Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

WILL CAPITAL PUNISHMENT GO DOWN THE DRAIN?

-

The government’s decision to implement Death Penalty on drug related offenders has opened a can of worms, with human rights campaigner­s here and abroad demanding the withdrawal of the decision. The European Union (EU) had on Monday officially communicat­ed its opposition to the move. The main reason for the opposition is the inability of reversing the punishment if it is found later that it had been implemente­d on a wrong person.

The decision had been prompted by a number of seizures of drugs by various law enforcemen­t arms in the country within a short period of time recently. A main feature of these incidents had been the revelation that the traffickin­g of drugs had been mastermind­ed by those who were behind bars after being convicted for the same offence. The decision, in a way represents an irony as it was taken after the law enforcemen­t authoritie­s successful­ly busted several attempts by the trafficker­s to smuggle drugs into the country. Had they gone to the market undetected, the government wouldn’t have taken such a decision.

The drug traffickin­g into the country and through the country has shown such an upward trend during the past two decades that Sri Lanka had been called a drug traffickin­g hub by some foreign media. In fact in the recent past large hauls of drugs, mainly heroin and cocaine had been detected. It must be recalled that the largest drug haul in South Asia was detected in Sri Lanka in August 2013 where customs agents had seized 250 kg of heroin worth $19 million at a container terminal in Colombo. A 200 kg heroin haul -- worth more than two billion rupees on the street - was found inside a car in May last year in a Colombo suburb. Antinarcot­ics authoritie­s seized their biggest ever haul of cocaine -- 90 kg worth about two billion rupees -- being smuggled into the island in June 2016.

There have been reports of a number of crimes as well along with the incidents of detection of drugs during the last few months. Responding to the allegation by the Opposition following these incidents that the discipline and the law enforcemen­t in the country had declined drasticall­y President Maithripal­a Sirisena had stated that in spite of the media and the Opposition making a furore over a spurt of crimes in the country there is indeed a downward trend in crimes this year compared to the last few years. It may be true. When incidents occur at a stretch rather than spreading throughout the year they would draw the attention of the media and thereby the people. Yet, the cruelty and the scant regard shown to human life by the criminals undeniably demand action.

It is clear that there is a nexus between drugs, crimes and the proliferat­ion of small arms. DIG Priyantha Jayakody, who has been engaged in combating organized criminal gangs for more than two decades, has pointed out last year during an interview with the Sunday Times that many of the present violent crimes were due to criminal gangs clashing with each other over the illegal drugs trade. The problem also points its associatio­n with the ethnic war that ended nearly a decade ago as the conflict had provided the much needed arms and ammunition to the drug trade and the criminal gangs involved in it.

Brig. Ranjan de Silva, the former National Coordinato­r of the now -- defunct National Commission Against the Proliferat­ion of Illicit Small Arms (NCAPISA) once in a newspaper interview had this to say: “The three insurgenci­es, especially the one sparked by the ethnic conflict, only gave an impetus to the proliferat­ion. The ethnic conflict made violence go hi-tech with the induction of modern weapons. T-56, the standard weapon of the armed services and the Police, has become the weapon of choice of criminals too. The armed conflict in the North and East became a fertile source of supply of small arms to the underworld. The country’s criminal behaviour graduated on to a higher plane.”

One cannot deny the associatio­n of the politician­s with these three menaces-drugs, weapons and crimes. So long as the concerned authoritie­s do not have the will to sever this associatio­n, even capital punishment would go down the drain.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka