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

Tuesday, August 7, 2018

MORE PAY FOR SRI LANKA POLITICAL CLASS


Image: Sri Lanka MPs like to fight among themselves as well.

Sri Lanka Brief05/08/2018

The political class in Sri Lanka, as in many other countries in the world, is not beloved of those who voted them into office; and they are very well aware of that unpleasant fact. Given that knowledge, it is inconceivable that our Members of Parliament including Ministers, State Ministers and Deputy Ministers will vote themselves the massive 215% pay increase that is now being talked about. No wonder then that Speaker Karu Jayasuriya’s office is on record saying that there is yet no final decision on this matter. It was up for discussion at the last leaders of parties meeting and, unsurprisingly, nobody had objected. A deputy minister of the government, undoubtedly with a finger on the public pulse, declared on Friday that the president and prime minister will never allow it. But the Leader of the House, Mr. Lakshman Kiriella, said that nobody objected when this matter was raised at the party leaders’ meeting on July 17.

That nobody objected will not surprise anybody. The public has long been aware that there is unanimity among our lawmakers whenever matters concerning their wellbeing and welfare, including their pay cheques, are raised. The people may not be aware that over 12 years ago it was agreed – surely unanimously – that the emoluments of parliamentarians be linked to what the senior judiciary is paid. Under that arrangement, an MP’s pay was to be linked to that of a High Court judge, that of Deputy Ministers to the emoluments of an Appeal Court judge while the pay of Cabinet Ministers will be related to what Supreme Court judges earn. Salaries of the judiciary have been upwardly revised in January this year and it was only a matter of time before politicians looked for the implementation of the link formula. Timing is of the essence in these matters. The reality, given the economic circumstances of ordinary people burdened with an unbearable cost of living, can never be right. The realization of this fact would have no doubt led to a decision to seize the bull by the horns.

The people have not yet been enlightened on who brought up the pay hike proposal at the party leaders’ meeting although one of the participants, Mr. Sumanthiran of the TNA, was reported to have said there was no proposal as such. But he had pointed out that the salaries of lawmakers were linked to those of the judiciary and a revision must follow. The general perception in the country is that our MPs are a pampered lot. The media takes a sadistic delight in highlighting the various benefits they receive. These range from sumptuous subsidized meals at the parliament restaurant, allowances for attending sittings of the House and its various committees, qualification for a pension after a mere five years service, saleable – or should we say ‘floggable’? – duty free vehicle permits enabling profits running into millions and much more. A few months ago MPs were granted a monthly allowance of Rs. 100,000 to set up an office in their electorates. We don’t know what perks the members of the higher judiciary enjoy, but would wager our last rupee that they don’t match up to what parliamentarians get.

There was a time when duty free vehicles granted to MPs were technically unsalable for a period of years. But these vehicles were freely sold on the open market on what used to be called ‘open’ papers. Just before late President Ranasinghe Premadasa was slapped with an impeachment motion, there was a special police unit set up by him checking on the sale of duty free vehicles by parliamentarians. These vehicles were stopped on the roads and their papers checked. The bloodhounds even noted down details of hard to locate chassis and engine numbers. These measures naturally incensed particularly those MPs who had pocketed big bucks by selling their duty free vehicles and no doubt added more signatures to the impeachment motion. President Premadasa overcame the bid to topple him, but realized very clearly that it is dangerous to make enemies of MPs. Eventually he created a new class of monitoring MPs to feather the nests of backbenchers without ministerial and deputy ministerial perks.

Rightly or wrongly, the general perception of our lawmakers is that they are a greedy, grasping lot. Undoubtedly they cannot all be tarred with the same brush. Long ago in the middle sixties when Mr. Dudley Senanayake was prime minister, there was a proposal to give MPs duty free vehicles. It was opposed at the UNP parliamentary group by a backbencher from Bingiriya who did not own a car and attended parliament by commuting to Colombo by bus. Human nature being what it is, only very few MPs would say ‘No’ to something that benefits them. They are not special in that regard. What employee would say no to wage increase that is proffered? Maybe certain adjustments like granting the hike by way of an allowance that would not impact on pensions will be made. But expect no howls of protest from the Hon. Members. Nobody will go to Lipton’s Circus on that score.
Editorial, 04 August 2018, The Island.

