Ranil Wickremesinghe’s views on media freedom are
two-faced. One, when in the opposition
and one when in power. One sports a
smile and the other a scowl. This
two-facedness, if you will, is not Mr Wickremesinghe’s preserve. It’s part of the political culture. In general those in power mimic those they
replaced and those who are replaced mimic those who replaced them. On most counts.
It is typical for the Opposition to champion media freedom
and for those in power to curb the same, directly or indirectly. It is also typical for those in power,
especially those who feel insecure, to vilify critics by claiming that they are
serving the interest of ‘the enemy’ (variously defined of course). During
the Rajapaksa regime those who criticized the government were labeled traitors in
the pay of separatists or foreign powers intent on dividing the country. During the regime of Chandrika Kumaratunga
critics were called ‘Sinhala Buddhist chauvinists’ or ‘war-mongers’. Today’s
critics are called ‘Rajapaksa loyalists’.
So there’s really no ‘venasa’ (change) in Ranil
Wickremesinghe’s occasional attacks on and not-so-veiled threats against journalists
and media houses. Not too long ago he referred to a journalist
as a dog and called for the control of certain ‘dog-media-institutions’ thereby
clearly indicating that he’s moved from good-governance to dog-governance; quite
unbecoming, especially for a man who his wide-eyed loyalists consider ‘a brain
and nothing else’ (thanikara
molayak).
Just the other day he ranted once again, targeting his longtime
bugbear, the genial and quite nondescript editor of the Daily Mirror, Kesara
Abeywardena. This is what he said:
"Last Monday's
Daily Mirror called for the removal of Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera. I
know the editor of the Daily Mirror. He once wrote saying I too should be
removed from UNP leadership. We will have to see what we should do if he does
not resign from his post. He is possessed by Mahinda Rajapaksa. Daily Mirror
carried anti Tamil, anti Muslim articles. Now they want ministers to resign. We
must teach journalists a good lesson."
What was Kesara’s crime, though? Did he publish a news item where he craftily
threw in a quote by some political maverick making a speech in an unrelated
context, selectively extracting the line ‘Mangala should be removed?’ Did he write an editorial calling for the
Foreign Minister’s removal? No. All he did was to publish a political
commentary titled “Why
Mangala must exit and Amunugama must enter”. The columnist, Dayan Jayatilleka, to be fair,
makes a cogent argument for the Foreign Minister’s removal.
Dayan has his preferred political outcomes. His commentary is informed by the same. He is clever with words and he knows enough
history, political science and sociology to make his conclusions sound like
they are the only ones that are logical.
There have been times when I’ve disagreed with Dayan, but on this
occasion I concur with him totally. But
let’s assume that he is way off the mark. Let’s assume that he is just making a
case for an outcome that serves his political objectives. The fact is, however, that his is only a
comment.
A comment, Mr Wickremesinghe. It’s free, Mr Wickremesinghe. He is offering an opinion on facts which he
has not distorted. Weighted maybe, but
that’s allowed Mr Wickremesinghe. You
should know this. Editors, especially
liberal editors, reserve space for regular columnists from across the political
spectrum. Kesara gives space to people
who are rabidly opposed to Dayan Jayatilleka and who regularly trot out what I
would call nauseatingly servile pieces about your administration, Mr
Wickremesinghe. I don’t know of any
occasion when someone objecting to such views called him names and declared
that Kesara would be taught a lesson.
What does Ranil Wickremesinghe want, I wonder. The entire media to come together and call
him ‘saviour’, salaam him at every turn, sing hosannas and crack down hard on
his detractors? Is that the ‘media freedom’ that this good-governance
government envisaged, never mind what was promised?
Ranil has issued a threat in no uncertain terms. He’s basically told Kesara ‘Resign or else!’ He’s read the riot act and he has the riot
police ready. That’s the message he’s given and not just to Kesara but anyone
who dares question his judgment. Well,
speaking of judgment, he was found lacking when he appointed Arjuna Mahendran
as Governor, Central Bank. He did fire
some shots at those who criticized Mahendran, ably supported of course by his
loyal sidekick Lakshman Kiriella, the Minister of Higher Education whose
judgment too has been called to question after it was found that he had
appointed dozens of advisors with hardly any educational qualifications and
even tried to justify the use of public funds to pay the salaries of these ‘party
loyalists’. Ranil’s tirades did not stop
the media. It did not stop
commentators. Arjuna Mahendran had to
go. At this rate, the call will not be
for the exit of a bad-judgment-appointee but the appointer himself, Ranil
should understand. Arrogance was a key
factor that saw the ‘exiting’ of Mahinda Rajapaksa. This too he should not forget.
He says that the Daily Mirror has carried anti-Tamil and
anti-Muslim articles? Maybe that’s how
he reads and maybe that’s an indication of his ability to read, but then again
others can say that the Daily Mirror has carried ‘anti-Sinhala’ and ‘anti-Buddhist’
articles. After all, the Daily Mirror
gives as much or more space to anti-Sinhala and anti-Buddhist commentators or,
if you want to be sweet about it, those who attack Sinhala and Buddhist extremists
and slip in crass generalizations to attack the entire collective. Hasn’t Wickremesinghe seen any of these
pieces?
Those who know Wickremesinghe’s ways will not be surprised
at this manifest inability to stomach any criticism and especially calling his judgment
to question. What might surprise a lot
of people is the deafening silence of the bleeding-heart media-rights advocates
who could barely hold their tongues at the slightest perceived wrong done to
journalists. What happened to the
Editors’ Guild? What of the Free Media
Movement? What of their lords and ladies
abroad who regurgitate their whines in international forums and fire off strongly
worded missives to anyone who might be willing to listen? How about the rights-bloc (shall we call them?),
those who cheered the yahapaalanists all the way? How about those self-righteous above-them-all columnists who rant and rave about Sinhala Buddhist chauvinism (but are quiet on Tamil, Muslim and Christian varieties) in the Daily Mirror and elsewhere who also talk about media freedom? How about Dr Ranga Kalansuriya? How many such tirades from Wickremesinghe
will it take for them to wake up or will that never happen because they are
simple in pretend-slumber?
Let’s stop there.
There’s no point doing the horage-ammagen-pena-ahana
number (asking the crook’s mother about the crook’s whereabouts).
Let’s get back to Ranil Wickremesinghe. On the 16th of May, 2004 the ‘Sunday
Observer’ published an article titled ‘Move over Ranil,
your time’s up’. It was a political
comment. It was an exit call. Wickremesinghe didn’t say a word. He didn’t call for the particular editor’s
blood. He didn’t say ‘we must teach
journalists a good lesson’. He was quite
the lamb. He was in the Opposition
then. Says a lot doesn’t it?
Malinda Seneviratne is
a freelance writer. Blog:
malindawords.blogspot.com. Email: malindasenevi@gmail.com. Twitter: malindasene.
2 comments:
Most Sri Lankans do NOT know how to "enjoy" the new freedom they were given by Ranil & MY3. Most are abusing it. This is the backward nature of our people, sadly.
Hey MS, what do you think about ETCA?
THAT is the Economic and Technology Cooperation Agreement (ECTA) with India.
You are for or against it?
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