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From democracy to farce

“Majority decisions tell us what people want at the moment, but not what it would be in their interest to want if they were better informed… The argument for democracy presupposes that any minority opinion may become a majority one.” - F.A. Hayek, The Constitution of Liberty

“…there is no room anymore to assist terrorism directly or indirectly, and talk about democracy. This is because they use this democratic space to design the destruction of the entire society. The democracy that creates an opportunity for terrorism is a joke. It is no simple joke but a deadly joke.” - The President, Address to the Nation, 6th December 2006

In an article I wrote recently titled I am an Enemy of the State, I said that there is no longer any difference between the Government and the LTTE in the manner in which they understand democracy and use terror to serve their own ends. I also said that this government’s war on terror is not in my name. More than any article I’ve written in the past 7 years, it received an exceptional outpouring of support from Sri Lankans in the country as well as from the diaspora, both Sinhala and Tamil. There were those who spoke of a “silent majority” whose spirit I had captured – a corpus alienated by this Government and its significant contributions to and justification of State terrorism. Some said the State, as a direct actor in or tacit attendant to the perversion of democracy by the systematic violation of human rights, needed to heed more voices such as myself. To both, I expressed a deep skepticism – I don’t claim to know the contours, composition of or indeed believe in the very existence of a silent majority against this administration. Even if I did and I animated them briefly with an inspiration they had found wanting in themselves, I don’t believe that a peoples movement in support of democracy on the lines of the Nepali example is imminent in Sri Lanka.

More on this anon, but it is in this light that the significance of and resulting disconnect between the understanding and practice of democracy by Hayek and our President must be seen. Hayek posits a compelling vision of what a democracy should be. The President’s statement is a chilling reality of what it is in Sri Lanka today. There is no cognition of diversity in the timbre of democracy, or what passes for it, in Sri Lanka today. Indeed, it is the democratic space itself that is a threat to “national security” - since my own voice, and that of others not in line with the government, is seen, branded and subsequently eliminated as those directly or indirectly supportive of the “terrorist threat”. So the overt war on terror is covertly also about defining the art of the possible within a democracy. To paraphrase Fareed Zakaria writing in the late 90’s on the rise of illiberal democracy, Sri Lanka’s emergent socio-political cancers are those within democracy. This makes them more difficult to handle, wrapped as they are in the mantle of legitimacy given by peoples kept largely in the dark. In Sri Lanka today, there is single Chintanaya - an omnipresent and omniscient vision - that trucks no dissent or question. Like Chavez in Venezuela, this President preserves democracy only to gradually and inexorably eviscerate it. In an incredible yet revealing move, there is now even a special police unit formed to monitor any public admonition of the Chintanaya in particular and the government in general. Free speech, it seems, is increasingly an unwarranted appendage to what is required of true patriots in a time of war - blind faith, a slavish subservience and supine acceptance of Truth as determined by a coterie not known for their intellectual rigour.

A case in point of this singular dullness was the President’s recent interview with Al-Jazeera. It is a confused and confusing riot. Reading it, I was almost convinced that all one really needs to do to secure peace, and indeed, for the LTTE to take the upper hand in global media stakes, is to stay silent and watch the ignominy of this government drowning in a quagmire of its own confusion. And yet, some of that which the President asserts is so outrageous, so incredible, that to allow them to pass without question is untenable. For example, the President on human rights in Sri Lanka:

Are you willing to accept that there are violations of human rights occurring?

Knowingly, a state will not violate human rights, abduct people. That must be stated very clearly.

But Human Rights Watch has documented at least 700 and more abductions during your term.

Many of those people who are said to have been abducted are in England, Germany, gone abroad. They have made complaints that they were abducted, but when they return they don’t say. Some talk of a few people abducted from Colombo. We do not know whether they are fighting in Killinochchi, we have no way of finding out. This is all against the government.

The first answer gives rise to all manner of glorious possibilities as to how human rights violations grow apace without the knowledge of the head of the state. Plausible deniability after all is a centre-piece of diplomacy and especially when one has trusted family to take care of the unpleasantness of contrary opinions voiced against one’s thought and actions. But it is the second that is really incredible. Clearly, my erstwhile colleague Vijayan, abducted from the heart of Colombo recently and transported some 200km to Badulla - traumatised and more than a little lucky to be alive - must have been attempting passage to Europe. And the hundreds of persons who have been meticulously documented by the Civil Monitoring Committee and human rights groups local and international, as having been abducted, missing or killed over the past year alone, are quite possibly enjoying the dolce vita on the French Riviera.