The deadly contrast: Mahinda vs Gota


2018-08-07
Sri Lanka would go to a presidential election sometime during the next year as the presidency enters the final year of its five year term in January 2019. The prospect of a new Constitution, which may also require the approval in a referendum is diminishing. And even the constituent partners of the government are divided over the rationale of abolishing the executive presidency. A presidential election plus a general election should the president decide to dissolve Parliament after four and a half years into its term – is the most likely outcome. And it would also be a three way race, that pits Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, President Maithripala Sirisena, who has now gone back on his earlier commitment to not to seek a second term, and the Joint Opposition candidate, most likely Gotabaya Rajapaksa. The candidacy of Wickremesinghe and Sirisena would see anti-Rajapaksa voters divided and as the recent local government elections vindicated, the winner of this rivalry would be the Joint Opposition.  
Gotabaya plays his presidential ambitions close to his chest, yet, despite the quirky calls for Chamal Rajapaksa or Dinesh Gunawardene as a potential presidential candidate, even those who make such claims know in deep down their hearts, that those gentlemen are yesterday’s garbage, who neither inspire voters , nor have political courage for decisive policy.  
In contrast, Gota is an autocrat first, and if ever, is a populist by pretense . For those like Gota, electoral legitimacy matters only until they achieve political power
In contrast, to give the devil his due, Gota is different. Being a Rajapaksa adds up to his electoral appeal. But, a good part of his image is built on not being a politician, though younger Rajapaksa was more powerful, and lethally so, than any politician during the presidency of his brother.  

Gota speaks as if he has rendered himself unto his elder brother. “If former President Mahinda Rajapaksa asks me to contest and to carry forward the ex-president’s mission, I would”, he asserts. However, even MR knows Gota, who is unpredictable and a law unto himself is a dangerous choice. When he was the president, he used to tell the media, “don’t criticize Gota, criticize me.” Those who count on Gota to be the reincarnation of MR may be committing a costly miscalculation. Gota is not MR.  

Consider the contrast of their personalities   

Local and foreign political pundits tend to describe MR as authoritarian. Yes , he was, however, the operative word of Rajapaksa’s political character is that above all, he was and is a populist. Absolutism of his rule was subjective and was a predictable outcome of his populist legitimacy. In other words, MR was a populist first, and authoritarian later.   

In contrast, Gota is an autocrat first, and if ever, is a populist by pretense . For those like Gota, electoral legitimacy matters only until they achieve political power. Once there, rather than playing by the rules, they are more likely to rewrite them and to rely on the arbitrary force of the state’s coercive organs. The Rajapaksa administration’s resort to white-vans and extra-judicial killings of prison inmates to address the law and order problem, at the expense of the very rule of law it was entrusted with to defend, was primarily a product of Gota’s personal preference.

Those who terrorized the public with bed time stories of Idi Amin, during Sarath Fonseka’s presidential campaign now has a real prospect to worry about.  

MR was a populist to the extent that he was so cocksure that he would win the popular vote, that he disregarded opposition from his advisors to call snap elections one and half years before the end of his presidential term. When he lost, he left power gracefully, perhaps because, he knew he would make a comeback. Gota may not. Electoral mandate would not matter much in a Gota presidency. There will be other layers of state power through which he derives legitimacy and obedience. If MR was a Hugo Chavez,Gota is more likely to become an Abdel Fattah el-Sisi,Egypt’s Army chief-turned President, who exploited popular grievance to capture power and then made an ass out of the country’s nascent democracy.  
MR was a populist to the extent that he was so sure that he would win the popular vote, that he disregarded opposition from his advisors to call snap elections 18 months before the end of his presidential term
Nonetheless, MR’s populism had its constraints. The economic windfall at the end of the war provided him with time, space, and sufficient legitimacy to address the structural problems of the economy. MR squandered that opportunity because he valued his political calculations over the long term viability of the economy. When the post- war bonanza fizzled away, economic troubles, hitherto suppressed and unattended, magnified. His government spent US $ 2.5 billion to defend the value of an over-priced rupee. By the last year of his government (2014), exports as a share of the GDP halved from their 2000 value (33%). The Electricity board and Petroleum Cooperation accumulated looming losses due to unaffordable subsidies. National carrier was ran to the ground. He left a right royal mess for his successor to clean up.  

