organisation helping North Koreans to help develop their understanding of business and economics. “To have that cut off for even a few weeks would be debilitating.”
However, he added that exemptions were likely almost immediately, especially for Chinese citizens with multiple entry visas. “The people who do have contacts with Chinese businesspeople can get the message flowing upwards that this is seriously damaging to the economy.”
Smith said: “North Korea is completely different from 10 years ago. There are powerful push factors that will ensure important economic exchanges will continue. The last thing they want is to stop major commercial interchange. All the elite have big commercial interests.”
When it came to smaller-scale trade, officials no longer had full enforcement capacity in Chinese border areas, she added: “There will be bribes and people slipping backhanders to get people in.”
Associated Press said on Friday that Chinese businesspeople on the border had said they were unaffected and China’s state news agency, Xinhua, reported that no Chinese nationals had been quarantined.
Already, officials have said that diplomats and the staff of international organisations – who have to make regular trips to Beijing for cash and other supplies because of sanctions – can serve their quarantine at home rather than at designated quarantine hotels. That is a relaxation of the Sars rules.
Those in the tourism industry say thousands of westerners and perhaps a few hundred thousand Chinese visit North Korea each year, as well as many Malaysians and Singaporeans. Summer is the peak time for visitors, but several upcoming tours have been hit.
“The best guess anyone has is that this will last for the rest of this year – and after that we will see,” said Simon Cockerell, general manager of Koryo Tours, which has already cancelled one trip.
“If Ebola subsides, they can open up the country and say, ‘We got it right’,” said Gareth Johnson, managing director of the firm Young Pioneers, which had several tours booked this winter. “The problem is that if it gets any worse, or there’s an Ebola case in China, they will feel they cannot open up again.”

How to remove pimples naturally at home

Treat-Pimples-Under-The-Skin
Pimples are the general skin problem faced by everyone. These pimples are caused by bacterial attack on the skin and block of the skin holes. These pimples take the beauty from us. These pimples are the barriers for the natural beauty. The kill the appearance .If they are present in large number and that condition is miserable and afraid to think about the situation. Pimples are produced due to oil productivity from the skin is stopped. Oily faces have the chances to get the pimples more. There are many pimple treatment products are available in the market. But if they are not suited for the skin you are victim of skin allergies. So better to use the natural home remedies to treat the pimples. Below are the some of the natural tips to treat the pimples

Ice Cubes

Ice cubes are the widely used to treat the skin pimples. Take the ice cube and apply on the pimple are. It will decrease the redness and swelling .It makes the blood circulation easier and soothes the skin. Repeatedly do to for a week to get the results.

Peppermint

Peppermint contains the anti bacterial and anti fungal properties which effectively works on the pimples. Peppermint leaves contains the antioxidants also they will clears the skin good and bacteria free. Apply the meshed peppermint leaves on the pimples area. Leave it for hour and wash after hour. Do it continuously for 10days to get the results.

Lemon Juice

Apply the lemon juice on the pimple area.  Lemon contains the vitamin C clear the skin effectively. Dip the cotton ball on the lemon juice and apply on the affected area. Better to do it at night time. Wash your face at early morning .If your skin is not sensitive, adds cinnamon powder with the lemon juice and applies on the affected are gives the much better results than the lemon juice.

Honey

Honey is the best useful home ingredient for the pimples. Apply the honey on the pimple area. Leave it for 1 hour and wash with lukewarm water. For better result apply it for whole month .Honey contains the antioxidants clear the dead cells in the skin.

Cucumber

Cucumber also the best remedy for the pimples. Cucumber juice clears the blocked skin pores and bacteria free. Take the cucumber juice and apply on the pimple skin. This juice contains the vitamin A, Vitamin C helps in treating the pimples.

Toothpaste

Toothpaste is also works on the pimples. Apply the tooth paste on the pimple area and wash with water. Apply the paste in the night time. Wash it on the early morning. 

