Introduction
Lankan society in its post-1948 history has undergone many violent
conflicts in the form of pogroms, insurrections, and a civil war. The
latest round of violence said to have ended with the military defeat of
the LTTE in 2009 continues now at a much lower level, but seems to
operate throughout the land. These campaigns of violence have caused
collective social trauma within the society.
With the end of the war, the opportunity was ripe to rebuild the
country and reconcile the many divisions. During the war, of course,
many statements, assurances and pledges were made that the issues of
Tamil people that culminated in an armed conflict would be resolved
through major constitutional and legal reforms including devolution of
power to the periphery, though after the end of the war, such measures
are yet to come to fruition.
International situation
The reports of global capitalist financial institutions indicate that
the present financial and economic crisis is structural, persistent and
long-term. In many countries, industrial and agricultural production is
being adversely affected including in the bastions of capitalism, the
EU and the USA. The dominant capitalist model of neo-liberalism, based
on free-market paradigm underpinned by deregulation and privatization
has not been beneficial to the working people. Relocation of industries
to more favourable and profitable regions, outsourcing of
labour-intensive production and application of technological innovation
to reduce labour intensive work have led to high levels of unemployment.
Yet, neo-liberalism does not wish to give up their hold on the world
in a peaceful manner. The current drive of global capital to acquire and
control all possible resources such as hydrocarbons, land, water,
minerals and forests needs to be understood in this light. In the name
of combating terrorism and promoting democracy and human rights,
neo-liberal forces are waging its ruthless war on resource-rich
countries the world over.
A decade of war in Afghanistan and Iraq has failed. Pakistan and
Yemen have become destabilised. Lebanon, Palestine and Libya have been
devastated. Nonetheless, neo-liberals have not given up their policies
of invasion, intervention and destabilisation. Unofficially, war has
been declared on Iran and Pakistan. The neo-liberal camp has been
repositioning their troops, armaments, logistics and coalitions to
launch a surgical strike on Iran. Iran has been subjected to sanctions,
attacks on military and missile installations, killing of its nuclear
scientists, and cyber warfare. The case against Iran is based on
speculation, even weaker than that was used against Iraq. Iran is an
authoritarian state, but surrounded by countries carrying weapons of
mass destruction such as the US, Israel, Russia, Pakistan and India. On
the other hand, in Iran’s favour, it has not invaded any country in its
recent history. Escalation of this conflict, which may happen any time
soon, will destabilise the whole world and its economy.
Last year, agitations for political and personal freedom spread from
Occupy Wall Street movement through the peoples’ uprisings in the Arab
world to protests against economic crises in European countries, Chile,
Israel and elsewhere. Young people, mostly unemployed secular students
with no future prospects in life led these protest campaigns. They were
not bound by any ideology. Apparently, their demands related to
dissolution of centralised power, and assurance of their rights for
autonomy and personal freedom.
The outcomes of these uprisings and protests remain uncertain mainly
because the ruling elites in these countries mimic compromising gestures
while holding onto power in the hope that the peoples’ momentum towards
democracy and threats to the ruling elite’s existence will fade away
with time. The people continue to demand change for the better. The
regimes are utilising sectarian divisions based on religious and tribal
affiliations to contain peoples’ uprisings and to safeguard interests,
privileges and power of the elite.
Neo-liberalism continues to be the main challenge facing sovereignty
of developing countries like Sri Lanka. The dominant progressive forces
of the working people need to determine the direction of change that
will control foreign capital investment for the benefit of people,
define alternate developmental processes that are sustainable
economically, socially and ecologically and lead to a social system
embodying the characteristics of peoples’ control, participation and
co-operative ownership.
Neo-liberal agenda has made social protests and rebellions criminal
offences that can be dealt with anti-terrorism laws, as the current
regime attempts to do. The new National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA)
that came to effect in the US allows indefinite military detention
without trial, and determines that the entire globe is a battlefield on
which the war on terror is being waged.
Who are best assisting these designs in the developing countries?
They are chauvinists including social chauvinists (socialists in words
but chauvinists in deeds) and the opportunists of all hues. In Sri
Lanka, among them are those who oppose a fair and just solution to the
national question of Sri Lanka based upon the recognition of peoples’
right to determine their own political destiny that would allow all
people to live in dignity and peace.
Domestic situation
Recent reports indicate that the island has achieved middle-income
status. Similarly, certain surveys have found that the island’s social
conditions, health and education have improved. However, let us not
forget the fact that aggregated per capita figures statistically hide
social inequality. Clearly, the gap between the affluent and the poor
has worsened. The Gini coefficient shows that income disparities have
grown significantly in the urban and estate sector and income has
remained relatively static in the rural sector. The increase in
consumption accompanying the affluence and service provision
distribution is skewed in favour of the affluent in the land, in
particular, geographically towards the western province.
The armed conflict that was concluded in 2009 has created additional
disadvantages in the region of the North and East in terms of economic
infrastructure, livelihood, health and education. Inequality in
opportunities and income can be associated and correlated with one’s
social class and political patronage, the geographic region one resides
in, one’s mother tongue, caste, ethnicity and gender, and one’s special
needs. Hence, in addition to per capita models, statistical growth
assessment models that also take into account the deficiencies caused by
such inequities and that incorporate mechanisms for addressing such
inequalities are necessary.
Economic development and building a united nation
Lankan society is heavily polarized due mainly to political and
economic factors. The state’s cultural policies towards non-Sinhala
people are designed and implemented to build the majoritarian support
for discrimination and exclusion of non-Sinhala people so that the
attention of the working people can be diverted from the significant
socio-economic issues that prevail at the time.
The government’s effort in building infrastructure will help the
movement of people, but mainly it will be skewed for travel from the
south due to the economic imbalance that exists. Providing opportunities
for people within the framework of social justice, social inclusion and
provision of equity will pave the way for a better future.
It is not possible to foster a harmonious environment in the island,
without genuine efforts to address the sufferings of the people who have
suffered due to loss of their loved ones, those who cannot grieve
openly, those who do not know where their loved ones are, those who
cannot visit their loved ones who are detained. People need to be given
space and time to relate their stories and learn the truth of what
happened so that it will provide genuine opportunities for
reconciliation. Transitional justice provides such opportunities for
people to collectively get over their psychological trauma. It should
provide for people to come to terms with the past and get along with
their future. Genuine reconciliation can be facilitated if the people
are not burdened by the past that prevents them from going into the
future. In particular, most of the non-Sinhala people affected by the
long war, displaced from one location to another on so many occasions,
do not enjoy their civil, cultural, economic and social rights in any
meaningful way. They have become weaker and feebler.
The LLRC Report
The Report of the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (the
LLRC) provides us with a good opportunity to seriously explore the
present state of play in the political, legislative, executive,
judicial, economic, social and other spheres. That can provide us
guidance on the path we need to traverse to build a united nation
upholding respect for democratic values, human dignity and the rule of
law.
Though the scope of the mandate given to the LLRC was limited in
comparison to the scope the South African Truth and Reconciliation
Commission, the LLRC report specifically states that lack of good
governance, non-observance of the Rule of Law and lack of meaningful
devolution were causes for building tension between communities. It
recommends creating a separate and independent police commission and
provision of provincial police with better legal tools and expertise,
whilst reaching out to non-Sinhala groups. It has also emphasised the
necessity to have an independent Judiciary, a transparent legal process
and strict adherence to the Rule of Law for peace and stability and to
work towards meaningful reconciliation. What we have today is not rule
of law but rule of impunity.
According to the LLRC, the lack of governance and non-observance of
the Rule of Law would re-result in the creation of tension between
communities. It is the view of the Commission that making visible
progress on the devolution issue is of critical importance to ensure the
success of any process of lasting and sustainable reconciliation. The
report has also conceded that the investigation into human rights
violations is a vital component to national reconciliation. We should
encourage Sri Lanka to fully implement these recommendations in order to
jumpstart the process of national reconciliation.
Reconciliation – Where are we?