Perhaps, Gota might have been more proactive. As much as he was willing to send Police STF to evict slum dwellers, he was also not inclined to feed the people with subsidized sprats and lentils. Some of the much talked about feats of the Rajapaksa administration such as Colombo beautification was made possible due to Gota’s cold-hearted determination. 
Nonetheless, MR’s populism had its constraints. The economic windfall at the end of the war provided him with time, space, and sufficient legitimacy to address the structural problems of the economy
However, there is a glitch. Even the dictators need a group of competent advisors to run the economic policy. Pinochet had ‘Chicago boys’, young economists trained in the University of Chicago; pro-American autocrats in East Asia had their American advisors. Who has Gota got? Majority of the so- called intelligentsia in  ‘Viyath Maga’ are no name nobodies, who are more at ease in parroting long lost economic theories of a middle path, which has proved to be a road to nowhere. They imbibe a nostalgia for the 1956, a populist misadventure that deprived the country of its hitherto held competitive advantage, leading us to the depravity of sending our women to toil in the Middle East. There is also a sense of strong opposition from his backers towards free trade agreements. Though such opposition is shrouded in the concerns for saving local jobs, the untold desire is to maintain the rotten status quo that favours a few under-performing industries at the expense of the future of a nation.   

At the end, running a country is far more complicated than evicting squatters in Kompannavediya. If the panacea for the efficient governance is enlarging the role of military in public life, Pakistan could now have been an economic miracle. Gota’s hype does not provide solutions to complex problems that Sri Lanka is currently faced with. Still, more than anything else, the current government’s failure to provide a strong leadership continues to provide currency to that farce.  
Follow @RangaJayasuriya on Twitter   

Four including driver suspended over Polgahawela train crash

Four including driver suspended over Polgahawela train crash


logoBy Tharindi Pabasara-August 7, 2018 

The Engine Driver, Assistant Driver, Guard and Assistance Guard of the Rambukkana-bound train involved in yesterday’s train accident in Polgahawela, have been suspended pending an inquiry into the incident, the Department of Railways said.

Minister of Transport and Civil Aviation Nimal Siripala de Silva had given instructions to temporarily suspend the service of the driver of the train in connection with the incident at Panaliya in Polgahawela.

A train en route to Rambukkana from Colombo Fort had crashed into a Kandy-bound train which was ahead of it last evening (06), injuring some 32 commuters.

Accordingly, the Minister had informed the General Manager of Railways to temporarily suspend the service of the driver of the Rambukkana train until a proper investigation is conducted with regard to the incident.

The Minister has also given instructions to appoint a committee of three members presided by the General Manager of Railways to carry out the investigation.

The individuals responsible for the train collision should be penalized irrespective of their status and public’s trust in the railway services is lost due to actions of irresponsible train drivers of this sort, added Minister Nimal Siripala de Silva.

Monday, August 6, 2018

Gaza man killed as Israel, Hamas reportedly near deal

Palestinian protesters sieze an Israeli sniper position east of Rafah, southern Gaza Strip, on 3 August.Mahmoud BassamAPA images

Maureen Clare Murphy- 3 August 2018
Yet another Palestinian was shot and killed during protests along Gaza’s eastern perimeter as indirect negotiations to loosen the Israeli blockade on the territory were reportedly nearing conclusion.
The slain Palestinian was identified by Gaza’s health ministry as Ahmad Yahya Atallah Yaghi, 25.
At least 120 Palestinians have been killed during the Great March of Return protests that began on 30 March, more than 20 of them children.
Forty more Palestinians in Gaza were killed by Israeli fire in other incidents during that period, and one Israeli soldier was killed by Palestinian gunfire from Gaza.