Garlic

Onion family contains the antifungal antioxidant property. Garlic will helps to kill the bacteria in the pimple area. Apply the garlic paste on the pimple and wash it after 1 hour.

Papaya

Papaya contains the antioxidants and vitamin A. Take the fresh papaya and cut it into pieces. Make the pieces crush and take the juice from them. Apply this juice on the pimples you can get the results better within week.

Saturday, November 1, 2014

What Happened To Those 6000 Persons Out Of 18,657 Who Had Surrendered?



| by L.Annadoure
( November 1, 2014, Chennai, Sri Lanka Guardian) In or about June 2014 the Sri Lankan Army has announced that all those who have been either captured by the Army or surrendered before it at the brink of the war would be released 100% from its custody. The Sri Lankan Government initially has in its official report said that the Army had captured 18,657 people as prisoners of war and the said figure has been later reduced to 12,000 persons only for some reasons known to it and therefore the parents of the prisoners of war who have entrusted their sons and daughters on the assurance of their earlier safe return, have been taken aback and they have come to realize that the Government has failed to keep its promise and as a result the parents of the prisoners of war are in utter despair and consternation and await in the fond hope that their sons and daughters would return home safely and we also come across the aggrieved families having laid complaint before the Presidential Commission To Investigate Into Complaint Regarding Missing Persons to find out and secure their sons and daughters. The Natham.com Tamil web site has published a picture on 6.6.2014 which is inserted below and the said picture has purportedly been captured in a mobile phone. We find the 6 persons and a minor boy who are the ones among 22 persons found in the other pictures. 

Cosmetic Fixes: Sri Lanka’s Poor Progress on Human Rights
Sri Lanka’s twenty-six-year civil war was a brutal conflict that pitted the Sri Lankan government forces against the Tamil Tigers, a group that fought for a separate state in the country’s northern and eastern provinces. Though the government defeated the Tamil Tigers in May 2009, Sri Lanka’s post-war situation is headed in the wrong direction. Since that time, the international community’s engagement with the island nation has been variegated. Unfortunately, much of the criticism Sri Lanka has received about ‘accountability’ for alleged atrocities committed during the civil war and an end to ongoing human rights abuses on the island has not made the situation any better.
Cosmetic Fixes Sri Lanka’s Poor Progress on Human Rights by Thavam

Police hunt for TNA Vavuniya organiser, Governor takes up Ananthi’s conduct with NPC


Signatures on blank UN war crimes complaint forms


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By Shamindra Ferdinando-

The government investigating an alleged Tamil National Alliance (TNA) plot to provide unsubstantiated information to UN war crimes investigators wants to question Vavuniya-based senior TNA official Alva Pulle Vijendrakumar alias Sun Master

Authoritative sources told The Island yesterday that the TNA official had hurriedly left his Vavuniya residence and sought refuge presumably in Colombo or its suburbs after his name transpired in the ongoing probe. Sources said that Vijendrakumar had to be questioned to verify the alleged involvement of two politicians, one of them a member of Parliament. Sources said the politicians were responsible for what they called a vilification campaign against Sri Lanka.

A senior investigator said: "The police searched Vijendrakumar’s residence consequent to the recovery of 25 blank UN war crimes complaint forms from Sinnathamby Krishnarasa, a civilian who had received LTTE training. We took Krishnarasa into custody on October 25 at Mulankavil in the Vanni. Under interrogation, the suspect claimed that he received the blank forms from Vijendrakumar on the afternoon of Oct 22 in Vavuniya."

Krishnarasa quoted Vijendrakumar as having instructed him that he should only collect signatures on UN war crimes complaint forms of those who had suffered during the war. Responding to a query, the official said that of the 25 blank forms, six had signatures though none of them had been filled. "Obviously they were to be completed at the TNA office in Vavuniya on the instructions of its MPs," the official said.

He said that Vijendrakumar had contacted Krisnarasa over his hand phone while the latter was being questioned by security authorities.

The Tamil National People’s Front (TNPF) had been involved in the project, another official alleged. According to him, the TNA’s Northern Provincial Council member, Ananthy Sasitharan, too, played a pivotal role in the operation by requesting the Geneva-based Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) to give more time for them to collect information. Sasitharan’s husband was hardcore LTTE cadre, Elilan.

Meanwhile, Northern Governor retired Maj. Gen. G. A Chandrasiri has sought a clarification from Province Chairman C.V. K. Sivagnanam as to whether Sasitharan had moved OHCHR with the approval of the NPC.

The official said that the UN’s refusal to reveal the identities of those who provided information to Darusman panel until 2031 should be examined in the wake of UN using TNA to collect signatures on blank forms.

MORE TEETH 

Missing Persons Commission needs

 By Sulochana Ramiah Mohan-November 1, 2014

The United Nations Human Rights Committee, in its fifth periodic report on Sri Lanka, adopted that the State should ensure the rights of families to know the location or status of disappeared persons, by ensuring that the Presidential Commission to Investigate Complaints regarding Missing Persons and other relevant bodies are provided with adequate legal powers as well as human, technical and financial resources to operate in an independent, timely and effective manner, that ensures adequate witness protection.

The Committee released its concluding observation at the 3,126th meeting (CCPR/C/SR3126), held on the 27 October 2014.
The Committee report, under the title ‘Enforced disappearances’, stated that the State party has established a Presidential Commission to Investigate Complaints regarding Missing Persons, the Committee is concerned at the limited territorial scope of its mandate and the slow rate at which such cases have been investigated and prosecuted.     

The HR Committee further urged the government to “expeditiously investigate, prosecute and punish perpetrators of enforced disappearance, and establish the whereabouts of missing persons, in a transparent and impartial manner.”

The Committee urges the State party to take all measures necessary to vigorously investigate all allegations of unlawful use of force and violations of the right to life, promptly, transparently and impartially, with intent to bring those responsible to justice by prosecuting and punishing, and provide adequate remedies to victims and their relatives.

“It should redouble its efforts to implement the recommendations of the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) pertaining to the need to investigate allegations of serious violations of international law through independent investigative mechanisms. In particular, the State party should ‘Cooperate with the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights in investigating all allegations of serious human rights violations; and, in the context of the Muttur and Trincomalee cases, as well as other similar cases, consider allowing witness testimony by video-link from secure and secret locations in order to facilitate the investigations with due regard to the needs of witness protection,” it has observed.
Tamil students inspired to excel at UKTSU's Careers Network 2014
01 November 2014
Over 100 Tamil students and top professionals from several key industries came together for the UK Tamil Students Union's (UK TSU) careers event - Careers Network 2014 on October 30.

Part of UKTSU's Careers Development Scheme, the event which was launched last year, offers aspiring school students one to one mentorship for UCAS applications, careers talks at schools throughout London and one to one interview preparation.


Why Muslims might not vote for Mahinda -By Hilmy Ahamed


 
The only reason, the Muslims may not vote for President Rajapakshe, would be the Bodu Bala Sena and other Buddhist extremists who have unleashed so much violence and intimidation against the Muslim community during the last three years, starting with the destruction of a shrine in Anuradhapura to the pogrom of Aluthgama.  There are over 350 incidents against the Muslims that have been recorded by the Secretariat for Muslims
The Muslims have stood by the country throughout history, and more so during the ethnic war between the Tamil tigers and the government forces by being the buffer for the government forces against the ruthless tigers. For this, they paid a heavy price by being forcible evicted from the North with less than 24 hours notice. They were not allowed to take any of their valuables along. They are still languish in refugee camps in different parts of the country, labeled as old IDPs, they have limited access to any form of relief for resettlement in their former homes.
The Tamils, probably will not forgive the Muslims for standing by the government forces and betraying the Tamil speaking identity yet, the Muslims became the target of a hate campaign by Buddhist extremist led by the Bodu Bala Sena.  The rhetoric of the extremists seems to be, “we have finished off the Tamils, and now we need to finish off the Muslims”.
President Mahinda Rajapakshe, who was able to win unprecedented support from the Muslim community, especially during his second term in office, lost all of it and more because of  the hate campaign of BBS.  President Mahinda Rajapakshe probably lost most of the Tamil votes due to the war, but the loss of the Christian and Muslim votes were purely because of the Bodu Bala Sena, Sihala Ravaya, Ravana Balaya and other extremist Buddhists. It is indeed tragic that President goes in to an election where he probably is down by 30% of the votes, because of the anti minority campaign by BBS.
The President and the government may have seriously miscalculated the threat posed to them by these Buddhist extremists.  They probably assumed that the emergence of these radicals would be an insignificant nuisance,  but it has now alienated not just the Muslims and Christians, but a large number of the moderate Buddhists who believe in ethnic harmony and a peaceful Sri Lanka. Whatever gains the president may have accrued due to the Buddhist chauvinism, the loss of the block minority votes would in no way compensate.
What demands serious consideration is,  the rhetoric of these misinformed Buddhist monks who claim that the Muslims intermarry and breed like rabbits,  Halal complaint food is something that has been sacrificed to Allah, far too many mosques are being built, probably to accommodate the large conversions envisaged, Sri Lanka would become a Muslim country like Indonesia, Maldives etc., they are buying property through support from Arab nations and the Muslims are kingpins in the drug mafia . What crap?
I do not deny that there are Muslims involved in the drug trade, but they are insignificant minions who are mere couriers paid handsomely for a trip to the Golden triangle or crescent with almost guaranteed safe passage by the drug mafia and their protectors.  Once in a while, when a minion is arrested, the racist media would carry banner headlines – A Muslim was arrested with 100 grams of heroin. Have you ever seen a banner headline – A SINHALA BUDDHIST arrested for …..?
Who are the kingpins of the drug mafia, they are not certainly Muslims. Who controls enforcement? Are the IGP, the Chief of Customs, and the Chief of Narcotics control, Muslims? No, all of them are Sinhala Buddhists.
Another claim that they have is that Muslims are building far too many mosques. There are over 200,000 registered taverns and bars in the country. The figure would be three folds if you take all the illicit ones in to consideration. Will having 2000 mosques in the entire country pose a threat to the well being of the people?  Mosques are not bars, brothels or casinos. They are places where the  Muslim children learn their religion. They are similar to the Sunday schools, or the daham pasala.  Further, it is obligatory on Muslims to pray 5 times a day as a congregation to the best of their ability.  This cannot be done in private homes, hence the need for a mosque or prayer center wherever the Muslims live.
Conversation to Islam by the local population in a number of our neighboring countries was never by the sword. Either the leadership embraced Islam and the subjects followed or they believed in Islam because of the exemplary lifestyles of the Muslims of that era. There has been no record history of forced conversions by Muslims anywhere in our neighborhood.
It is time, our president dispelled these myths and start reigning in these extremists who are destroying the peace that we rightfully deserve as a nation. The president, at the end of the war in 2009 had the opportunity of embracing the Tamil population with a true reconciliation process, but failed. It is time that he doesn’t aggravate  the situation further by alienating the rest of the minorities from him.  He still has the chance to win the minority votes by reigning in the Sinhala Buddhist extremists and build a truly united Sri Lanka for all Sri Lankans. His commitment and immediate action will certainly swing the minority votes towards him and probably give him his third term.

“MR must rule for 300 years to send Muslims on Haj pilgrimage” - Gamini Viyangoda


gamini viyangoda 1President Mahinda Rajapaksa will have to rule the country for the next 300 years to fulfill the promises made by him to the people, veteran translator Gamini Viyangoda said.

