Those who lecture Sri Lanka on what is best for the
country and the people, claim that accountability and justice are necessary and
non-negotiable preconditions for reconciliation. Never mind their moral authority to
pontificate there is truth in this position.
‘Forgive-and-forget’ is easy to say but hard to obtain. It is the same for the aggrieved, whether
grief arrived in May 2009 or somewhere in the mid-eighties for the simple
reason that some sorrows can only be laid to rest with any degree of finality
with the death of the sorrowing.
In short, there are no shortcuts in the matter of
‘closure’. There can be no selectivity, not of community, not within community
and not in terms of week, month, year or decade. Complete closure, as mentioned, will only
come with death. This side of death,
there are things that help and things that detract.
Leaving aside the legality of the matter and
punishment warranted if infringement is determined, S. Sritharan did not help
when he did his ‘Mahaveer’ number in Parliament, calling Velupillai Prabhakaran
a national hero. It is hard to
understand how a man who ordered hundreds of Tamils to be killed, abducted and conscripted
thousands of little children to carry out terrorist activities and held some
300,000 civilians hostage could be hero to Tamil people, never mind the death,
destruction, dismemberment and displacement invited and engineered by the man’s
preferred strategies.
The leadership of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA)
was quick to distance itself from Sritharan’s position. Party Leader R.
Sampanthan, however, has skirted around the vexed question of hero-credentials,
offering ‘the man is dead’. If the fact
of death is itself a conversation stopper than the TNA (and Sri Lanka’s
detractors in the international community) can drop all talk of investigation,
accountability and justice. TNA MP
Sumanthiran did no better when he chided Government MPs for not stopping
Sritharan. Surely, he knows that charity
begins at home? He could have himself
intervened. Both leave us wondering
whether they have a ‘public story’ or a ‘Colombo story’ about Prabhakaran as
well as a private (Beyond-Vavuniya) narrative.
Sritharan, in this aspect, appears more honest.
If reconciliation is predicated on accountability
and justice then the TNA and other one-time apologists for the LTTE who even
now squirm and wriggle when questioned about Prabhakaran would have to turn
searchlight inwards. Even if they don’t
they cannot stop the questions being asked.
This is because reconciliation is a two-way street. They can’t point finger without applauding
the Government for saving more than 300,000 Tamils held hostage by
Prabhakaran. They could ask Murali
Reddy, embedded journalist during the last stages, what he saw and wrote at the
time, if they still have doubts.
All this indicates the amount of acrimony and
distrust that still exists or else the pernicious readiness to pretend to be
acrimonious and distrustful. That’s
Cameronesque politicking. The TNA can do
better if only because all things taken into account they belong to a community
of largely gentle disposition that can draw from a refined, accommodating and
generous culture.
If the TNA needs inspiration at this point, UNP
National List MP R Yogarajan’s observations on the issue of commemoration would
suffice. Yogarajan said, ‘Both parties
should commemorate war heroes together’.
One can dispute the suitability of the term ‘hero’ of course. One can
argue about what the term ‘parties’ means here.
Everyone, however, can commemorate the dead for that’s ‘common ground’,
‘heroism’ being a contentious word that could revive old animosities.
Yogarajan, when heckled by Government MPs, also
said, ‘Let’s change the date if you don’t want to commemorate on November 26th
which was fixed by the LTTE’. He was
essentially saying that it is not profitable to get embroiled over ‘best day to
commemorate,’ implying rather that what is important is the act of
commemorating together. Yes, the key
word is ‘together’. We can, after all,
drop all labels and keep ‘citizen’ and therefore ‘fellow-citizen’ intact.
We could theoretically argue until we are dead and
(therefore) done about accountability, justice and the best pathways to
reconcile, but nothing stops us from opting to do the little things that can
heal.
The TNA, perhaps for reasons of political
expedience, may not have ears for the likes of Yogarajan. President Mahinda Rajapaksa, however, has no
reason to object. Indeed, as head of state, he is better positioned to take the
lead here. It will not get us to
‘Reconciliation’, sure, but it will get us out of hatred and suspicion. That would be a big step.
msenevira@gmail.com
Yes, it is definitely a more humane approach than trying to justify the positions from where a hero of the adversaries' camp would be a villain and as long as we remember the people who were killed at the hands of each other separately, it would always leave that gap wide open. The real villains were those who tried to see differences among people. Prabhakaran would have been honestly agitated at the beginning later when he felt the power he got over others( given by others) made him think as an almighty.So, taking the lives of others was just routine.What mattered really was the reality that innocent people who were turned into killing machines also lost that hesitation in taking others' lives.If they did not become high handed and out of control, would there have been a necessity for an army to fight against them ? It was political surgery.A cancerous situation had to be eliminated.In the international scene it became a 'cock-fight' and others enjoyed betting, and winning till a country's fate had to be readjusted.That is what happened and there is no killing now. Sritharan is an example for a political actor only.It is not the wish of the people.No one calls Hitler a Hero.It was same with Pol Pot. The truth is that. But the issue is different.Those who made billions in extorting have become desperate.In Sri Lanka there should be very strong laws to prosecute irresponsible people who instigate. Minimum of ten years hard labour.Few behind bars will cure this ailment.
ReplyDelete