Children at risk

The theme of this week’s protest was the remembrance of “The Jerusalem Intifada and the Martyr Muhammad Dar Yousif.”
View image on TwitterView image on Twitter
القيادي في حركة حماس حسام بدران وأعضاء المكتب السياسي للحركة خلال مشاركتهم في "جمعة الوفاء لشهداء انتفاضة القدس والشهيد محمد دار يوسف"، ضمن فعاليات مسيرة العودة شرق غزّة
The latter refers to Muhammad Tareq Yusif Abu Ayyush, a 17-year-old Palestinian who was shot and killed after stabbing three Israelis in a West Bank settlement, one fatally, last Thursday.
The rights group Defense for Children International Palestine warned this week that children living under Israeli siege in Gaza are “vulnerable to nearly every kind of human rights risk, including the risk of recruitment.”
The group cited the case of Odai Ahmad Mansour Abu Hassan, 11, who died when an improvised device exploded on the rooftop of his Gaza City home in July. The boy’s father, who was also killed in the explosion, was in charge of a rocket unit belonging to the military wing of Fatah, according to Defense for Children International Palestine.
Another child, Hashem Abdulfattah Othman Kallab, 17, was among a group belonging to the military wing of Islamic Jihad when all four were killed in an accidental explosion in southern Gaza in April.
“The Palestinian Authority, Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups obligated themselves to not recruit children when they signed a code of conduct in 2010,” Ayed Abu Eqtaish, a director with the children’s rights group, stated.
This week the heads of three UN bodies – while condemning Israel’s killing of children during Gaza protests – deplored “the too often cynical use of children in political rhetoric and propaganda on all sides.”
The trio said “of particular concern” was last week’s call by Great March of Return organizers for Palestinians to protest under the banner of “Friday of our Child Martyrs.”
“Children should never be the target of violence and must not be put at risk of violence nor encouraged to participate in violence,” the officials stated.
The march theme was likely intended to focus attention on Israel’s violence against Palestinian children whose deaths have often been ignored or downplayed by international officials and media.
During this Friday’s protest, Palestinians managed to break through part of the militarized Gaza-Israel boundary fence and seize an Israeli sniper position:

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'His blood was on the floor': The night Israeli forces stormed our Freedom flotilla and kidnapped us


On 29 July, the Israeli Navy stormed the Freedom Flotilla boat al-Awda and diverted it from Gaza to Israel. Dr Ang Swee Chai, medical doctor on board, recalls what happened that night

Swee Chai Ang's picture
The last leg of the journey of al-Awda (The Return) was scheduled to reach Gaza on 29 July. We were on target to reach Gaza that evening. There are 22 on board including crew with $15,000 worh of antibiotics and bandages for Gaza. At 12.31pm we received a missed call from a number beginning with +81... Mikkel was steering the boat at that time.
The phone rang again with the message that we were trespassing into Israeli waters. Mikkel replied that we were in International waters and had right of innocent passage according to maritime laws.
The accusation of trespassing was repeated again and again with Mikkel repeating the message that we were sailing in international waters. This carried on for about half an hour, while al-Awda was 42 nautical miles from the coast of Gaza.

Non-violent actions

Prior to the beginning of this last leg, we had spent two days learning non-violent actions and had prepared ourselves in anticipation of an Israeli invasion of our boat.
Vulnerable individuals, especially those with medical conditions, were to sit at the rear of the top deck with their hands on the deck table. The leader of this group was Gerd, a 75 year old elite Norwegian athlete. Gerd had the help of Lucia, a Spanish nurse in her group.
The people who were to provide a non-violent barrier to the Israelis coming on deck and taking over the boat formed three rows – two rows of threes and the third row of two persons blocking the door to the wheel house for as long as possible. There were runners between the wheel house and the rear of the deck. The leader of the boat, Zohar, and I were at the two ends of the toilets corridor where we looked out at the horizon and informed all of any sightings of armed boats.
I also would be able to help as a runner and would have accessibility to all parts of the deck in view of being the doctor on board. Soon we saw at least three large Israeli warships on the horizon with five or more speed boats (Zodiacs) zooming towards us. 
As the Zodiacs approached I saw that they carried soldiers with submachine guns and that mounted on the boats were large machine guns pointing at us. From my lookout point the first Israeli soldier climbed on board to the cabin level and climbed up the boat ladder to the top deck.
His face was masked with a white cloth and following him were many others, all masked. They were all armed with machine guns and small cameras on their chests. They immediately made it to the wheel house, overcoming the first row of people by twisting the arms of the participants, lifting Sarah up and throwing her aside.
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An all-women flotilla heading to Gaza in October 2016 (@Malakamohammed)
Joergen, the chef, was too large to be manhandled so he was tasered before being lifted up. They attacked the second row by picking on Emelia, the Spanish nurse, and removed her, thus breaking the line. They then approached the door of the wheel house and tasered Charlie, the first mate, and Mike Treen who were obstructing their entry to the wheel house. Charlie was beaten up as well. 

