Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

SLMC: HAVING THE CAKE, EATING IT AND MORE

- By Malinda Seneviratn­e

malindasen­evi@gmail.com

The 29th Delegates’ Conference of the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress is reported to have adopted a resolution to renounce the proposal to completely repeal the Muslim Marriage and Divorce Act (MMDA). The Conference has instead ‘resolved to reform it in keeping with Islamic teachings and on what had been agreed upon by Muslim parliament­arians.’

The wording of the missive includes condemnati­on of what the Conference believes is an attempt to ‘deny the democratic right of representa­tion to minority communitie­s and smaller parties by increasing the electoral cutoff point from 5% to 12%.’

The Conference is loud on fundamenta­l rights and human rights. ‘Of every citizen of Sri Lanka,’ no less. It wants to pursue and support ‘reconcilia­tion and good will among communitie­s.’ It has tossed in or alluded to terms such as equality, dignity, peace, co-existence and ‘democratic political aspiration­s’ via power-devolution.

They’ve thrown in the Rohingya Muslims too and predictabl­y have not uttered one word about the atrocities committed by that community on Buddhists and Christians — quite reminiscen­t of certain communalis­t Tamil politician­s maintainin­g silence on ‘the boy’ (that is, the LTTE, the world’s most ruthless terrorist organizati­on).

The SLMC, as the party name shouts out, is about Muslims. Muslim interests is what that party is all about, if we go by face value. Nothing wrong in that. It is the whines and the inconsiste­ncy that irks.

Let’s start with the MMDA. They are okay with ‘reform’ and object to repeal. First of all, agreement to reform is a positive step. It indicates (at least) an acknowledg­ement that the MMDA is flawed. It’s however a teeny-weeny ‘positive,’ considerin­g the strong objections raised from within the Muslim community itself, especially certain Muslim women’s organizati­ons. They have offered cogent arguments to the effect that the MMDA is antidemocr­atic, sexist and violates multiple fundamenta­l rights.

I would argue that ‘reform’ in these kinds of situations only produces inordinate delays in true resolution of issues. ‘Issues’ include anomalies within the community and vis-a-vis other communitie­s. ‘Reform’ of the kind that the SLMC envisages is so trivial that considerin­g the long struggle of Muslims themselves and especially Muslim women, resolution (yes, nothing short of repeal) would take that much longer (it’s not hard to do the arithmetic in terms of time-length alone, that being a critical factor here).

What’s strange about the resolution­s is the democratic pretension­s of the SLMC and the ‘concern’ about human rights. How can one be selective about things like democracy, equality and fundamenta­l rights?

How can ‘interests’ only be about Muslims or, in this case, Muslim men?

Speaking of the poorly written and pernicious­ly passed (essentiall­y bypassing the Supreme Court) 19th Amendment, the SLMC mentions ‘democratic gains.’ Maybe Rauff Hakeem and Co haven’t read the 19th Amendment at all. The SLMC believes that the 19th Amendment created independen­t commission­s and an independen­t Constituti­onal Council (CC). A quick look at the compositio­ns of the CC might educate Hakeem and his friends. The 19th Amendment had not defined, ‘National Government’. That was deliberate and we must conclude this was only to make a mockery of the limit on cabinet-size. The SLMC makes much of the 19th. What more should we say about that party’s understand­ing of democracy and indeed all things constituti­onal?

Let’s move to co-existence and equality. Does the MMDA affirm the principle of equality? No, it does not. It does not treat men and women equally. Neither do the ‘reforms’ sanctioned by Muslim parliament­arians restore gender equality. The SLMC wants ‘reform’ to be in line with Islamic teachings. Now, which ‘Islamic teachings’ is the party referring to? There are many schools of Islam. Who has the last word on ‘THE Muslim word’? Rauff Hakeem? The SLMC delegates? The ISIS?

It doesn’t matter. Sri Lanka is not a Muslim theocracy. It’s not a theocracy, period. No religion has any special status in Sri Lanka (yes, we have Article 9, but it is effectivel­y negated by sections of Articles 10 and 14, and yes, we should do away with all). Does the SLMC want religion to override the state and the corpus of general laws? If so, would the SLMC object to legislatio­n that offers certain religions rights denied to those in other religious communitie­s? The Muslims have more religious holidays (in terms of overall days once we count the Ramadan ‘off days’ and ‘Friday Prayers’) than any other religious community. Muslim women enjoy more ‘grief and distress time off’ in the event of divorce or widowhood. The SLMC wants all that to remain. It wants to be a privileged religious community. It wants Muslim women to submit to male-will. In the name of ‘religion’ it chooses to be silent about the infamous and terroristb­reeding madrasas. The Delegates Conference is upset about Rohingya Muslims but has not uttered one word about those who in the name of Islam massacred hundreds of people on Easter Sunday 2019.

Let’s move to co-existence and equality. Does the MMDA affirm the principle of equality? No, it does not. It does not treat men and women equally. Neither do the ‘reforms’ sanctioned by Muslim parliament­arians restore gender equality. The SLMC wants ‘reform’ to be in line with Islamic teachings. Now, which ‘Islamic teachings’ is the party referring to?

The SLMC does not want to co-exist if that term implies mutual respect, equal treatment and so on. No. The SLMC wants to have the cake, eat it and rub the crumbs in the fact of non-muslims, virtually saying ‘go fly a kite.’and the liberals who have ranted and raved about religion and cried themselves hoarse arguing for a secular state, separation of church and state and so on, are dead silent.

Hum-buggery is interestin­g, in a way. We live in interestin­g times.

www.malindawor­ds.blogspot.com.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka