Help from the gods
SLFP General Secretary Maithripala
Sirisena on listening to media lamentations
at a press conference last week has asked
the media to place their trust in the divine
for justice to be done.
‘He (Mervyn Silva) would be punished by
the gods anyway,’ the Minister had assured
the journalists. We hope we would not incur
the displeasure of those believing in the
divine, when we say that if gods do dispense
justice effectively, Sri Lanka would have
been a far better place. Perhaps Sirisena
must have had in mind the wisdom of the
Greek dramatist Euripides who said: ‘Those
whom the gods wish to destroy first make
them mad.’
While placing trust in gods is a human
inclination – or failing as rationalists may
say – our advice to journalists, their press
barons and TV moguls is to look inwards and
examine their own resources and
capabilities. Is the pen no longer mightier
than the sword or the club of a political
thug?
Political patrons
Mervyn Silva is not a new phenomenon.
There were many before him, like: Sothi
Upali and a cranky brother- in-law of Rohana
Wijeweera, a Dr. Fernando, who used to storm
offices — particularly of newspaper editors
whom he did not like. Sothi Upali and his
thugs once held the management of a
newspaper company at its headquarters for
well over six hours.
There were lesser known thugs and
criminals, who have thankfully been
eliminated by their own kind. The billion
rupee question (everything in Sri Lanka
these days is measured in billions) is: How
could they do all this and get away? The
reasons are known to almost all of us but
few dare speak out: political patronage.
Can any ordinary citizen get away with
what Mervyn Silva has done? He has created
many a rumpus in newspaper offices. He
walked in with thugs into the government
owned state TV headquarters, Rupavahini, and
the director news was assaulted. Subsequent
to this incident employees of Rupavahini
were waylaid and attacked by ‘unidentified’
thugs.
The latest exploit is that he considers
himself the uncrowned king of Kelaniya to
which media personnel disliked by him cannot
enter and do so at their own risk. The
recent incident at Kelaniya where a TV crew
covering the opening of a bridge was
attacked took place in the presence of
senior police officials. But this brazen act
of thuggery has gone unnoticed by the
guardians of the law.
Why did not the police act as they should
have under the law? It could be presumed
that they were instructed not to take any
action.
Who is the officer ultimately responsible
to take such action? The IGP of course but
was he prevented from taking action? Who
could have prevented him from acting? The
head of all the armed forces and the police,
the Commander-in-Chief, is President Mahinda
Rajapakse. But what has this all powerful
President done?
Of course onerous duties of state made
his presence at the Beijing Olympics
essential. Meanwhile Sirisena at the press
conference attempts to placate journalists
by saying: He (Mervyn Silva) has already
drawn the wrath of the leadership and that
the President had ‘advised’ Silva to refrain
from ‘such activities’ in the future and
added that ‘necessary action’ would be taken
against him ‘in the future.’
Silva, we know, was warned once before by
our all powerful President against such
behaviour. That happened when Rupavahini
employees threatened a strike following
repeated attacks on their colleagues by
unidentified thugs, whom the employees
alleged were hired by Silva.
But Silva behaves like a naughty boy with
an indulgent father, taking advice through
one ear and letting it go out of the other.
With this kind of unbridled thuggery
going on while the President is enjoying
himself at the Olympic Games, we can well
imagine what could happen during the
election campaigns for the provincial
councils of the North Central Province and
Sabaragamuwa.
The solution is to implement the 13th
Amendment by activating the Constitutional
Council which President Rajapakse is
artfully dodging. The reasons are obvious
except to the most politically naïve.
Whatever the opposition and government
may do, is the media an impotent paper
tiger? The fact is that apart from some
asinine protests on the streets, newspapers
and other media have not acted collectively
to demonstrate their power.
DR strategy
We recall a story related to us by
veteran journalists way back in the mid ’60s
when we joined the Ceylon Observer as
a junior journalist.
D.R. Wijewardene who built up the mighty
Sri Lankan publishing house, Lake House and
was its chairman had been encouraging the
efforts of former labour leader A.E.
Goonesinghe who is still considered by some
as the father of Sri Lankan trade unionism.
Despite the support extended to him by Lake
House newspapers, Goonesinghe at one stage
had launched a tirade against Lake House.
Wijewardene, the veterans said, was a man
of few words. And in this instance he did
not utter any. He simply ordered blackening
out Goonesinghe’s name and activities from
all Lake House newspapers. That was a
crippling blow because the only other
publishing house was the British owned
Times of Ceylon which had no inclination
to support a labour movement in Sri Lanka.
With that blackout commenced the downfall of
Goonesinghe from which he never recovered.
In the light of the threats against the
media the DR strategy is well worth
consideration by all media barons, moguls
and journalists. They could not only
blackout all activities of the Mervyn Silva
variety but also partially blackout
government activity including those of
publicity seeking politicians.
What better, effective protest could they
have made than a ‘go slow’ of the recent
SAARC jamboree? With the state media it
could be difficult if not impossible but in
recent times state media journalists have
shown surprising spunk in the face of
terrific odds. Even if the private media
goes it alone, by recording only basic
government activity, it could have positive
results.
Could our media moguls, press barons and
journalists emulate the DR example? Of
course guts, courage and commitment to
independent journalism is required. DR was a
born newspaperman of that mould, not a media
mudalali looking out for the next
state bank loan.