Lanka is governed as a police state. Despite the formal ending of the
country’s state of emergency, all draconian powers that were employed
during the war such as disappearances, killings, arbitrary arrests and
detention without trial are still in force. Thousands of prisoners that
had been detained remain in custody without being charged even after
three years since the end of the war.
The LTTE subjected the people in the south to terror and it was
natural for them to place their trust in the government to overcome that
terror. Understandably, the majority of people expressed their
gratitude to the current President and the government for ending the
armed conflict. On the other hand, despite many individual killings by
the LTTE, many Tamil people in the North and East considered the
presence and prevalence of the LTTE militancy in their region was
associated with their fate and survival as a community by preventing the
abuse of power the state forces and their paramilitaries had been
hurling on them.
In the same vein we need to understand that the terror unleashed
against Tamils, simply just because they were Tamils, was a non-issue
until the counter-terror of Tamil militants started reaching the
doorsteps of the people living in the south. Many disagreed with me in
mid-2009, when I took the position that the conflict did not end with
the military defeat of the LTTE. My conclusion was based on the simple
fact that the armed conflict was a continuation of the political
conflict in a heightened form, and the end of the armed phase of the
conflict will be construed and interpreted as seeking solutions to the
political conflict (national question) is not significant. Now hardly
anybody would disagree with me that in a political sense, the conflict
remains much more heightened with international attention set upon the
ways the state and its people handle the broader governance issues of
democracy and reconciliation. Such issues also include extension of
equitable opportunities for all people based on protection and the
application of the principles of rule of law, democracy and human
rights. It is evident, that such an endeavour will require changing the
ways the legislative, executive and judicial arms of the state operate
today in political, social and religious domains.
Achieving the current ‘no-war’ situation after more than three and
half decades of armed conflict has been enormously expensive. Yet we
have not been able to achieve a state of positive peace due to the
recalcitrant interest, thinking and attitudes that continue to prevail.
With no self-critical reflections and all the bitterness and hatred
being passed on to the next generations, the process of reconciliation
has become a non-starter. Thus, the process of reconciliation has become
extremely difficult and complex.
Measures for reconciliation
Following the termination of the armed conflict, the government has
embarked upon huge business, infrastructure and community development
programmes (with all their apparent deficiencies and shortcomings).
Building highways and roads, providing vocational training, assisting in
many small-scale industrial and agricultural projects, teaching
English, and training in IT continue, with the help of many individuals
and organisations, both local and overseas, and not for profit and for
profit. There also have been many allegations that local communities do
not get opportunities to contribute in terms of decision making or
concretely taking part in any of the developmental activities that would
generate income opportunities for themselves.
If the state intends to reconcile the Lankan people, one important
symbolic step would be to free all political prisoners, who have been
held with no charges being made against them. Those who have been tried
and convicted through adjudications of institutions, not properly
constituted, because of political and personal vendettas also need to be
freed. Those against whom charges can be filed may be charged in
properly constituted courts following proper rule of law. From a state
and a government who had to conduct a ruthless and destructive war to
end the armed conflict, this is not an easily achievable task. However, I
am still confident that there will be a day when the country opens up
its closed doors, as has just started to happen in Burma (will all best
wishes for the process to continue unabated without being influenced by
opportunistic, corrupted and corroded political advisors).
As we are aware, the island have been searching for an apparently
dignified political solution for the last half a century with many
discussions held; many agreements and pacts signed and then annulled
unilaterally; many commissions and all party conferences appointed,
reported and then such reports dumped into dustbin of history; and many
study tours undertaken with no lessons or experiences apparently learnt.
Search for a solution
We have searched enough. We do not need to wait for international
intervention to occur in these matters. If we consider Tamils and
Muslims as our own brothers and sisters, then the state has the primary
responsibility and accountability for looking after them and protecting
their rights as fellow human beings. In the current global climate
acquiring or restricting ourselves to a superiority complex of making
the other submissive is impracticable, unethical, non-cognisant of the
diverse nature of today’s Lankan society and its richness, and
unrepresentative of our traditions of harmony and co-existence.
