Archive for April, 2007

The Amnesty Campaign: Taking the Eye Off the Ball

A lot of heat and indeed anger has been generated by the Amnesty International campaign‚  – Sri Lanka: Play By the Rules – timed to coincide with and targeted at the Cricket World Cup in the Caribbean. Amnesty has made clear that the campaign is not targeted at the Sri Lankan cricket team and in response to criticisms of this nature made the point that the issue is not cricket but human rights and that all right thinking and mature adults will not mistake the campaign as in any way making a comment on or seeking to undermine our cricket team. The criticisms against the Amnesty campaign come from a number of quarters – the government and political parties, local NGOs and from diaspora groups. They range from a full frontal attack on Amnesty and its bona fides as regards human rights protection in Sri Lanka – some include other international human rights organizations as well for good measure –…

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Any More Separation For TMVP?

TMVP is remembering their 3rd year of separation from the LTTE on April 10th 2004 when 175 Karuna cadres, including female cadres, were massacred in Verukal in an attack by the LTTE to prevent the separation. Regarding the separation V. Muralitharan (Karuna amman) has given statement to their web site. “Earlier it was seem as a single person’s problem with the LTTE. Now there is more clarity on the extent of the problem after we got strength through military wise and political wise with support of eastern people”. However they reached this position with help of few cadres and supporters. Now the situation is that those cadres are being sidelined and being dominate by some others. After the separation TMVP had only around 30 cadres. 5 to 10 carders were very confident and trust among them by Karuna. In the beginning he lost his trusted 6 cadres in a shooting incident in Colombo Kottawa in 2004. They were senior and…

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Language Barriers

When looking at the root causes of the Sri Lankan conflict, one issue that comes up time and time again is language. According to The Constitution, Sri Lanka’s national languages are Sinhala and Tamil but it seems that ‘national language’ and ‘official language’ mean different things. The Constitution has two separate sections for these, the latter of which reads “The official language of Sri Lanka shall be Sinhala. Tamil shall also be an official language. English shall be the link language.” From the wording alone, it is not surprising that this is still a very problematic area where discrimination and inequality prevail. Today, Sri Lankans have the right to an education in either Sinhala or Tamil, but they are not required to learn both which means that from a very early age, communities are being divided by language barriers. That is not to say that Sri Lankans are monolingual. On the contrary, many Tamil people have learnt Sinhala, especially those…

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Robberies Increase In Jaffna

Gun-point robberies have increased in Jaffna. Town area houses are robbed day or night and even during curfew time. Last week some robbers went to a house during the day, introduced themselves as being from the CID dept and said they wanted to search the house. After they left a camera, money and a mobile phone were missing. Day before yesterday some robbers went to a restaurant and robbed at gun point. Sometimes the robbers sexually harass women as well. One month back some robbers robbed a house in Kalvianakadu. The house owner shouted thief and neighbours gathered and chased them away and caught one of them. The villagers assaulted the robber and he died as a result. A Jaffna library laborer is in police custody now. He was one of the people who beat the robber. Now Police have arrested him and magistrate has ordered that he be remanded.

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  • 5 Apr, 2007
  • 2 Comments
  • Disaster Management,
    Human Rights,
    Human Security,
    Peace and Conflict,
    Trincomalee

නැගනහිර යූද්ධය තූල තනීවූ සාමෙය් නගරය.

ශූීලංකාව à¶­à·–à¶½ තවමත් අැදීයන ෙමි ඊළාමි යුද්්්්ධය à¶§ දැන් වසර 26 à¶šà·Š ගතවි තිෙබි.ෙමම වසර 26 තුල යුද්ධෙයන් බැට à¶šà·‘ අහිංසක ඡනතාවෙග් අවසන් බලාෙපාෙරාත්තුවද දැන් ෙකෙමන් ෙකෙමන් දියෙවන්නට පටන් ෙගන අැත. ෙමම ඊළාමි යුද්ධෙයන් බැට à¶šà·‘ තවත් à¶‘à¶šà·Š දිස්තිුක්කයක් ගැන ෙසායා බැලිෙමි අරමුණින් à¶…à¶´ ෙමි සංචාරය අාරමිභ කරන ලදි. සමස්තයක් වශෙයන් ගත් à¶šà¶½ නැගනහිර පළාෙත් පුනර්ඡිවනය වශෙයන් හදුන්වනු ලබන තිුකුණාමළය නගරයයි. ුුුුිිිි අාර්ථිකය අතින් වැදගත් වු ස්ථානයක් ෙලස හැදින්ෙවන ෙමහි à¶´à·’à·„à·’à¶§à·’ ස්භාවික වරාෙයන් සහ සුන්දර ෙවරළ තිරෙයන් නැගනහිර පූෙද්ශෙය් වැඩි වටිනාකමක් දිනා ගැනිමට තුිකුණාමළය පුෙද්ශයට හැකිවි තිෙබි.එෙහත් අවසනාවකට ෙමන් අද à¶…à¶´ කතා කිරිමට සුදානමි à·€ සිටින්ෙන් නැගනහිර පූෙද්ශෙය් යුද්ධෙයන් බැට à¶šà·‘ තුිකුණාමළය නගරෙය් වර්ථමාන තත්වය පිළිබද ෙතාරතුරැ ෙසායා බැලිමටය. සාමෙය් අාරමිභයත් සමග උදාවු වසන්තය දැන් නිමාව අැතයිද යන්න ගමන අාරමිභෙය්ම à¶…à¶´à¶§ හිතුෙන්,පුෙද්ශෙය් අාරක්ෂක අංශ විසින් පනවා තිෙබන මාර්ග බාධක සහ පරික්ෂාකිරිමි නිසාය.ෙමම මාර්ග බාධක පසු කරන සැම වාහනයක් සහ පුද්ගලෙයක්ම දෑඩි පරික්ෂා කිරිමකට ලක්කරන අාකාරයයි. නගරයට අැතුල් වන ස්ථානය වන අනුරාධපුර මංසන්ධිය අසල දකින්නට ලැබුෙන් පාඵ ස්භාවයකි. මිට මාස 10à¶šà¶§…

