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When good men do nothing

The forcible eviction of Tamils from Colombo drew much criticism from both local and international quarters, forcing the government to provide for the return of some of the evicted people back to Colombo. This latest action clearly makes mockery of the government’s initial claim that it was merely facilitating a ‘voluntary’ transfer of people from Colombo to the North/East.

Now that the Prime Minister has apologized for the incident, and His Excellency has ordered for a probe on who accidentally pressed the ‘evict-the-Tamils-button’, and also given the fact that the Supreme Court has issued an order preventing the police from carrying out further evictions, it’s most likely that the government will try its utmost to sweep this incident under the rug and assign the blame, by the looks of it, to some ‘rotten eggs’ in the police department.

Before the government completely succeeds in burying this issue under an avalanche of other muck and mockery so readily available in contemporary Sri Lankan politics, perhaps it is worth to carry out a postmortem on the incidents of 7th of June in Colombo.

The simple question is- what the hell were they thinking?

How did the architects of this ‘ingenious’ security plan managed to think, waking up a few Tamil lodgers in Colombo and pack them away to Vauvniya or where ever they came from would be a perfectly acceptable practice? What could have possibly given them that level of arrogance?

To understand the reasons we must first investigate the issue it self, what really happened on that Thursday morning? It certainly wasn’t a PR debacle as few people with the chintana-syndrome has suggested, it’s not something that should have been done, but more discretely! It was clearly a violation of both human and fundamental rights of those people; but to understand this issue merely from s a citizens rights prospective (however right and just) is too convenient.

The most persistent issue may turn out to be not the action itself but rather the thinking which went behind the action, and that thinking is not so much ‘racist’ but rather more arrogant and assuming, this government and its apparatus seems to believe that any action, legal or otherwise is completely acceptable so long as it’s is submerged in the mantra of ‘National Security’.

What happened was more than just an incident; it’s was an expression of how low this government’s morals have gone and an indication how high our collective apathy has gone.

It’s an enactment of what a few liberal-minded people kept telling us of what would happen if things are allowed to continue the way they were, many failed to listen and branded these critics as being ‘overacting’.

To an extend this is understandable. Since the success of liberal politics, or rather, a liberal critique of politics, often hinges upon a construction of a draconian beast- a repressive regime which is undemocratic, unfair and somewhat fascist.

So perhaps the message got diluted in the rhetoric, maybe it was the messenger, or maybe there wasn’t enough messages or maybe, just maybe it might have been us.

There were abductions of civilians in Colombo, ethnically-biased mass arrests, there were threats and violence against journalists and media houses, MPs, aid-workers were murdered, yet we chose to remain silent, recently the police chief proclaimed that they will stay within the bounds of law ‘as much as possible’ and the JHU claimed this was a Sinhala country, still we were silent, this plan to evict Tamil-lodgers was announced in the papers days earlier, even then, only a few spoke out. It took the action itself for us some of us to see what we have come to.

This is a classic case of the boiled-frog syndrome. The story follows if a frog is put into a jug of boiling water it would jump straight out, but the same frog put into jug of lukewarm water, gradually brought to a boil wouldn’t notice it until its too late.

We are like that frog, if not worse.

We have let the power of authority to increase so gradually that we haven’t noticed how coercive and arrogant they have become. With each small increment of government impunity we have tolerated, have made the next increment less noticeable, we have let this government get away quite literally with murder and silently watched by thinking of it as being ‘unavoidable’ and as a necessarily evil.

Now maybe it is unavoidable but for lord’s sake we must stop being so apathetic, what’s more appalling here is not what is said and done but what is not said and not done. We have got to speak out, and where necessary, take action. None of this would be assisting the terrorists, or unreasonable in times of war for allowing democratic dissent is specifically what separates a democratic government from a terror organisation.

Price of liberty is eternal vigil, and this country could certainly use a little bit of that.


