
The
floods that affected significant swathes of the
expansive Menik Farm a week ago generated interesting
responses from government. One of the most revealing was
the deafening silence of the usually loquacious Rajiva
Wijesinha, and the lack of any statement over the
flooding by the Disaster Management and Human Rights
Minister, Mahinda Samarasinghe.
On
July 22, Mahinda Samarasinghe noted during an
adjournment debate on IDPs in parliament that;
“We
are quite definite in our view that conditions on the
so-called welfare centres and relief villages can and
must be improved. As I have said on numerous occasions,
these persons are not a mere statistic to be discussed
as an abstract problem. These are Sri Lankan citizens
with all the expectations, hopes and dreams of a better
tomorrow which has been made possible by the defeat of
terrorism. We must not let those aspirations wither away
for want of concentrated and concerted effort on our
part.”
He went on to note;
“… in
the aftermath of a historic operation to rescue them
from a ruthless terrorist organisation, all necessary
measures must be taken to ensure not only their welfare
but also the welfare of the general populace of Sri
Lanka in those areas and in the rest of the country. It
is for this reason, that the freedom of movement of some
of these IDPs has been restricted. We are not happy to
do so nor are we totally inconsiderate of their rights.
We are well aware that some cadres of the LTTE have
infiltrated the ranks of the IDPs and, until and unless
those cadres are filtered out, we have no option but to
keep them within the welfare centres and relief
villages.”
Continued internment of IDPs
I have
quoted the Minister at length because his justification
for the continued internment of IDPs is one that is
echoed, albeit more offensively, from other quarters in
government. A month after the Minister’s submission to
parliament, the divide between rhetoric and reality is
acute. Even in July, he is uncertain of what really to
call Menik Farm.
That
they offer relief, to any degree, is a farce. That they
are established for the welfare of those displaced, and
what is more, those of us outside, is preposterous. IDPs
I doubt gladly rely on the largesse of southern voters
to keep them undernourished and interned.
Eric
P. Schwartz, Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Population,
Refugees, and Migration at the US State Department was
more forthcoming last week when he unambiguously said
IDPs were confined against their will and that “people
who are displaced should be agents of their own
destiny.”
The
Minister refers to the welfare of the IDPs and the
welfare of the general populace of
Sri Lanka
as a bizarre justification for their internment. The
argument goes on to suggest that some cadres of the LTTE
reside in these camps. Fine. They do. So what? Why is
this government suddenly so insecure of dealing with the
emaciated remnants of the LTTE after decimating the
larger movement?
Spending will continue
Surely, the swift containment of nascent terrorism would
be a cinch for a trigger happy army, even if all these
arms caches buried underground somehow found their way
into the hands of these under-nourished, traumatised
IDPs? The Defence Secretary is on record noting that
defence procurements and spending will continue
unabated. Gen. Sarath Fonseka is on record saying that
recruitment and fortification of the north and east will
continue apace.
This,
lest we forget, is all post-war — when we have already
been told the enemy has been decisively defeated. What
is the government so frightened of then to suggest that
the only reason for keeping over 260,000 IDPs interned
in horrific conditions is out of care and concern for
them and us?
And
does the traditional media feature in this debate? Who
in traditional media has questioned the plans of the
Ministry of Defence which has a muscular grip over the
fate of these IDPs? All SMS news services, that never
fail to deliver cricket scores minutes after events on
the pitch, were silent for over three days after the
devastating floods in Menik Farm.
Damning display of indifference
Only
Tamil media featured news of the flooding the day after
the floods. The plight of IDPs was, shamefully, a
non-issue for Sinhala newspapers last Sunday, with no
front-page coverage whatsoever. This was despite a
number of reports which suggested that toilet pits were
overflowing, floors of tents were soggy and wet, IDPs
had no change from wet clothes, a lack of dry firewood
for cooking, that roofs of some tents blown away are
increasing concerns over health and sanitation
conditions with the impending monsoon.