By force ad coercion

Mike did not give way after being tasered in his lower limbs, so he was tasered in his neck and face. Later on I saw bleeding on the left side of Mike's face. He was semi-conscious when I examined him. They broke into the wheel house by cutting the lock, forced the engine to be switched off and took down the Palestine flag before taking down the Norwegian flag and trampling on it.
They then cleared all people from the front half of the boat around the wheel house and moved them by force and coercion, throwing them to the rear of the deck. All were forced to sit on the floor at the back, except Gerd, Lucy and the vulnerable people who were seated around the table on wooden benches around her. Israeli soldiers then formed a line sealing off people from the back and preventing them from coming to the front of the boat again.
As we entered the rear of the deck we were all body searched and ordered to surrender our mobile phones or have them taken by force. This part of the search and confiscation was under the command of a woman soldier. Apart from mobile phones, medicines and wallets were also removed. No one as of 4 August has got their mobile phones back. I went to examine Mike and Charlie.

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Reuters reporters 'revealing the truth', former teacher tells Myanmar court

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Shoon NaingAye Min Thant-AUGUST 6, 2018

YANGON (Reuters) - A Myanmar court heard defence witnesses on Monday vouch for the integrity of two Reuters journalists accused of obtaining secret state documents and will hear final arguments in two weeks, when the trial regarded as a test of press freedom resumes.

Kyaw Soe Oo, 28, and Wa Lone, 32, are facing up to 14 years in prison for allegedly violating Myanmar’s colonial-era Official Secrets Act. Both have pleaded not guilty to the charges and have told the court how they were “trapped” by police officials who planted documents on them.

During Monday’s session, their former teacher Ye Naing Moe, director of Yangon Journalism School, praised both reporters as curious and excellent students who had won multiple awards for stories focusing on the underprivileged and social issues.

“We haven’t seen any stories they wrote which have violated media ethics,” he said, explaining that the school monitored the work of its former students.

“I believe that Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo performed the most important role of journalists which is revealing the truth,” said Ye Naing Moe. “Finding defects, problems and revealing them in a positive way gives a chance to fix things and that benefits the society and the country.”

A second witness, Thant Zin Soe, had worked with Wa Lone at a charity distributing humanitarian aid to the victims of natural disasters and described him as being consistently ethical, and “disgusted by corruption”.

At the time of their arrest in December, the journalists had been investigating the killing of 10 Rohingya Muslims in Inn Din village in western Myanmar’s Rakhine state.

The killings took place during an army crackdown that United Nations agencies say sent some 700,000 people fleeing to Bangladesh.

Prosecutor Moe Thu Aung’s questioned the witnesses over whether they could have known what the intentions of the defendants were while they were reporting and whether they believed the journalists would behave unethically.



Detained Reuters journalist Kyaw Soe Oo holds up his daughter as he leaves Insein court in Yangon, Myanmar August 6, 2018. REUTERS/Ann Wang

He declined to comment after the proceedings.

The trial has captured global attention and has come to be seen as a test of press freedom and reforms in the fledgling democracy, where the military still wields considerable influence.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called for the immediate release of the reporters on Saturday. UN Human Rights chief, Zeid Raad Al Hussein, has also recently called for the case to be dropped “immediately”.

Government spokesman, Zaw Htay, told Reuters by phone that Myanmar’s courts are independent and the case would be conducted according to the law. He said “they will have the full protection of their rights as citizens.”

FINAL ARGUMENTS

Judge Ye Lwin adjourned the court and scheduled final arguments from both the prosecution and defence to be heard in two weeks. The judge will declare a verdict in the weeks following the final arguments, according to legal experts.

On Monday, Kyaw Soe Oo’s wife and daughter and Wa Lone’s pregnant wife, who is just four days away from her delivery date, sat in a courtroom packed with diplomats.

“The day of decision will arrive soon. We believe that it will proceed in a fair and just way,” said Wa Lone, before he was taken back to jail.

Kyaw Soe Oo and Wa Lone have testified that Police Lance Corporal Naing Lin and another officer handed them documents during their meeting at a north Yangon restaurant, but that they had no time to look at them before being arrested as they left.

A police captain, Moe Yan Naing, has also testified that a superior officer had instructed his subordinates, including Naing Lin, to “trap” the reporters. Naing Lin has told the court he met the reporters, but denied giving them anything.