This is farcical and to reiterate the gravity of the human rights situation in Sri Lanka at present is really to flog a dead horse - the damning facts and figures are a matter of public record. Multiple parties have been involved in the violations and they are growing unabated in a culture of total impunity. We are fighting terror with terror, with democracy, or what little is really left of it, blind and powerless. As the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) recently said in response to an accusation that it was harder on the Government and softer on the LTTE which is a greater violator of human rights “…that the point here simply is that a democratically elected government that functions under the law is obviously to be held to higher standards of behaviour than an organisation recognised to be terrorist in nature. The point is not who is the greater offender. It is bad enough that the government is an offender.”

During the course of the interview with Al-Jazeera, the President contradicts himself (”As a government we cannot have talks. We say that we are ready for talks always”), confuses (”Like I said before, [Prabhakaran] thought that we were weak, that the state is weak, that he is strong. But now, he has come to a point, where he has accepted that”), perplexes (”For the people, LTTE, peace - the people want peace, that is the truth, without defeating the LTTE, without defeating the terrorism of the LTTE. There is no politics in this”), and ends up undermining his own war against terror (”If they do not attack me, I will not attack. If they stay where they are, keeping their arms, I have no problem with that”).

Out of a confounded farrago of befuddlement, we are left with the suggestion that an armed terrorist group in Sri Lanka is not a problem if they stay where they are and don’t bother “us”. Question obviously is what we make of the recent hue and cry of “liberating” the peoples of the North and East from the clutches of the LTTE? Quite frankly, the problem here is not even one that is based on the significant differences of opinion with the President on matters of conflict transformation and peacebuilding. Fundamentally, it is one of communication. Except through coercion, outright terror, spin and disinformation (in Sinhala primarily) this government, like any other illiberal regime, is unable to secure and strengthen support for its war against terror domestically or internationally. A coherent, principled articulation of and for war requires an intelligence, moral authority, strategic vision and process design well beyond the capacity of this government. Ignorance is bliss and an electorate enveloped in bliss is one that will countenance economic depravity, corruption, nepotism and a further erosion of rights.

But for how long?

Already, signs are growing of sky-rocketing inflation and economic downturn that will be exacerbated by soon to be introduced insurance surcharges on shipping, which will render unworkable and useless the three year plan of this government for ultimate victory against the LTTE. This is quite simply the inescapable reality of asymmetrical warfare - the LTTE only has to strike occasionally and approximately at key financial, public and military targets to maintain a fear psychosis, whereas the Government has to (in principle) avoid civilian casualties, maintain human rights and regularly drum up significant victories against the LTTE in order to show its local support base, and the international community, of progress in the battle-field. Ultimate victory will be invariably Cadmean in nature - a victory that damages the victors as much as the vanquished. Put another way, there is emphatically no military solution to this conflict – only a political one, founded on a radical, democratic transformation of the State and the manner in which it is imagined, constituted, governed and given expression to in a new constitution.

It is incontrovertibly not a task this government is up to.

I fear that if we as a nation and peoples cannot find expression at all levels of polity and society to that which binds us in a greater humanity and overarching Sri Lanka identity, we tacitly contribute to the emergence of careerist political prostitutes, illiberal regimes and in essence, terrorists, that make a mockery out of democracy.


563 have read this this article so far. You may also find these articles interesting:
  • Mahinda - Better than G.W Bush ? Photo credit: Al-Jazeera A friend recently forwarded me this story - an interview featuring the Sri Lankan President on Al Jazeera. I am slightly confused by it - and thought it would be useful to get some local interpretations… Click here for original source The following is a transcript of an interview between Al Jazeera’s 101... sam, June 1, 2007
  • Coming Back Home to a Truth more Dangerous than Fiction This columnist spent the last two weeks in the UK and the US speaking to opinion and policy makers on the human rights and humanitarian situation in Sri Lanka. In these conversations he pointed out that sadly and tragically, Sri Lanka was one of the worst places in the world for civilians caught up... Dr. P. Saravanamuttu, June 6, 2007