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Human Rights and a Political Settlement: Regime Defences Wearing Thin

The two main criticisms against the Rajapaksa regime relate to human rights and a negotiated political settlement of the conflict.  In summary the charge is that the regime is unwilling to do anything about either and therefore is well into the smoke and mirrors game of camouflage and procrastination.   The regime on the other hand maintains that its bona fides on both fronts are in tact and that these are baseless charges. In the case of human rights, time and time again it points to the Commission of Inquiry (COI) and the Independent International Group of Eminent Persons (IIGEP) as evidence of its seriousness of commitment and purpose. The international community too, has gone along with this and more.  It has invested time and resources in the establishment of the IIGEP and key members have indicated their expectation of results.   Indeed any further action on the human rights front internationally has been stayed by the establishment of the COI and…

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  • 4 Apr, 2007
  • 37 Comments
  • Peace and Conflict

Amnesty Campaign: Some quick thoughts

I never thought I’d say this, but I think Amnesty International has made a big mistake in launching its latest human rights campaign against Sri Lanka against the backdrop of the World Cup Cricket Tournament. Don’t get me wrong (and yet I predict many will). I am entirely supportive of any and all attempts to highlight grave human rights violations in Sri Lanka. However, the recent initiative a la Amnesty reeks of double standards, cheap pot-shots and poor taste. Here are the reasons why. First, if World Cup Cricket offers an opportunity to name and shame human rights violators, then practically every competing country is fair game for past or continuing rights violations. The fact that this particular tournament takes place at a time when the incidence of rights violations are at an all-time high in Sri Lanka seems too easy a reason for AI to single-out one country without as much a passing reference to other egregious violators. Second,…

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Which comes first – Human Rights, Media or Terrorism?

Judging by his own standards and those laid down in public by his government, our incumbent President is Sri Lanka’s No. 1 “traitor”. In branding those who champion human rights in Sri Lanka to be partial to the LTTE, we tend to forget that the President himself was an fervent champion of the very human rights he now holds in contempt when in the opposition over a number of years. I have explored this in earlier articles as well, but in this submission to Groundviews, I explore some fundamental problems facing the media today in Sri Lanka in reporting the on-going violence and conflict. Professional media, I argue, can’t take sides and certainly can’t be shafted into a simplistic black and white paradigm of being in support of the Government or against the Government / with the LTTE. Professional media has a vital role to play in exploring ALL sides of the conflict, based on the inviolable right of the…

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A Marxist Perspective on Constitutional Reforms

Erik Olin Wright, in his interesting and insightful article entitled “Compass Points: Towards a Socialist Alternative” (in New Left Review No. 41, Sep-Oct, 2006), dissects the term “social” that has been present in both socialist and social democratic politics. In general, the term- “social”- “is invoked to suggest a commitment to the broad social welfare of society, rather than the narrow interests of particular elites”. The debate on constitutional reform in Sri Lanka has been so far carried on in the dominant language of constitutionalism. All three main streams of constitutionalism, namely, liberalism, nationalism and communitarianism, subscribe to this meta-language of constitutionalism that privileges the state, nation and citizenship. On the other hand, emancipatory social science that Olin Wright proposes to uphold calls for “a systematic scientific knowledge about how the world works” and explains how its central purpose of “the elimination of oppression and the creation of condition for human flourishing” be achieved. In this article, I deploy emancipatory…

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Peace professionals and War professionals

By Rajan Philips There has been a spate of writings on the political economy of war, particularly relating to the war on terror that President Bush has imposed on the world as the primary concern of humankind in our time. Sumanasiri Liyanage, Peradeniya academic and commentator, has recently written about the political economy of peace in the Sri Lankan context. In particular, he has drawn attention to what he calls the emergence of “peace professionals” and their allegedly “rent-seeking operations” in the peace process. Rent-seeking in economic theory simply means making money without producing anything, and is treated as different from the positive economic practices of profit-seeking and wage-earning. There is also another term, called profiteering which is to make unreasonable profits and often in unconscionable situations such as war. Sri Lankans have grown familiar to war-profiteering over the last two decades, and accusations of war-profiteering are among the main criticisms of Bush Administration’s war in Iraq. In my view,…

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About Groundviews

Located at the Centre for Policy Alternatives in Colombo, Sri Lanka, Groundviews is a citizen journalism website that uses a range of genres and media to highlight critical perspectives on governance, reconciliation, human rights, the arts and literature, democracy and other issues. The site has won two international awards, including the prestigious Manthan Award South Asia in 2009. The grand jury's evaluation of the site noted, "What no media dares to report, Groundviews publicly exposes. It's a new age media for a new Sri Lanka... Free media at it's very best!"

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