Ranil Wickremasinghe’s Dilemma

Jehan Perera in Colombo Telegraph, May 2024 where the title reads “President’s Commitment for Economic Reform is Model for Reconciliation” … & is reproduced here with underlining imposed by the Editor, Thuppahi

On numerous occasions President Ranil Wickremesinghe has said he was elected president to get Sri Lanka out of its economic morass and will do his utmost to fulfill that obligation. This has led to much speculation regarding the president’s intentions with regard to conducting presidential elections prior to achieving economic success. The truth of the president’s utterances with regard to his commitment to resolving the economic crisis is to be plainly seen in his determination to push ahead with unpopular economic policies. He has been unrelenting in sticking to higher tax rates than the masses of people can afford and to the privatization of state-owned enterprises. Both of these policies are unpopular to the point of jeopardising his bid to be re-elected at the forthcoming presidential election, but the president has stuck by his convictions.

There was also a second promise that the president made soon after astonishingly becoming president elected by parliament even though holding only one of the 225 seats in it. He said he felt he had an obligation to solve the ethnic conflict that has been with Sri Lanka from the dawn of Independence and not leave it to burden future generations. It would be no exaggeration to say that Sri Lanka lost thirty years of foreign investments and accompanying development due to the instability brought about by the war. The president reassured the people that the political solution to the ethnic conflict had been discussed and negotiated many times in the past and he would build on those past efforts to achieve success. He promised this would all happen in the country’s 75th year of Independence, now more than a year ago.

Over the past two years since becoming president, President Wickremesinghe has sketched out his vision of reconciliation in Sri Lanka in very clear and precise terms. He did so, for instance, at an inter-religious symposium on peace and reconciliation in March this year, which was attended by religious clergy and civil society activists from all parts of the country. In a matter of no more than twenty minutes, the president sketched out the essential elements on such a solution without consulting any notes, as it was all in his mind. But unfortunately for Sri Lanka and its people, the president has not chased down those reforms in reconciliation in the manner he has for the economy.

President’s Failure

The president’s failure to stand by his own vision of reconciliation and a political solution to the ethnic conflict is costing the country dearly. The absence of a strongly held and consistent policy on national reconciliation has become obvious in the most unfortunate way in the past two weeks. It began with the heavy-handed efforts of the police to prevent Tamil people from publicly commemorating their loved ones and those who had perished in the last phase of the war. The police went to the extent of securing court orders which they misapplied to prohibit people from gathering together to remember the suffering of those last days and to share the kanji (rice porridge) that sustained the lives of those trapped in the battlefield with nowhere to go.

It seems that there were only a few places where the heavy hand of the police was used to suppress the people coming together, though this may have deterred much larger numbers of people in many more locations from trying to do the same. But these incidents, though few, were captured on video and circulated around the country, and the wider world, which certainly showed the government in a very bad light. One such incident captured on video shows police going to the homes of women who commemorated the loss of their loved ones in defiance of the police orders not to do so in the public they had chosen. The police chose the night-time to make their foray into the homes of the women, perhaps to make it easier for them to arrest the women. But the women resisted arrest and therefore had to be dragged screaming and struggling into the police vehicles.

Another similar incident in which the police appear in a very unfavourable light was when they went to Eastern University where a small group of students were engaging in a memorial activity centering around the sharing of rice porridge among themselves on the lines of “do this in memory of me.” As the court order not to engage in such activities had changed by now, and the president himself had said that such memorials are permissible, the police did not forcefully seek to stop the students from going ahead with their memorialization ceremony. However, they showed their opposition by pointing at the students in a threatening manner and speaking angrily at them. They also took video films of the students and their ceremony at close range, which would create the fear in the students that this material was being kept by the police for future use.