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david said,

June 6, 2007 @ 8:36 pm

Dear Sanajana,
This article, and the one before it (I am an enemy of the state), are exceptional, and truly worth reading… however, don’t you think you should try and get them translated in Sinhala and Tamil? That really is the only way to reach out to the majority of the people in this country, and communicate your ideas to a much wider range of people. If you could do so, and have them published in some of the popular dailies, you will have an even greater response.

groundviews said,

June 6, 2007 @ 9:11 pm

Thanks David. I should, and will, get these translated into Sinhala for subsequent publication. So much to do, so little time!

Cheers,

Sanjana

JM Bardo said,

June 6, 2007 @ 11:05 pm

I do not think that the President’s words should be taken quite as literally. The man is clearly not an accomplished liar - every answer seems to contradict the previous. He was lucky that Al Jazeera hasn’t been able to recruit Tim Sebastian yet. International PR is best left for smooth talking diplomats like Palitha Kohona.

“…there is now even a special police unit formed to monitor any public admonition of the Chintanaya”

Surely you are exaggerating! This sounds very far fetched to me.

Let us be rational here. Abductions are actually occuring in Sri Lanka - there is no question about that. But how should one go about actually stopping this - not just profiting from it? Convincing the Sinhalese public of the need to do something about the situation, and that they can indeed afford to do that something without compromising - humour me here - the popular war effort, may be a good start.

We need to recognise that just as there are innocent people being abducted and held to ransom or murdered, there is also likely to be just as many people who are really guilty, or are orchestrating the whole thing for political propaganda, individual publicity or foreign asylum, or have not even been abducted but are simply under arrest by the law enforcement authorities.

Our activists are incapable of, or unwilling to, distinguish between the real and the not so real, as long as it helps persuade the international lobby to put pressure on the government. The rationale seems to be that the government could be beaten into submission to allow in UN human rights monitors - supposedly the panacea for everything. You do not seem to realise that with that approach, you are alienating and antagonising the ordinary masses, among whom this president is amazingly popular just as Chavez is in Venezuela.

The sort of hysteria you are producing is counter productive. It is only going to make the public more cynical and impudent. Your fundamentalistic absolutivist zeal is a liability, because that allows your detractors to make you less credible in the public’s eye. For example, many of them do believe that the arrest and detention of the Akuna “journalists” is perfectly just, and they see our human rights activists hand in hand with LTTE supporters like Mano Ganesan and leftist extremists such as Siritunga Jayasuriya demanding their release while lamenting abductions and the human rights record. How could anyone then take them seriously?

The real silent majority that you refuse to engage, but just happens to the biggest obstruction to anything being done about the situation, are the rural Sinhalese masses. Except for myself and a few others, they hardly have a voice on the Internet. They do not watch Channel 1 MTV and read the Sunday Leader or even CPA’s Pederal-vadaya. They are not going to be convinced when you go up to them and declare that the government must be held to unrealistic standards of behaviour, which would inevitably lead to a defeat in war and more terrorist attacks in Colombo. You cannot tell them that RLO members must be set free because their confessions were supposedly obtained with coercion, when the people have been presented with video recordings and pictures of these people training with the LTTE. They are not going to believe that the restrictions on Tamils in Colombo are overkill when the Sinhala newspaper editorials tell them of terrorists planning out attacks in lodges.

You need to be realistic and compromise on your part. There is no other way to win them over. History shows that you cannot bully them - ignore it at your own peril. They will brush you off as an NGO/Madya kotiya and shed no tears when you too get a lift on a white van.

groundviews said,

June 6, 2007 @ 11:49 pm

JM,

The diasporic comfort does lend itself to the misunderstandings in your comments, and indeed, the larger and more dangerous misreading of the timbre of democracy in Sri Lanka. Firstly, your ignorance of the Police Unit to protect the Chintanaya is all its glory is particularly telling - it is present, it is real. See http://www.tamilnet.com/art.html?catid=13&artid=22287

Secondly, you begin by admonishing the President for not being an accomplished liar. I did not know lying, and doing it well, was on the list of desirable for the highest public office in the country. However, I take your observation in a larger sense - we are dealing with, as Sara mentions in his article, someone who is only given to “imbecilic allegations”.