As many international experiences have shown, if we take positive
steps to build lasting peace, the chances and opportunities for the
so-called western conspirators to interfere and meddle in the country’s
internal affairs, its sovereignty and territorial integrity will become
minimal. Such measures will not only unify communities of people as a
nation, but also unite as a bulwark against foreign interference. More
significantly, such measures will create the basis for preventing
another ethnicity, language and/or religion based insurgency in the
island.
Lessons of the past should guide the future socio-economic and
cultural changes that are required in our attitudes and actions for us
to progress towards a peaceful society based on justice and equity. The
three-decade long war created hostilities and strengthened animosity
against each other, which strengthened the isolationist and exclusionist
policy calculus of the state, thus generating sentiments and attitudes
of bitterness, suspicion, hatred, prejudice and un-compromise towards
each other. The Tamil community, in particular, has been dealing with
the armed forces and their paramilitaries.
Needs of the ruling elite
It is in the best interests of the ruling elites for Lankan society
to remain fragmented so that no united effort on the people’s part will
threaten their power, control, interests and privileges of the regime.
When a crisis looms, as our own historical experiences indicate, such
layers and individuals will do everything at whatever cost to safeguard
their regime. Pretexts are generated; news are concocted; and
misinformation campaigns are carried out, so that these could be used to
present a situation as if concrete and objective threats to the country
emanating from such a so-called public enemy exists. Then, the cycle of
violence commences.
Need for a new public enemy
The syndrome of a ‘new public enemy’ that needs suppressing through a
new insurgency seems was created soon after the termination of armed
conflict in May 2009. In 2010 itself, the state, its intelligence
services and the government declared that they were aware of another
insurgency to be launched soon using university students. This was made
in an environment of a crackdown targeting the university students
across the country, aimed at suppressing opposition to its planned
measures for privatisation of education.
The proposed new University Act to establish private foreign
universities in the island has been in preparation since then.
Currently, the state and the government have become hyperactive in
making Gobbelian type allegations of another insurgency led by a
breakaway group of the JVP allegedly having links with pro-LTTE groups.
As practised in the eighties, repressive measures have been used against
any genuine political or trade union opposition to government policies.
The President himself warned in 2010 that students would face the law
prevailing in the country. He was not talking about the rule of law,
but the prevailing law. Hundreds of students have been suspended or
detained, mainly for protesting against government policy. The burden of
the current economic crisis will be placed on the shoulders of working
people with public services being gradually cut down through
privatisation policies following demands of the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) to reduce the budget deficit.
The state has been in readiness to swoop on any protests by
incorporating emergency laws into normal laws of the land; by
centralising most of the power in the hands of President; by censoring
the media; and by increasing disappearances and detentions without
trial. Freedom of information in the land is becoming increasingly
applicable in the way ruling elites and states interpret what that
freedom should be. A strong example is Wikileaks, where attempts are
being made to hide information about war crimes from the very people in
whose name such crimes were committed. So, the political challenge will
be to build a coalition under the leadership of the working people to
resist the impending state repression.
The need for social implosion
Periods of intense cycles of violence have commenced with the violent
suppression of freedoms and repression of rights of the ordinary
people. Cycles of violence that commenced with the suppression of
dissent ended up creating valleys of death. This vicious cycle would
escalate spirally due to the situation that is made to prevail. Such
artificial constructions are made for imploding a society from within,
and I call this social implosion by a state, as against creating social
reconciliation.
Past experience
Despite its alleged democratic traditions, Sri Lanka has half a
century of recorded history of using violence and terror to subjugate
and suppress political opponents with the overt or covert use of a
plethora of repressive legislation and state forces and through the
maintenance of a culture of impunity among its security establishment.
For example, the President and the government in the early eighties
faced a crisis, which I would see as a parallel situation with many
similarities to what the people in the island are experiencing today. In
1983, the government sponsored, pre-planned and launched the anti-Tamil
pogrom, on the one hand, to ‘teach Tamils a lesson’ using violent means
to favourably shift the economic power balance towards Sinhalese
business interests and on the other hand, to crush the growing left
movement in the country.