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galleblogger said,

June 12, 2007 @ 10:57 am

exactly! time to SHOUT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Peace at what price said,

June 12, 2007 @ 11:49 am

Reading this and many more and seeing all the horror I am in tears , my question would be what next ? The ethnic cleansing has already started I heard from a friend of mine that if the lodgers were kicked out successfully , then they will move in evicting people who stay for rent in various places , great guns for the lawyers who put the case if not for them , we still be talking about it , the chinthana idiots are the only ones at the moment in this country who are making money everybody else is just suffering , they ve tried everything and now it’s time to take ethnic cleansing to the forerun , who will voice us , we are dying or a dead race. I only pray for a divine intervention at this time since I feel things are getting closer and closer to what I experienced in 1983 and this time we would even beat rwanda in a larger scale .

Thushanti said,

June 14, 2007 @ 3:01 pm

“….an indication how high our collective apathy has gone. ”

This sentence chills me…its so true.

Sunimal Alles said,

February 17, 2008 @ 6:40 am

After over a year in Sri Lanka, I am sorry to see that there are very few “Good Men/persons” around. In addition, most of the few TRULY good persons, I have found are inactive (as they are scared to come forward) or are being sidelined/pushed down by “Self-glorifying and Egoistic, persons who proclaim that they are Good Men/Persons”. I define TRUE “Good Men/persons” as those who are 100% Honest (Those who do what they say in their professional and private lives), Neutral (Those who do not impose their ethnic, religious, political, or management affiliations/practices on others), Truthful and Just (Those who are guided by UNBAISED moral and social principles stemming from their religious/belief systems/philosophies) Uncorrupt and transparent (Those who do not have underlying interests in their thoughts and actions, take bribes, receive commissions from purchases and sales of goods in addition to their salaries, use their official resources for personal benefit and are not being supported/paid by external sources for the actions they undertake) and Accountable (Those who TOTALLY declare their assets, payments, benefits and remunerations received).

When the number of “Good Men/persons” who were active in countries such as Cote d’Ivoire, Liberia, Rwanda and DR Congo diminished, as they were forced into “states of war and displacement” put in place by those who profited from the spoils or decided to take hand outs from “Hand-Outers” everything started collapsing. Many “Good persons” (Who were hungry) were enticed by international crooks doing business and others in the relief and development industry that needed to maintain their jobs. They arrived and “killed the Spirit” of communities by imposing “relief items” on them which made displaced communities lethargic. They made them fearful by writing situation reports based on rumors, so that people were not motivated to return to their villages and restart their lives. After killing the Spirit, some made people believe that they needed international experts and pressure to exist and survive. I saw that civil society and people’s movements were funded by external sources, in order to maintain a presence and long-term needs, which crated dependency syndromes. It made them weak, biased and fragmented. Externally funded civil society survived for a while until bullets started to fly. When the funders of civil society ran, civil society broke up and ordinary people had to run to other countries, as there was no law and order. Ordinary people in countries I lived in suffered much (Some still Suffer) due to the aftermath of civil unrest that led to mass scale massacres and war. The causes were mainly because of the need to settle past hurts and atrocities (at times put in place by persons other than those that suffered), some greedy citizens supported by foreigners to exploit the riches, stubborn and egoistic politicians, freedom fighters and militants that took up arms to manifest their protests and terrorized populations in the process and greedy, dishonest and corrupt international aid and development workers.

I see the same in Sri Lanka and feel sad. As there are not many truly honest persons of good standing around, who are able to advocate and pressurize leaders to become transparent and accountable. I see that anarchy will arrive and eventual doomsday. The only way forward at this stage is to find “HONEST and NEUTRAL PERSONS” who are willing to be active voluntarily, set up independent and neutral CCC (Concerned Citizens Committees) in every village and urban quarters in Sri Lanka, and start analysing and solving issues at the local level. It will be dangerous to even think of setting up large movements, as they will either be corrupted or taken over by power hungry and egoistic fame seeking persons, wiped out by some forces that wishes to maintain anarchy to benefit, or organizations that have vested interests in order to maintain DS (Dependency Syndrome) so that Sri Lankans remain destitute and they can maintain their jobs and influx of funds. I remind all those who do this that they are criminals and inhuman, as they use human beings to keep themselves going for either fame, jobs or money.

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