Your example of Chavez telling - and I have already stated what I feel are the similarities between him and Mahinda in this article.

The points you make about Mano Ganesan and the CMC are also from the position, quite commonly articulated here, that whatever they say has to be inaccurate, false, with a hidden agenda and determined to undermine, scathe, or otherwise wrongfully shame this government - which likes to see and promote itself as the embodiment of decency, civility and democracy.

That it is not, is far from it, and as I have said in the past, through its duplicity and lying is as reprehensible as the enemy it is attempting to wipe out, are inescapable facts of life in Sri Lanka. Perhaps Melbourne’s comfort and security are indeed a world away from the realities here.

Finally, there is no word called “absolutivist”. I believe the word you are searching for is absolutist and that is precisely what I am when it comes to the inviolability of human rights.

JM Bardo said,

June 7, 2007 @ 12:10 am

Look matchang, I am not going to disagree with anything you have said, but try telling it to the Sinhalese public. The more pertinent question is, how are you going to convince them with this attitude? I may claim to speak for them, but I do not represent them. Look at it from their point of view. Do you not need their cooperation?

Thanks for the English lesson. Why doesn’t this administration source well-connected erudite articulate lobbyists from the NGO sector? You could certainly do a better job than Rambukwella.

groundviews said,

June 7, 2007 @ 12:28 am

JM, your disbelief of the Police Unit I mentioned in my article I believe is reflective of the larger bliss that I mention in my article many in the South also demonstrate. It is the bliss of ignorance and it is indeed a significance challenge. This is precisely why I write in the manner that I do.

I am not searching for the cooperation of the general populace or to “convince the masses” - that’s the job of politicians and the more ambitious of civil society activists. All I wish to do is to write while I can on topics close to my heart, that you may choose to disagree and deride, yet others may choose to accept and celebrate. I treat both equally and am keenly aware of Montesquieu who said “An author is a fool who, not content with boring those he lives with, insists on boring future generations.”

I can only apologise if I bore you, but assure you that I would much rather be a fool and say what I have had to say in a country not known for its celebration of diversity, pluralism or a healthy contest of wit, those cornerstones of democracy - in the North-East or, as it turns out, anywhere else in the country since the election of this government to power.

suntzu said,

June 7, 2007 @ 9:24 am

Sanjana…even if you translate this into sinhala and tamil like David wants you to, I doubt that you will achieve anything…best of luck anyway…and may the “Chinthanaya” be with you!

ps: hope your outspokenness wont get you abducted or bumped off (or both)… by people who want to bring disrepute to Mahinda and his government! Ha! ha! haaa!

punitham said,

June 7, 2007 @ 11:21 am

sanjana
i’m repeating what david has said - translate this into tamil and sinhala and give it to vernacular press - citizen journalism?

Aliya said,

June 7, 2007 @ 11:41 am

Hats off again for your outspokenness!
Surely you got a lot of support and new suggestions to carry out.
However, I think the type of support you got does not embody the whole community. It’s only a marginal fraction, not even a 1%.. It’s the same for ‘silent majority’. It’s not the fault of the president if he sees it as negligible.
And, what the president is talking about is an adoption of Democracy suiting to the context of Sri Lanka. I agree that all Tamils are not LTTE and there’re Sinhalese LTTE. But given the circumstances, it’s not fair by the governmnet if we write down the equation, “Government of Sri Lanka = LTTE”.
We want them to handle the LTTE matter somehow- politically or militarily, don’t we?
With or with out the non- declared war, LTTE will have occasional strikes on key financial, public and military targets to maintain a fear psychosis. They have done that ever since they declared war against the GoSL.
It’s tragic for me. I don’t know why some people always try to make farce out of everything. Must be due to their love for fun………………..

SH said,

June 7, 2007 @ 2:10 pm

Suntzu, I suggest you contact Mahinda and his cronies and give them the same forewarning. Actually, in their case, I sense the chances are greater. The enemies they have been collecting so far, probably outnumber the hairs on their head. Not a laughing matter at all.