The repression the state launched then, developed into a massive
spiral of violence leading to the insurgency in the 1988-89 period,
killing about 60,000 people. Incidentally, several political and
military personalities, who had been involved in serious human rights
abuses such as disappearances, death and destruction on their political
opponents at the time, continue to hold responsible positions under the
current status quo. It is worth noting that in the 1988-89 period when
university students protested against privatisation of education,
several student leaders were tortured to death.
Another cycle of violence?
Many people pose the question whether Lanka is entering into another
cycle where violence will reign supreme, as it experienced three times
before. One can only compare previous contexts, developments and
experiences with the situation that is developing now. For simplicity, I
will limit myself to comparing the context, development and experiences
of the valley of death that commenced in 1983 and continued until
mid-2009, where disappearances, arbitrary detention without trial,
torture and extra-judicial killings by death squads associated with
military have been used against political opponents.
What can be done?
As we have witnessed many times before, when international pressure,
particularly from India, is exerted, the President would announce that
the 13th Amendment in the Constitution or a plus version of it would be
implemented. However, as time passes, artificial opposition campaigns
will be created or allowed to be built to give a false impression to the
outside world that there is enormous resistance against the devolution
of power to the periphery. The only time, such a situation did not
materialise was at the presidential elections held in 1994, when a
consistent and persistent campaign for devolution of power was
successfully carried out. Yet, due to the nationalistic and chauvinistic
pressures that were created by small groups within the governing
coalition itself, the proposed devolution package was neither widely
discussed locally nor even presented to the parliament. Though concerns
were expressed if the proposed devolution would be meaningful and
adequate to guarantee the Tamil people’s physical security, the outright
rejection of the extent of proposed devolution and the LTTE’s
persistence on separation destroyed the Sinhala people’s trust in
resolving the conflict through power devolution to the periphery.
The entire country should have the opportunity to reflect on the
human misery that the conflict had caused. All the people in the country
need to learn about the root causes of the conflict, the common
experiences of social trauma that they have undergone, and the ways and
means to prevent recurrence of such events.
I consider the first political indicator of a government that is
candidly bent on reconciling its fractured society will be a genuine
national campaign intended for that purpose. Even if it is only relating
to the full implementation of the 13th Amendment, or a plus or minus
version of it, the south of Lanka should be convinced of the necessity
to look after and protect all citizens of the island in the same way the
Sinhala citizens are being looked after and protected. Significant
rights could be bestowed on non-Sinhala people with the consent of the
island’s southerners. Perhaps, starting with what has been already
guaranteed by the Constitution, but have not yet been fully and robustly
implemented could be taken up for consultation and dialogue at national
level.
Such rights will obviously be subjected to a barrage of criticism
from the diverse spectrum of views held by many. For example, such a
national discussion may commence with the topic of the necessity to
include a legal framework that makes discrimination on the basis of
one’s race, caste, religion or spoken language a punishable offense in
law; the termination of current practice of providing unequitable
opportunities on the basis of preferential treatment; establishment of
effective mechanisms to handle and resolve all issues that arise in this
context in an accountable manner adhering to the principles of
openness, justice and fairness; making use of all three languages
holistically in public communications and correspondence; ensuring that
there are adequate numbers of Tamil speakers to handle issues of Tamil
and Muslim people, particularly, where they are predominant; and
devolution of power so that the people in provinces could look after
affairs that matters in their day to day lives.
Attitudes of the Left
If you tremble with indignation at every injustice then you are a
comrade of mine. This was Che’s indomitable leftward attitude towards
injustice. In keeping Che’s sentiment in our hearts and minds, we of the
left needs a critical look at the things we have done and we used to
do.
Sadly, many in the left have helped and are still helping bourgeois
ruling elites in diverse ways to implement their neo-liberal agenda. No
wonder why the left is in a crisis. I believe that even those who do not
think or act this way still need to rethink their strategies. From the
experiences in 1971, 1988-89 and the long-term insurgency from
1983-2009, one needs to learn that they cannot break new ground or hold
on to their social bases merely basing themselves on military strength.
The major lesson to be taken from these experiences is that despite
multiple provocations of the state and their cohorts, military strength
is not a substitute for political work among the people and independent
political initiatives. 2012 will be a year of high significance for the
people of Lanka in terms of greater political initiatives and closer
interaction between the Left and democratic forces.
Ultimately, it was the bourgeois ruling elites such as the UNP led
coalition in 1977, the SLFP led coalition in 1994, and the SLFP led
coalition in 2005, who took advantage of the disunity in the left and
their failed tactics, as evidenced by them later wiping out the new left
in the electoral front. These are not personal mistakes, but essential
ingredients and manifestations of the ultra-left adventurist line taken
in confronting the provocative violent and armed repression of the state
and its cohorts. Though the new left only genuinely and determinedly
implemented that political line, it led to the political process of
isolation and then to the eventual military and electoral debacle, thus
revealing the bankruptcy of the tactics used.
Unfortunately, in 1994 and 2005 the JVP, and in 2005 the LTTE was
being made use of by the bourgeois ruling elites to further their own
interest. These ruling elites have used them and would use them again
for electoral benefits. Is not this habit of getting used for the sake
of gaining temporary and partial political benefits, acting as pawns in
the hands of reactionary political forces, right opportunism of the
worst kind? Yet, curiously, this sort of surrendering political
independence of the left was sought to be concealed at times under
ultra-left phrase mongering.
Conclusion
We do not need a telescope or a microscope to see that the national
question persists and needs to be solved justly and fairly. The
majoritarian state being chauvinist and the civil administration being
increasingly militarised, armed violence has become an entrenched
characteristic of the Lankan political landscape today. The past
violence of the Sinhalese against Tamils, later on Tamils violence
against Muslims, violence by the armed forces and their paramilitaries
against civilians to generate pretexts for implementing their own
agendas of domination.. One community’s sufferings have been pitted
against another community’s sufferings by scapegoating that community as
the cause of sufferings. So, re-examination of our own politics, our
own actions, assertions and silences is extremely important in this
context.
The question of power sharing, equal rights and equity of opportunity
confronts the whole of Lanka. Inter-ethnic reconciliation and dialogue
between communities should be the precursor to a long-lasting
sustainable just and democratic political solution. Any one community in
isolation cannot proceed towards a unilateral solution without taking
into consideration the concerns of other communities.
The President and the state currently do not seem to be even in
favour of fully implementing the 13th Amendment, though the current
constitution already accommodates provisions for devolution of police
and land powers. The Lankan state points to a national security threat
posed by attempts to create political instability following the example
of Arab Spring. This clear warns that the focus of the security
establishment is now on scheming ways and means to repress the
activities of the discontented workers and youth in the country. The
working people and the youth are opposing the government’s push to
implement the demands of the IMF by privatising services such as
education and health, thus lowering public spending, wages and cutting
down working conditions of people.
As has been done before, the communal card is currently being played
again to reinforce division of the working class and the poor and
prevent unity being achieved in the struggle to defend living conditions
and democratic rights. To do this the security establishment under the
political guidance of the ruling elite is reviving a threat posed by
pro-LTTE groups both local and overseas and linking individuals and
organisation with progressive leanings to such groups without any
evidence to substantiate their allegations. This bogus threat is also
being used to justify the increased expenditure incurred on maintaining
and expanding the security establishment. Such attempts of the state can
be thwarted only through the united action of the working people for
abolishing social inequality and for protecting their democratic rights.
Our task today is to initiate a process to keep the momentum of the
processes that have been initiated to include diverse progressive views
into a coherent strategy and a minimum program of social change. We need
to adopt a less dogmatic and less sectarian approach towards new social
thinking and developments with more tolerance and critical
assimilation. Building an extensive island-wide mass movement based on a
broad political agenda that would focus on issues immediately affecting
the working people such as corruption, capitalist globalisation,
violation of individual and collective human and democratic rights of
people and environmental issues is urgent. In order to sharpen and
consolidate the political power of the working people, special emphasis
should be placed on developing unity in action among all left formations
in the short run and working towards unifying all socialists under the
banner of a single party in the long run. If we are to be successful in
this endeavour, then we in the left need to honestly and critically look
at our past actions, alliances and programs.
13 February 2012
No comments:
Post a Comment