Not Reconciliation

What took place in the country over the past two weeks was not reconciliatory but indicated resentment and confrontation. This is contrary to avowed government policy, which draws its inspiration from the resolution that the government under Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe signed in 2015 in agreement with all the 47 countries in the UN Human Rights Commission. In terms of this resolution, the government has done much, setting up an Office on Missing Persons, an Office of Reparations and an Office for National Unity and Reconciliation in the period 2016 to 2018. In addition, after taking on the presidency in 2022, the government under President Wickremesinghe has been doggedly going ahead with setting up a Truth and Reconciliation Commission. However, given what is happening on the ground, the credibility of the government is low in terms of the people’s belief in its willingness to deliver on the national reconciliation process.

When a country wants to progress from having been in a situation of war and division to peace and reconciliation, there is an internationally accepted four-step process. This is to ascertain the truth of what happened during the period of conflict, hold to account those who violated the law, offer compensation to those who were victimized by the conflict, and engage in political reform to ensure that the root causes of the conflict are addressed. Before his term of office comes to a close in six months, President Wickremesinghe still has the opportunity to redeem the government in the eyes of both its people and the international community. He needs to do this soon as the international political climate is becoming negative to Sri Lanka where the reconciliation process is concerned, which would have a spillover effect onto the economic recovery process as well.

The annual statements of Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau that genocide occurred during the final stages of the war, the new resolution calling for a referendum on Tamil Eelam presented to the US Congress by a bipartisan group of US legislators, and the latest report of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights that the government should acknowledge the involvement of state security forces and affiliated paramilitary groups in human rights violations and to issue a public apology cannot be simply ignored. These different positions taken by powerful global actors show that the problem of reconciliation is not going to get better on its own, but needs to be actively promoted. Even though the time remaining is short the president needs to urgently convene an all party conference to work out a roadmap to reconciliation that they agree to support now and after the forthcoming election.

Jehan

 ALSO SEE .

Special Statement Delivered By President Ranil Wickremesinghe: Full Text

 

3 Comments

Filed under accountability, anti-racism, centre-periphery relations, charitable outreach, communal relations, democratic measures, doctoring evidence, ethnicity, governance, historical interpretation, Indian Ocean politics, law of armed conflict, legal issues, life stories, news fabrication, NGOs, parliamentary elections, plural society, political demonstrations, politIcal discourse, power politics, propaganda, reconciliation, self-reflexivity, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, slanted reportage, social justice, sri lankan society, Tamil civilians, tamil refugees, truth as casualty of war, war crimes, war reportage, world events & processes

3 responses to “Ranil Wickremasinghe’s Dilemma

  1. Darini

    Thanks Jehan: May be worth comparing whats going on in Gaza and the response of the Great Western Defenders of Human Rights and Democracy there, to what they say and do vis-a-vis Lanka? Double standards perhaps?
    Of course this does not vitiate the need for Sri Lankans and the State to be responsible and address war crimes, but always referencing the West as if are the beacons of truth, beauty and goodness, may be counter-productive to your argument. Would be far more effective to refer to Buddhism, Hinduism and Asian traditions of tolerance, reconciliation and wisdom.
    Reconciliation is a fine balance, between remembering and forgetting. Acknowledgement and letting go.
    External, neo-colonial actors like USAID and NED fund so-called “Memory, History and Reconciliation’ projects to reverse effect; to fetishize and construct Victim Hood: Funded local NGO memory and history projects are often designed to prolong and deepen the ‘beggars wounds’ of ethno-religious conflicts and often turn Victims into Killers and promote more violence as is the case in Israel/Palestine at this time.
    Mahmood Mamdani, an Anthropologist at Columbia University, has written a book titled : When Victims become Killers”.. Very relevant to how memory, history is gamed in post war contexts to continue to Divide and Rule by external colonial actors also in the name of Humanitarianism and Development as in Palestine today.
    Naomi Klein has called it: Humanitarian Disaster Capitalism, and I/NGOs are a bit part of this
    Often culture conflicts in the post/colony were Weaponised, yes, WEAPONIZED literally, to Divide and Rule, particularly after so-called Independence. This was by Imperial Powers. GLADIO style. Check out the world of Daniel Ganzer, on Gladio operations in Europe. These were assassinations, coups and Staging Riots, (later Colour Revolutions and Arab Spring Aragalaya Protests), to destabilize and secure imperial security and economic interests, as in the post/colonies, also against Communist and Socialist De-colonization, self-determination and National Liberation movements in the Third World a.k.a Global South during the COLD WAR.

