There was a time, not so long ago, when Sri Lanka was known for the
quality of its democracy. In 1975, when I was a foreign service officer
at the United States Embassy there, the country was in economic straits
but proud of its international reputation for an independent political
culture, a feisty media, and a remarkably high standard of education and
social services. |
There were tensions between the Sinhalese and Tamils, but there was also
a history of co-operation and respect amid Sri Lanka’s ethnic and
religious diversity. Hindu shrines thrived within the country’s most
sacred Buddhist temples. Christians and Muslims played a prominent
political role. And at least among the urban elite, Tamils and Sinhalese
studied together, played together, and often married each other.
Today, Sri Lanka is another country. The bloody war between the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam and the government tore the country
apart after 1983. The U.S. and many other friends of Sri Lanka supported
the government in its fight. In 2009, the military succeeded in
crushing the Tigers. But the government, after winning the war, has not
been able to manage the peace or rebuild Sri Lanka’s democratic
traditions.
Instead, the country looks to be drifting toward authoritarianism.
Journalists are terrified and intimidated by arrests and mysterious
assaults on those critical of the government. The annual press freedom
index lists Sri Lanka near the bottom, just above China and North Korea.
The once-independent judiciary has learned not to challenge the
government’s edicts. The war-heavy defence establishment carries out
many internal security functions, and “white vans” have become
synonymous with the disappearance of dissidents who speak out against
the government. Extremist Buddhist clergy have attacked churches and
mosques, with little response from police and with minimal condemnation
by political leaders.
But one of the saddest legacies of the long war is the polarization of the Tamil and Sinhalese communities.
President Mahinda Rajapaksa and his government had the opportunity to be
magnanimous in victory, and to offer the minority Tamil community clear
signals that the government would respond to their legitimate
grievances, and would offer a modicum of regional autonomy for the
traditional Tamil heartland of the north and east. It has failed to do
that.
The government also needed to acknowledge and deal with the scar left by
the bloody end of the war, in which tens of thousands of innocent Tamil
civilians were killed by indiscriminate military shelling and by Tamil
Tiger hostage-taking.
The government still owes its people — and especially the relatives of
those who died — an honest accounting of that time and a genuine effort
to bring to justice wrongdoers. Sweeping these tragedies under the
carpet will not help the nation heal nor bridge the divide between
Tamils and Sinhalese. There must be truth before there can be meaningful
reconciliation.
With the government so far unresponsive, there is increasing pressure
for the United Nations to take action. The UN’s senior human rights
official, Navi Pillay, said in August that if Sri Lanka didn’t make
meaningful progress on reconciliation, particularly on issues of
accountability during the final stages of the war, “the international
community will have a duty to establish its own inquiry mechanisms.”
The issue is coming to a head as the UN Human Rights Council meets in
Geneva this month. The United States and other members of the council,
including neighbour India, last year supported a resolution calling on
Sri Lanka to undertake its own independent and credible investigation
into alleged war crimes.
The government of Sri Lanka has levied accusations of bad faith and
hypocrisy at the countries calling for action by the UN Human Rights
Council. In fact, the council is acting only because Sri Lanka has
failed to do so.
The world community supported Sri Lanka during its battle with the Tamil
Tigers, and respected the country’s traditional commitment to
democratic governance and to religious and ethnic tolerance. If the
government had demonstrated that it was listening to the voices within
the country calling for justice and reconciliation, and for an accurate
accounting of the actions of the military, there would be no call for
action in Geneva.
It is Sri Lanka that has changed, not the UN or the nations calling for action at the Human Rights Council.
After five years of stalling by the government, it is time for an
international investigation to do what Colombo has been unwilling to do.
Donald Camp is a senior associate at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, in Washington D.C.
(McClatchy-Tribune News Service)
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