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It's just not cricket
"Ancient
rulers of Sri Lanka built monuments, established
institutions to honour the philosophy of Buddhism. In
turn this led to lesser folks following the principles
advocated by Buddhism en masse."
-
Lankapuvath, February 15, 2009
"I
strongly believe that this country belongs to the
Sinhalese but there are minority communities and we
treat them like our people. They can live in this
country with us. But they must not try to, under the
pretext of being a minority, demand undue things."
- Army
Commander Sarath Fonseka, National Post, September 23,
2008
Every
time a highly placed individual from the Rajapakse
administration says something offensive - which sadly
occurs quite frequently - I recall a photo of the
President hugging, with great affection, his brother
Gotabaya, who had just escaped an attempt on his life by
the LTTE in Colombo. It's an awkward photo in a sense -
neither of them are posing, the President has this grin
of relief plastered on his face and Gotabaya looks,
well, human.
The
photo is dislocating too, for you are acutely aware of
just how much power they control and yet how little they
seem to be moved by the plight of hundreds of thousands
of civilians trapped in the embattled north today. They
are starving. They are dying. They are sick. Children
are being killed and maimed for life.
The
condition of life in IDP camps, for those displaced by
the heightened conflict, from reports that sporadically
come out from the region can only be described as hell
on earth, as Human Rights Watch notes in a press release
issued on March 4.
In
addition to preventing civilians from leaving combat
zones, the LTTE has deployed their forces close to
civilians, thus using them as "human shields," fired
upon civilians trying to flee to government-controlled
areas, and recruited children for their forces. The Sri
Lankan armed forces have repeatedly and indiscriminately
fired artillery at densely populated areas, including
unilaterally declared "safe zones" and hospitals.
Go-ahead
Government statements have suggested that all ethnic
Tamils who remain in LTTE-controlled areas are
combatants, effectively giving a go-ahead for unlawful
attacks.
ICRC's
Head of Operations - South Asia, Jacques de Maio said on
the same day that the current situation in the Wanni is
one of the most disastrous situations he had come
across. The lack of clean water and proper sanitation
are also major concerns in IDP camps, which are high
security zones accessible only by the ICRC and some
agencies of the UN to mask them from public scrutiny.
The
Leader of the TULF, V. Anandasangari in a statement
released on March 5 said that he was "reliably informed
that people are not merely on the verge of starvation
but some people had in fact died of starvation." As one
seasoned photojournalist noted at the Galle Literary
Festival this year, this was the most hermetically
sealed conflict he had ever encountered. Make no
mistake, though remarkably well hidden from the public
gaze, this is our Gaza and Darfur combined.
This is our shame.
On the
other hand, there was no shortage of genuine concern for
the safety and security of our cricketers. The
outrageous attack on our cricket team usurped vestigial
local media coverage of the humanitarian crises in the
Wanni. Instead we now consume penetrating analysis of
the future of cricket in Pakistan, insights into the
nature of injuries sustained by players and replays of
tearful reunions at the airport.
Life imitates art
Perhaps life imitates art - anyone who has read David
Blacker's A Cause Untrue will also recognise the
familiarity of some of the theories bandied around now
suggesting the LTTE's involvement in the attack. A
President who cut short a foreign tour, a Foreign
Minister who rushed to the scene of violence, and a
Media Minister who wants the international community to
sign a treaty on the prevention of terrorism with
special emphasis on the safety of sportsmen and
sportswomen.
Some
media have even gone as far as to draw parallels between
this attack and the infamous Munich Olympics. Cricket is
our opium, and we are intoxicated.
Is
there some way we can channel at least a bit of this
concern towards the situation in the Wanni? Are we so
inured, misled or confident that killing Tamil children,
women and men is inevitable or even necessary to
decisively end the war against a larger enemy? Is this
not the same perverse logic the LTTE employs, to date,
and with disastrous consequences?
In a
bid to secure peace, must we become in form and action
that which we revile in order to defeat it? And if we
must become less than democratic in our response to
terrorism, what guarantee is there of democracy's quick
and full restoration after war?
This
is why pronouncements such as the Army Commander's
deranged notions of what it is to be Sri Lankan and
Lankapuvath's tragi-comic bifurcation of our peoples to
better and lesser beings are disturbing. There are of
course many other examples of incipient and blatant
racism, notably the race riots of '58 and the anti-Tamil
pogrom of '83.
Support for war
These
suggest that the majority of the majority do not yet
demonstrate the capacity to envision and embrace a Sri
Lanka without the deeply ingrained, systemic racism. As
the Peace Confidence Index of the Centre for Policy
Alternatives clearly indicates, the majority today
unequivocally support the President and his war. As a
consequence, many columnists in this paper including
your author have little or no traction in the mainstream
Sinhala Buddhist consciousness. The looming danger for
Sri Lanka is precisely on account of this - the sheer
euphoria of the LTTE's defeat coupled with the frothing
intolerance of democratic dissent are the ingredients
that can very easily give rise to a totalitarian rule no
different to the LTTE.
And
this is why I go back to the photo of the President and
his brother. Google it and look at it yourself. We
cannot escape the essential humanity here and it is
undeniably a touching photo. And yet, we know that both
subjects have gone on to demonise, with complete
impunity, and arguably murder those who are staunchly
and non-violently opposed to what they do and say. These
are two men who command an army of soldiers and an army
of voters, who without a moment's hesitation will today
support whatever they say or do.
They
both say we are on the verge of a historic moment. We
are. They say we must all be firmly committed to peace.
We must.
But
how we define history and make peace is up to us, not
them.
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