Hidden Dragon said,

June 7, 2007 @ 4:24 pm

I’m glad you have the courage to stay in Sri Lanka and take a forthright stand on the great tragedy that is unfolding here day by day. Just one tiny bit of advice from a well-wisher: please don’t take any swipes at expatriate Sri Lankans. Because, at the very least, they form part of your readership. They have a right as much as anyone to voice their views, even if they are in the relative security of Melbourne or Maryland. Many of them have been driven to those places simply to have a better life for themselves. There’s no harm in that, surely? BTW, lest I feel the sharp jab of your pen, I’m firmly rooted in paradise!

NdM said,

June 7, 2007 @ 7:43 pm

I am glad for Sanjana’s articles and for the appreciative comments here by readers. But I recoil a little when I read the paternalistic advice to him about how to do even better and reach larger audiences etc. I don’t read Sanjana as claiming to be a one man cure for all the ills of Sri Lanka. But his writing invites us to reconsider our own complaisance and become a part of the solution. To try and teach Sanjana how to communicate better seems rather an odd response to that invitation.

SH said,

June 8, 2007 @ 9:07 am

Hidden Dragon,

Thanks for putting a word in for us expats :)
I must admit though as an expatriate Sri Lankan, I try to be more sensitive to the opinions and situations of those who actually live in the country and have the courage to speak out about what is happening in the country. I hope other expats will do the same. Some of us in fact have been in situations that have provided us with no choice but to leave, making us even more aware of the problems that are faced by those living there.

With regard to being sensitive I was concerned my previous heartfelt piece of advice might be too inflammatory. Fortunately this is moderated, so I let it through hoping it would be removed if considered to be so.

ivap said,

June 9, 2007 @ 8:42 am

sanjana

Another timely article on the signs of times that sri lankans currently live in. It is indeed good to see your attempts to hold the government and the democratic institutions of the land to a higher standard, a necessity in these troubled times. Something which seems to evade many of the blogpheres commentariat. Having said that, a sharper analysis and harsher words towards our shared nemesis in the north should also be written if we are to understand it’s caustic affects on the timbre of democracy.

As I have mentioned to you in the past, I still feel that the need to translate your articles into singhala and tamil are a necessity. Particularly if one is aiming to spread these memes amongst those whose reasoning and decision making occurs in the languages closer to their hearts.

I too was flabbergasted by that rather baffling interview on Al Jazira and am glad that someone has taken him to task on the shameful display.

On another note, in your articles/essays there are many references to democracy but at the end of each reading I do not get the sense that it refers to liberal democracy. Even in this article it talks of democracy and illiberal democracy but not LD. Is liberal democracy implicit in your use of the term democracy? I only ask because, as you would know, there is a significant difference between “liberal democracy” (irrespective of how implemented by each nation) and other forms of democracy (imagined or practiced).

Singam said,

June 9, 2007 @ 1:26 pm

Sanjana, I gain from your articles and the responses. They give a perspective with more dimensions than just your article. Having interacted with Sinhalese of various age groups over the years, especially during the last 10 years, a large majority of them has no idea of our problem or the parametrs of a just solution. Many parrot the priests or the politicians. May be appealing directly to the people may not change their views.

Buddhist priests converted Asoka to spread the Buddhist philosophy. Arahat Mahinda converted Thevanampiya Tissa to convert the people in Sri Lanka to follow Buddhism. Early Chiristians converted Constantine to spread the faith among the people. If the leading Buddhist priests can be converted to ideas of HR, Federal or confederal solution to the problem, the Sinhala Buddhist people and their leaders will, I think, change. But who is to bell the cat?

cyberviews said,

June 9, 2007 @ 4:58 pm

Singam, there are a few civil society organizations that are trying do this by mobilizing the clergy in the cause. I know of an organization that is drawing up a programme enlisting the help of the enlightened clergy already in their ranks to spread the message. Having met some of these clergy, some of whom come from remote parts of the country, one could hope, that their principled positions of tolerance, based on religious precept, would have some impact. But I agree it is the leading priests that have to be converted as they are the opinion shapers. However, some of these leading priests and their parties, obtain the oxygen for their existence from the symibiotic and parasitic links established with the major parties. These major parites in turn are sustasined by their voter base among the masses. It is here that the village priest, by simply preaching the essence of the buddhist doctrine could spread a message of tolerance. A bottom up approach to belling the cat!!!

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