Slideshow (3 Images)

Other police witnesses have previously told the court the reporters were arrested at a random security checkpoint, by officers who were unaware they were journalists, and found to be holding secret documents in their hands.

Additional reporting by Thu Thu Aung; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore

Melania Trump issues statement in support of LeBron James after president insults him

Twitter users blasted President Donald Trump on Saturday after he questioned LeBron James's intelligence in a tweet.
First lady Melania Trump issued a statement Saturday in support of LeBron James, after President Trump posted a late-night tweet attacking the basketball star.

The president took to his favorite medium and attacked James’s intelligence Friday night after CNN aired an interview in which the NBA star told anchor Don Lemon that he thought Trump was trying to divide the country by using sports as a wedge.

“Lebron James was just interviewed by the dumbest man on television, Don Lemon,” Trump wrote. “He made Lebron look smart, which isn’t easy to do. I like Mike!”

Lebron James was just interviewed by the dumbest man on television, Don Lemon. He made Lebron look smart, which isn’t easy to do. I like Mike!

Trump had apparently watched the rebroadcast of the interview, which originally aired Monday, CNN said.

Lemon’s questions mostly focused on James’s time off the court, covering James’s newly completed I Promise School in Akron, a public and nonprofit partnership designed to help underserved kids in his Ohio hometown.

James, a newly minted Los Angeles Laker, three-time NBA Finals MVP and double Olympic gold medalist, said the school opening made Monday perhaps the greatest day of his life.

But Lemon also discussed James’s political awakening, driven by racial upheaval in the country and Trump’s ongoing battle with Colin Kaepernick and other NFL players who have knelt during the national anthem to protest police killings of black men.

“What I’ve noticed over the past few months,” James told Lemon, “is [Trump has] kinda used sports to kinda divide us, and that’s something that I can’t relate to.”

While James has not commented on Trump’s tweet, others have responded both directly and indirectly — like the first lady.

“It looks like LeBron James is working to do good things on behalf of our next generation,” said Melania Trump’s spokeswoman Stephanie Grisham. “And just as she always has, the First Lady encourages everyone to have an open dialogue about issues facing children today.”

Grisham went on to say that the first lady supports “responsible online behavior” as part of her Be Best initiative, and said that Melania Trump would be open to visiting James’s new school.


“Who’s the real dummy? A man who puts kids in classrooms or one who puts kids in cages?” Lemon said on Twitter. He included a #BeBest hashtag.

Melania Trump wasn’t the only person with experience as the first lady to respond in James’s favor. Hilary Clinton sent a tweet Saturday afternoon in which she praised James for being “a great family man” and “incredible ballplayer” who “gives back to his community and isn’t afraid to speak his mind.”

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Bangladesh suffered a bloody August and the unending screams

The agony of martyrdom is almost too much to bear. In every day early hours of August 2018, when the loss is fresh, there is comfort in knowing that his glory will live on. We speak of the martyrs in History but we cannot know the actual pain they suffered in their final living hours.