Addressing a rally in Nugegoda against a third term as Executive President for Mahinda Rajapaksa, Viyangoda pointed out that some of the promises made by the President to the people in fact was demeaning to the intelligence of the general public.
Citing an example, he said the President has pledged to send on Haj all Muslims in the country who cannot afford to go on the pilgrimage.
Viyangaoda explained that there a approximately 2 million Muslims in the country out of which about 500,000 would have gone the Haj pilgrimage.
He noted that it costs around Rs. 500,000 for each person to make the Haj pilgrimage. The entire cost to send 1.5 Muslims on Haj would cost a whopping Rs. 175,000 million to the government.
“There is also a quota for the Haj pilgrimage. Sri Lanka last year received a quota of 3,800 visas for Muslims to go on Haj. Even if the quota is increased to 5,000 visas, President Mahinda Rajapaksa will have to be the President for the next 300 years to send the Muslims in the country on pilgrimage to the Middle East,” Viyangoda said.

Conclusions-
Sri Lankan Muslims at the cross 


 


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By Izeth Hussain-October 31, 2014
What is the explanation for the anti-Muslim campaign? I have argued in this series of articles that no cogent explanation can possibly be found in the bilateral issues that have been bedeviling Sinhalese-Muslim relations. Two of them, alleged Muslim extremism and alleged Muslim exponential population growth, are of recent vintage and supposedly constitute existential threats to the Sinhalese. I believe that I have shown satisfactorily enough that both of them are really non-problems. Some may demur on population growth because the official statistics are thoroughly confusing. I now believe that those statistics are erroneous and should be ignored. I would now focus my argument on just two facts. Youssef Courbage, a professional demographer, and Emmanuel Todd, a leading political scientist, have shown in the book I cited earlier that in accordance with the well-established facts of population dynamics the global Muslim population will stabilize at a certain point, and therefore Islam is not going to take over the whole globe. The second fact is that in Sri Lanka the average Muslim family has two to four children just like Sinhalese and Tamil families. Therefore the notion that Islam will become the predominant religion in Sri Lanka by 2050, or even later, is just too fanciful to be taken seriously.

In addition there are the issues of the call to prayer, cattle slaughter, and so on over which the Government can easily take corrective action, and further there are developments in the Islamic world abroad that can impact negatively on Sinhalese-Muslim relations. All such issues are really no more than irritants that can understandably lead to minor ructions and even serious rioting. But what we have on our hands now is a serious Muslim ethnic problem which is resonating internationally in Geneva, the West, and the Islamic world. At this point we must consider certain additional facts: the Muslims have up to now been an abjectly submissive minority, so abject that their political representatives have refused to speak up for their fellow Muslims on many vitally important issues; the Muslims have consistently sided with the Sinhalese against the Tamils ignoring all ethical norms; and the wider Islamic world has been immensely beneficial to Sri Lanka economically, militarily, and politically (at Geneva). There are therefore excellent reasons why the Sinhalese power elite should regard the Muslims – notwithstanding the irritants – as a model minority, and they did precisely that at one time. How on earth, then, has this utter monstrosity of a serious Muslim ethnic problem arisen in Sri Lanka?

Some would hold that the Muslim ethnic problem is just a hiccup that will pass away the more quickly if it is ignored. This notion accords nicely with the view that history is a realm in which the fortuitous and the contingent reign supreme, and that in the last analysis it all amounts to just one dam thing after another. So don’t delve deeply into it, don’t dwell on it, and it will go away. Another view would have it that the Muslim ethnic problem is the result of the sinister machinations of foreign devils who want to keep the Sri Lankans divided. Yet another view – probably widely current – is that President Rajapakse and his associates have conjured up the specter of a Muslim existential threat as that will boost his Dutugemunu image as the leader who is best equipped to deal with it. That will help win the next round of elections. My own view is that all those and similar views are either sincerely mistaken or are ways of evading the real underlying problem, which is the problem of Sinhalese racism, or more precisely the problem of racism among the Sinhalese power elite. The so-called Muslim ethnic problem should properly be regarded as an epiphenomenon, something of a secondary order which has issued from the primary underlying problem of the Sinhalese power elite racism.