    Sri Lanka’s ethnic conflict was part of a wider regional, classic Cold War, South Asia regional Proxy war – triggered between Yankie Dickie JRJ and Soviet allied India at the time– with their various security agencies running riot in the geo-strategic Indian Ocean island.
    Otherwise, how was it that Sinhalas and Tamils who had lived together for centuries and INTER-MARRIED over generations, suddenly could not live together –after Fake Independence from the British in 1948– when Ceylon became a “British Dominion”?

    Fetishizing the memory of pain, war and violence over 30 years of the so-called internal ethnic conflict , as USAID and EU funded NGO programs in Sri Lanka do today with a great deal of Nostalgia for the War times, ( now mysteriously, with a new Pass Over rite of Rice Kanji ritual (borrowed from Jewish and biblical history, of the unleavened bread, very curious Judeo_Christian memory replay ?) among East Coast Hindu Tamil communities seems designed to keep the ‘Beggars Wound” of Ethnic Conflict and Euro-American Colonial ‘Divide and Rule’ projects going, also to distract from the role of Mossad, Keenie Meenie British Mercenaries and their complicity in State war crimes against Sri Lankan Tamils?
    And now the EuroBond neocolonial IMF program of debt bondage. Recall that indentured labour was about Bonded Labour and colonialism was all about economic exploitation and asset stripping.
    Fetishizing SL Tamil suffering like the Jewish state did will end up with the Victims becoming Killers as we see in Palestine Today.
    Where the Israeli occupation and violence is fed by the NATO military business industrial complex.
    Its wheels within wheels indeed!
    Finally, again, reconciliation is a fine balance between remembering and forgetting. Acknowledging and letting be.. and those in the NED and EU-funded NGO reconciliation industry must be careful no be Rent-seekers– using the suffering of Others’ and digging up wounds that the real victims may rather FORGET.
    Again the book by Mamood Mamdani: “When Victims Become Killers” may be of interest.

  2. K. K. de Silva

    This is a plea for progress on reconciliation. However, there has been progress on an unexpected front: “a total of 1286 freehold deeds, encompassing all 15 Divisional Secretariat divisions within the Jaffna district, were distributed to the people, with the President symbolically participating in the awarding ceremony.” Sometime ago a ceremony was held at Polonnaruwa to distribute deeds to Mahaweli settlers.
    It is worth recording what a Professor of Agricultural Economics at Peradeniya, Rainer Schickele, said about freehold land deeds in the late 1960s:
    “There are grave drawbacks in a free market for farmland, particularly in traditional societies. The right of a small farmer freely to dispose of his land, to mortgage it and sell it, makes him vulnerable to pressures from investors and money lenders to mortgage his land for any loan he may need, and to be forced to sell it when he is unable to repay the loan on time.”
    It appears that Professor Schickele foresaw the possibility of farmers having to work as labourers in their own lands. This should not happen.

  3. EMAIL COMMENT from a Friend, MERRIL GUNARATNE [a Retd Supdt of Police and Former Ceylon cricketer in the 1960s]

    “Tnks Michael. Jehan has rightly been an unwavering advocate of reconciliation based on political concessions. Offering too little too late and the greed to win elections with Sinhala ,majorities, the two closely intertwined, have plagued this country. We are now, in my view, in a Catch 22 situ where with every delay, marriage of N and S minds is becoming more and more difficult. The recent embarrasments over memorials only show that the rifts are widening, with both sides being able to justify their stands. Unless statesmanship takes precedence over politics, this problem will only grow in magnitude. Should we not be conscious that there would be a land route linking North with Tamilnadu. Merril

Leave a Reply to DariniCancel reply