by Anwar A Khan- 
( August 3, 2018, Dhaka, Sri Lanka Guardian) If we remember his death, we become indebted to his birth. We call it bloody August 15. It bechanced in 1975. He has not escaped the horrors of Bangladesh that we created at this grand man’s clarion call through and through the supreme sacrifices of millions of our people in 1971. He is no one else, but the Father of our Nation, Bangabandh Sheikh Mujibur Rahman. It retraces that the ghost of bloody August will haunt his legacy to persist in our souls till we live on.
Where in the starlit stillness we lay mute, hear the whispering showers all night long, and his bullet-ridden bruised body was a lute whereon our passion and warmth pay a deep-chested feeling of delighted approval and liking for his uncurled songs he sang for the welfare of his people for more than two decades. We cherish martyrs like Mujib not only because he died for truth, but also because he died for what he believed in and loved for the true cause of his people in his country, Bangladesh.
The agony of martyrdom is almost too much to bear. In every day early hours of August 2018, when the loss is fresh, there is comfort in knowing that his glory will live on. We speak of the martyrs in History but we cannot know the actual pain they suffered in their final living hours. They have entered the realm of the mythic, but we must never forget these were men like ourselves. When their flesh was torn, they cried out. They suffered as you or I would suffer, although more bravely. Remember, we shudder when recalling his or their pains.
The elegiac month of August has, once again, come to our life. We wish to dedicate this month to the immaculate heart of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the Founding Father of Bangladesh. This immaculate heart may be venerated together with the sacred hearts of our great fallen heroes like Tajuddin Ahmad, Syed Nazrul Islam, Capt (Retd.) M Mansur Ali, AHM Kamaruzzaman and with good reason just as their sacred hearts represent their true love for mankind in Bangladesh. His blood has dried, but it has become rose petals. What we feel brushing our cheek is not only our tears but these are our love apple for him. He remains above us, beside us and within us; how he beams a human sunrise and we are so proud of him!
Let us go hence: the night is now at hand; the day is over-worn, the birds all is flown; we have reaped the crops the gods have sown; despair and death; deep darkness over the land broods like an owl; we cannot understand tears, for we have only known surpassing vanity: vain things alone have driven our perverse and aimless band. Let us go hence, some whither strange and cold to hollow lands where just men and unjust find end of labour, where is rest for the old, freedom to all from love and fear. Twine our torn hands! Oh pray the earth enfolds our life-sick hearts and turn them into dust.
If in that Bangladesh’s garden, a great hero like Bangabandhu Mujib is slain, we sleep, and know that we are dead in vain, nor even in dreams behold how dark ascends in smoke and fire by day and night, the sleep well and see no morning, sons and daughters of Bangladesh. But if, the grave rent and the stone rolled by, at the right hand of majesty on high you sit, and are sitting so remember yet your tears, your agony and bloody sweat, your cross and passion and the life you give, bow hither out of heaven and see and save.
Razors pain you; rivers are damp; acids stain you; and drugs cause cramp. Guns aren’t lawful; nooses give; gas smells awful; and he might as well live in our memories till the last drop of our blood. We have wept with the spring storm; and burnt with the brutal summer. Now, hearing the wind and the twanging bow-strings, we know what winter brings. The hunt sweeps out upon the plain and the garden darkens. They will bring the trophies home to bleed and perish beside the trellis and the lattices, beside the fountain, still flinging diamond water, beside the pool which is eight-sided, like my heart.
To describe the tragedy of Bangabandhu’s passing, I quote a few lines of a famous poet:
“Ah! Me, what language can impart
The mournful feelings of a throbbing heart
No more the flag which royal Clarence gave
In ambient air its sportive colours wave
Cold is that hand which joyful won’t to raise
The splendid ensign upon gala days.”
Bangabandhu’s heart, full of goodness, ever compassionate toward our miseries; deign to melt our icy hearts and grant that they may be wholly changed into the likeness of the true heart. Pour into them the love of thy virtues; enkindle in them that loving fire with which thou thyself dost ever burn. In thee let Bangladesh find a safe shelter; protect her and be her dearest refuge, her tower of strength, impregnable against every assault of her enemies. Be thou the way which leads to Bangabandhu, and the channel, through which we receive all the graces needful for our salvation. Be our refuge in time of trouble, our solace in the midst of trial, our strength against temptation, his love in persecution, our present help in every danger and especially at the hour of troubles, when all hell shall let loose against us its legions to snatch away our souls, at that dread moment, that hour so full of fear, whereon our eternity depends. Ah, then most tender and pure, make us to feel the sweetness of thy fatherly heart, and the might of him was open to us a safe refuge in that very fountain of mercy, whence we may come to praise him in the world without end.
This fateful month of August 1975, especially in the wee hours of 15 August, a sky-touching statesman like Bangabandhu Mujib who was encircled by a gang of local cobras (anti-liberation and reactionary forces) in collusion with the most obnoxious nexus…. dreadful and disdainful killing outfits-CIA and ISI belonged to America and Pakistan. He was silenced to death by gun bullets by those hooligans. Maybe, the most shocking thing about this month is that no one seemed to know that those ruffians were headed over a cliff. Those rogue people seemed to be more obsessed with the prospect of brutal assassination in Bangladesh.
