Shyam Tekwani ... taken from …Alas the date of pubn is not indicated clearly… it is probably circa 2010
- Sri Lanka’s quarter-century civil war may be over, but many of the underlying causes of the war continue to linger.
- The international network of the defeated Tamil Tigers continues to control immense financial and logistical resources and is supported by the nearly one million Tamil diaspora. Meanwhile, the victorious Rajapaksa government has been slow in implementing its promise of political settlement and integrating the minorities into the political and socioeconomic life of the country. These realities may contribute to the radicalization of a new generation of Tamils, both on the island and in the diaspora in North America, Europe, Australia and Asia.
- International sanctions on the island nation will impede the process of reconstruction and resettlement—even as inflation drags the economy down further—and lead to social unrest.
- No amount of foreign aid will mitigate Sri Lanka’s problems without ensuring better governance to address the country’s serious economic and political challenges.
- The last stages of the war saw a rush of internally displaced persons (IDPs) take to the high seas, sailing off to countries of the European Union, Canada and Australia seeking asylum as refugees. The urgent task of resettling three hundred thousand Tamil IDPs has been slow, creating further resentment among the minority community.
SHYAM TEKWANI Profile in Wikipedia
Shyam Tekwani is professor at the Daniel K. Inouye Asia-Pacific Center for Security Studies where he specializes in political violence, terrorism and counterterrorism; security dynamics of South Asia and the role of media in security. His research interests include the role of media in conflict, new media and security sector reforms.
Professor Tekwani’s extensive background in the media as a journalist reporting conflict and insurgency in the Indo-Asia Pacific includes his exclusive reportage of the ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka which he covered exhaustively since its inception in 1983. His move to academics converged with the parallel shift of insurgencies and propaganda to the Internet in the early-90s and his early academic work focused on the use of new media technologies by terrorists and insurgent groups.
Professor Tekwani has been studying terrorism and insurgency for over thirty-five years. He has taught courses and lectured widely across countries at universities and institutions, including the last decade at the School of Communication Studies in the Nanyang Technological University, Singapore.
A native of India, Professor Tekwani earned a B.A.(Honors) in history and comparative religion from Visva-Bharati University, Santiniketan, and an MFA (Master of Fine Arts) in Photography from the Maryland Institute College of Art, Baltimore.
Professor Tekwani has authored and co-authored several books, book chapters, articles and opinion pieces. Some of his publications include: (ed.) Media and Conflict Reporting in Asia (2008); “Online Networks of Terrorist Groups and their implications for Security: A Case Study of Sri Lanka’s Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (2007)”; “Embedded Journalists – lessons from the Iraq War”(2005); “The Internet in the 2004 Sri Lankan Elections” (with Randy Kluver, 2007); “Two Indias: The Role of the Internet in the 2004 National Elections” (with Kavitha Shetty,2007); “The Media, Information Revolution and Terrorism in Southeast Asia”(2004); and “The Tamil Diaspora, Tamil Militancy, and the Internet” (2003).
Professor Tekwani is currently completing his book, Serendip to Sri Lanka on the Tamil Tigers and the ethnic war in Sri Lanka.
Professor Tekwani’s Publications:
- Building Climate Resilience in Small Island Developing States: Partnerships for Adaption in the Indian Ocean Region
- Workshop Held to Review Maldives’ Strategy on Preventing Violent Extremism
- Security Nexus | Webinar Episode 6: Power Play in South Asia
- The Uprising in Sri Lanka
- New OpEd on South Asia and Terrorism
- New OpEd looks at Pakistan and good governance
- Media and the Security Practitioner
- Hindsight, Insight, Foresight: Thinking about Security in the Indo-Pacific.
- Pakistan can help win peace in Afghanistan, but only once it’s stable and secure itself
- New OpEd on India and its Neighbors by Shyam Tekwani
- Sri Lanka’s return to ethnic majoritarianism
- New article by Dr. Jeffrey Hornung & Prof. Shyam Tekwani for The Diplomat
- Shutting Down the Mobile Phone and the Downfall of Nepalese Society, Economy and Politics
- The long afterlife of Sri Lanka’s civil war
- Issues for Engagement: Asian Perspectives on Transnational Security Challenges
A NOTE from Michael Roberts, October 2024
Though an Indian Shyam Tekwani was embedded as a journalist among the Tamils during the ‘reign’ of the Tamil Tigers and took some revelatory photographs of LTTE attacks and their suicidal warriors.
I got to know him when I had a short research spell at the NUS in singapore where he was alecturer at an university. He has since moved to professorial status in Hawaii.
