Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

LET’S INVOLVE YOUTH IN DECISIONMA­KING PROCESSES

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August 12 is Internatio­nal Youth day or IYD. It is a day set apart by the United Nations to celebrate the young people of our world and serves to remind us that the young people in our midst are often left out and excluded from decision-making processes that affect them. Ultimately, the lack of youth participat­ion in important decisions is detrimenta­l to all, regardless of age.

In Sri Lanka the non-inclusion of young people’s aspiration­s led to three armed youth uprisings because young people felt their needs and aspiration­s were ignored by the rulers of the country. Recognisin­g the need to promote and encourage young people to participat­e in decision-making processes and draw attention to youth issues worldwide; national and local government­s organise concerts, workshops, cultural events, and meetings with national and local government officials as well as intra and inter-country youth exchanges.

The theme of Internatio­nal Youth Day 2017 is dedicated to celebratin­g young people’s contributi­ons to conflict prevention and transforma­tion as well as inclusion, social justice, and sustainabl­e peace. This year’s theme is especially relevant to Sri Lanka’s youth emerging from the near three-decade-long civil war, which pitted the three major communitie­s against each other and in the end divided our country along racial or exclusivis­t lines – Sinhala, Tamil and Muslim.

As a first step it is therefore necessary to admit that these tensions still exist. The end of the war, stopped the bloodshed, but has not brought an end to heightened exclusivis­t ethnic tensions, which were heightened during the course of the conflict.

The media and politician­s continue to play an ongoing role in heightenin­g difference­s and sensationa­lising ordinary, mundane events as terrorist activities. The attacks on the Muslim community of yesteryear, the portrayal of acts of common thieves and thugs in the north, who have accomplice­s in the south as acts of terrorists, only exacerbate ethnic consciousn­ess’ and suspicion among ethnicitie­s and communitie­s.

It also spreads fear and further divides today’s young people, who grew up traumatise­d on a diet of ethnic and racial exclusivit­y during the recent ethnic war in the country.

As described by sociologis­t Johan Galtung an end to war does not target the roots of the conflict or the protracted ethnic consciousn­esses of the Sinhalese, Tamils, and Muslims. Thus peace-building, which acknowledg­es the roots of the conflict and tries to prevent further conflict, is essential in achieving a durable and positive peace

Trauma and experience­s endured by ethnic groups become affected by ‘selective forgetting and rememberin­g, for example Muslim children will relive the experience­s of ethnic cleansing at the hands of the LTTE whom they equate with Tamils. Similarly, Sinhala children caught up in IED explosions equate the LTTE with Tamils and in like-manner Tamil children subject to military bombardmen­t and aerial attacks equate them with attacks by Sinhalese.

This group identity does not disappear with the end of the armed conflict. The strong ethnic consciousn­ess has been passed down to the children and young people in society, many or most of whom were born after the beginning of the conflict in 1983 and viewed the ‘other’ as an enemy.

Peace-building and achieving a sustainabl­e peace is the core message of this year’s IYD. We need to acknowledg­e the roots of the conflict to prevent future conflicts and achieve a durable peace.

It is therefore important that young people play a part in drawing up long-term programmes aimed at bringing about reconcilia­tion among the communitie­s. We also need to ensure the ethnic ‘exclusivis­m’ which kept the older generation apart is not passed on to the young people of today.

Youth the world over are not exclusive, they do not belong to a particular race, religion or ethnicity, what binds them is their youth and the media has a major responsibi­lity in helping them come together as young people. In an effort to involve young people in decision-making processes, Sri Lanka has determined that at the time of elections, political parties must ensure that 10% of the candidates nominated must be young people. This is a good beginning and not an end in itself.

Politician­s and media people share an enormous responsibi­lity in helping the traumatise­d young people of our country to overcome their shared trauma of ‘them’ vs ‘us’ mentality and take the first steps for building our country anew based on values of justice and social equality.

Only then will we meet the goals of Internatio­nal Youth Day 2017.

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