I will substantiate my argument with some historical facts. The great historic divide in Sinhalese-Muslim relations took the form of the 1915 anti-Muslim riots. It set up a fear psychosis among the Muslims which endures to this day, and is particularly lively at present because of an expectation that 2015 might witness a commemorative holocaust against the Muslims. The next stage was Independence and the coming to power of D.S.Senanayake whom our Muslims saw as a thorough-going anti-Muslim racist – "communalist" in the parlance of that time. That impression arose as a consequence of a Muslim delegation meeting him to complain about Indian encroachments into the world of Muslim business. His response was that Sri Lanka had not won independence to enable the Muslims to make money. Fair enough, but would he have made that response if the Indian encroachments had been into the sphere of Sinhalese business interests and a Sinhalese delegation had complained about it? Surely not. I must clarify before proceeding further that there was no Muslim hatred towards DSS – there being little or no hatred in our politics in those days. It was a matter of regret, not hatred, because in spite of his racism the Muslims regarded him as essentially a decent person who wouldn’t want any great harm to befall the Muslims. I am making this clarification to emphasize something that should always be borne in mind: our Muslims are not given to demonizing the Sinhalese and therefore the possibility of sensible pragmatic accommodation on Sinhalese-Muslim issues is always there.

I will now mention just a few further details that point to Sinhalese anti-Muslim racism. From 1976 to around 2002 there were a series of anti-Muslim ructions, often of a minor order but sometimes extremely serious such as the Hulftsdorp riots of December 1993, on which I wrote a two-part article in the Lanka Guardian. The Muslims were always the victims – they never dared retaliate – suffering the consequences of being born into the wrong ethnic group. But the media resolutely refused to recognize any ethnic dimension in those riots, putting them all into the category of "fracas between thugs". As for our Governments, they resolutely refused to take the kind of punitive action that could have had a deterrent effect. I pointed out in my article on the Hulftsdorp riots that Lee Kwan-Yew would have done so, without too much scruple for the niceties of the law, and there never would have been any ethnic rioting in Singapore thereafter. The failure to take effective punitive action clearly points to anti-Muslim racism in the Sinhalese power elite. I must mention also the anti-Muslim diatribes of the late Ven.Soma Thera; the "Grease Yaka" exploits targeting Muslim females; and the kidnapping of wealthy Muslims which led to some Muslim businessmen fleeing the country temporarily.

The anti-Muslim campaign should therefore be seen in the perspective of anti-Muslim racism, particularly in the period after 1976. It is best understood in terms of a paradigm of racism, about which I will now set out what seem to me to be the essential points. In traditional societies there was little or no room for upward mobility, which became possible on a large scale with the expanding modern economy. After 1945 practically every government in the world has given importance to the spread of literacy, which has led to widespread aspirations towards upward mobility. These two facts – the possibility of upward mobility and the aspirations towards it – have led to a struggle for scarce resources among ethnic groups. This is the context for modern racism as distinct from earlier varieties of it.

We need to have a clear understanding of what is meant by racism. Practically every ethnic group in the world has a propensity to believe that its way of life incarnates all the best of which the human race is capable, and consequently that all other ethnic groups are inferior. That propensity leads to ethnocentric prejudice which seems to be practically ubiquitous all over the world. But if that amounts to racism, we will have to acknowledge that racism is integral to the human condition, something that is quite normal about which no corrective action can be taken. The important point is that racism has to issue in action, not just stop at the level of belief. The racist believes that the Other is inferior or threatening, or both, and also that he should be treated as inferior, or be excluded, or even be subjected to genocide. Sometimes the racist sees the Other as a scapegoat, as being somehow responsible for all or most of the ills of a society. We can see that very clearly in the ravings of the BBS about our Muslims.

(To be continued)

izethhussain@gmail.com