Erased
by a supine traditional media, many in the south do not
know the real ground conditions faced by IDPs. Worse, in
a damning display of indifference, the south does not
care enough to find out and demand this information.
Parading patriotic piffle, the catastrophic failure of
this President and his government to adequately care for
those interned in Menik Farm calls for a recalibrated
purpose in aid and advocacy, not redoubled effort to
keep these concentration camps intact. We cannot assuage
our guilt for what we know is wrong by the occasional
cover story, donation, photo op or sanitised visit.
My
commitment to the immediate release of these IDPs is not
based on some Western funded conspiracy to resurrect the
LTTE, which the government never tires of accusing civil
society of, or on the submission that no LTTE cadres
reside in Menik Farm. So what if they do? As I have
noted earlier, why isn’t human dignity more important to
establish, and an effective counter against residual
terrorism, than the inhumane, degrading open-air
imprisonment of IDPs?
LTTE will persist locally and globally
However much the government tries to identify and
contain, elements of the LTTE will persist locally and
globally. Surely a better way to address this threat is
to ensure that legitimate aspirations of all
communities, especially those who have been historically
marginalised, are negotiated and met?
The
nationalism of the Rajapakse regime that Sri Lanka’s
erstwhile Ambassador to the UN in Geneva Dayan
Jayatilleke tragically defended, was nevertheless a
socio-political phenomenon he critiqued when he noted
that:
“One
of the basic errors of Sinhala ultranationalists’
discourse is the conclusion that Tamil ethnic politics
or identity politics died on the banks of the Nandikadal.
There can be a military victory over a military
challenge but there cannot be a purely military victory
over a political challenge. An enemy army can and must
be defeated, an armed opponent can be killed, but a
political challenge requires a political response and an
idea can be defeated only by another idea.”
Aspirations of IDPs
Dayan’s post-war critique of the regime is congruent
with Mahinda Samarasinghe’s submission that the
aspirations of IDPs must be allowed to “wither away for
want of concentrated and concerted effort on our part.”
And yet where is this alternative vision and idea? Who
in the government is championing it?
Why
does the Ministry of Defence continue to have such a
stranglehold on our imagination and media that we see
all these IDPs as LTTE, or those who gave the LTTE
succour and therefore fit to be treated in the manner
they are? In an interview with the relative of a family
interned in Menik Camp I listened to last week and
published online, the speaker notes “The President of
Sri Lanka, Hon. Mahinda Rajapakse says these people are
his own citizens, but how they treat these people you
can’t believe.”
But to
even disbelieve and contest, citizens need to know what
conditions are in Menik Camp. The lack of access to
media is a problem, but not an insurmountable challenge.
It is now sadly a convenient excuse for so-called
independent media, fearful of the repercussions of
investigative journalism, to turn a blind eye to the
plight of these IDPs.
Erase our best chance of peace
Ironically, this lack of scrutiny guarantees precisely
that which the government seeks to avoid — condemnation,
wholly justified, of violent policies and practices that
will invariably put paid to reconciliation and
tragically erase our best chance of peace in decades.
The call for the release of these IDPs is not a
traitorous one. It is the moral and the right thing to
do. It is not a call to support or reignite terrorism.
It is to demand for government to stop mirroring the
insensitivity of the LTTE and its abhorrent violence
against civilians. It is to demand government to
urgently act like they really give a damn.
As a
southerner and a Sinhala Buddhist, I am ashamed of what
we have become, and how we silently countenance, nay
justify, this significant post-war violence against
fellow Tamil citizens. We were silent patriots during
war, because we thought they were all terrorists. We are
silent patriots after war, because we think they must
still be terrorists. Menik Camp is a litmus test of our
real commitment to peace. We do not need more support to
strengthen it. We need resources and the political will
to urgently dismantle it.
Glass
jawed patriots and others who don’t demand this, and
worse, feel they don’t need to, will be the chief
architects of a new LTTE.