In his lifetime, “Bangabandhu” as he was fondly revered by his people, enjoyed an emblematic status in Bangladesh and was widely appreciated across the world for his idealism and statesmanship. A greater understanding of Sheikh Mujib’s ideas and activities can only benefit the present efforts to create a world that is genuinely independent and self-determined. Consequently, his legacy is still relevant to the present-day struggle of Bangladesh’s people and other oppressed peoples around the world. Noted journalist Søren Kierkegaard truly wrote, “The tyrant dies and his rule is over, the martyr dies and his rule begins.”
We cherish martyrs not because they died for truth, but because they died for what they believed in and loved. Bangabandhu was like what Mahatma Gandhi once said, “They may torture my body, break my bones, even kill me. Then they will have my dead body, but not my obedience.” He is like the martyrs who are exceptional people. The martyrs survive pain, they survive total deprivation. They bear all the pains of the earth. They give themselves up. They transcend themselves… they are transfigured. And Mujib has transmogrified and changed completely the nature or appearance of Bengalis’ landscape in the world map.
The past is never dead. It’s not even past. And it is this type of dangerous, fearful tunnel-vision that may even be in full motion at the present moment. Would we recognise those attitudes, if we are caught in the middle of them? This is the kind of tragedy that reminds us why we should read history. We should bow our heads in shame even unto this day about the trail of tears and those who died along the way on that very early morning. But the blood of the martyrs’ waters is the tree of freedom. We expect to uncover more splendid treasures of this great fallen hero of our land in the days to come. The writer sincerely trusts that we shall keep our backs very stiff in this matter.
Those cruel butchers then enjoyed their vanity fair; they thought of themselves and not of others care-Fratricidal course that to hell doth lead – this was poison upon which the gentry fed. We should study physics, chemistry, more while they all such sinners adore; this is no idle prattle talk to you; it has made the banners red, white and blue. Out of the clear of the earth’s eternity has raised a kingdom of Bangladesh’s fraternity; there shall be conquests over militant forces; for, as man proposes, God disposes. Signs of retribution are on every hand: Be ready, the foreign paid men like Gideon’s band. They may scoff and mock at you today, but get you ready for the awful fray.
In the fair movement of our abounding grace, there is a promised hope for our race in the sublimes’ truth of prophecy. We are to raise us to earthly majesty. Princes shall come out of Egypt so grand, the noble Bengali men’s home and motherland, the Psalmist spoke in holy language clear as our triune will declare. In their conceit, they see are not their ruin. You soldiers of trust, be up and doing! Remember Belshazzar’s last joyous feast, and Daniel’s vision of the Great Beast! Weighed in the balances and found wanting is the tektite to which they are pointing. This interpretation, we, men shall never in our dreams forget. The resplendent rays of the morning sun shall kiss our life again to begin; the music of rhythmic natural law shall stir Bangladesh’s soul with excellent, beautiful or creative flow. The perfume from nature’s rosy hilltops shall fall on us spiritual dewdrops. Celestial beings shall know us well, for, by goodness, in death, with them we will dwell. And how sad a finish! With battleship, artillery and gun, our men put all evil creatures to run; and Heaven and Earth they have often defied taking no heed of the rebels that died.
The present August 15 marks the 43rd anniversary of Bangabandhu’s assassination. His death stunned the world and caused an outpouring of public grief unprecedented in today’s history of Bangladesh. His killing has altered the course of the country’s history. We will not forgive you, sun of emptiness, and sky of blank clouds. We will not forgive you indifferent anti-Bangladesh liberation and reactionary forces until you give us back our golden son.
This is the sad road to August. It is the most sorrowful month in Bangladesh. This is the murder that Bangladesh can never forget. August is the mournful month in our History – the bloody August of 1975; the trail of tears…and the never ending trail for our people, an elegiac month. Those hyenas’ acts have changed the face of our history. But God can’t be mocked in this daring way. So, the evil ones shall sure have their day.
The killing of Bangladesh’s Founding Father is barbarous, and the manner of the murder was too horrible for description. He dedicated his entire life to the just cause of Bengalis and establishing for an independent and sovereign homeland for them. He was the foundation and ultimate goal of Bangladesh’s politics. Let us build another exalted pantheon, a monument commemorating a nation’s dead heroes like Bangabandhu Mujib and his true-blue lieutenants. A walk to remember him or them is a full admiral, a full-of-the-moon elucidating, straightening out with irradiating rays of light upon us. It should not be the finale section of a musical composition and a basso continuo only, but it should be our living and braving out of withstanding with courage. When August comes with scarlet roses with no maculating stain on his bright face, our souls take leave of him to sing all day long for him, a love so fugitive and so complete.
-The End-