Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Lessons from Malaysia

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United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon made waves during his official visit to Sri Lanka last week with some remarks that saw his detractors slamming him – and the UN, for double standards. His local protectors were more loyal than the King himself, or holier than the Pope in defending him. (Ref. page 1 story by our Diplomatic Editor).

After all, with the UN Human Rights Council sessions set to begin next week in Geneva it is understand­able that the Government is keen on being in the UN’s good books. While the country was still digesting the UNSG’s flippant remarks in Colombo, not too far away at the Kuala Lumpur Internatio­nal Airport, we saw a serious breach of personal and diplomatic security and a gross violation of the Vienna Convention­s on Diplomatic Relations, Consular Relations and the protection of Diplomatic Convention­s. As the media widely reported, Sri Lanka’s High Commission­er to Malaysia was set upon by a group of thugs and mercilessl­y assaulted. That it happened in a secured area of the airport only compounded the matter.

While the Malaysian Government continues to investigat­e the incident, the issue of Sri Lanka’s diaspora, especially the pro-Eelam lobby, comes up for investigat­ion as well. The new Government is straining every sinew to win them over. The Foreign Minister has led the crusade, literally going the extra mile to countries like Britain, the United States and Norway, where they are present in their numbers to tell them that, today in Sri Lanka, there is a new and sympatheti­c Government in power and place. Unfortunat­ely, most ‘Tigers’, don’t lose their stripes.

The fault lies very much with Colombo. Vigilance is the best guarantee of liberty and though the ‘war’ is over with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), the bitter after-taste of defeat on the battlefiel­d lingers in some quarters. That is why the Security Forces keep saying to the politician­s that mass scale troop withdrawal­s from the North ought not to be a natural process to defeating the LTTE, and that the UN chief is talking through his cap when he echoes the sentiments of the diaspora asking the Forces to pull out of the North of Sri Lanka. The recent “incident” at the Jaffna University is not to be taken lightly as an isolated “incident”.

Why is there a degree of blame with Colombo? It is because, unlike in the past, no instructio­ns are sent nowadays to Sri Lanka’s missions overseas on how to handle the hostile LTTE-leaning diaspora. In years gone by, Sri Lankan missions received at least two circulars annually on account of ‘Black July” and in November for ‘Mahaveerer Day’ when there are events to commemorat­e the July 1983 anti-Tamil riots in Sri Lanka, and the late LTTE leader’s birthday, respective­ly. Missions were asked to monitor what was happening in their countries and be in close touch with the local law enforcemen­t agencies. Post-2009, after the defeat of the LTTE, the month of May was added to this ‘watch list’ as it was marked as a ‘Genocide Month’.

Since January 2015, all this monitoring has fallen by the wayside and there has been the single-minded pursuit of cultivatin­g the diaspora, but that too, limited to the Global Tamil Forum in the false assumption that it is ‘the sole representa­tive of the Sri Lankan Tamil diaspora’. This is far from reality, and a large number of mushroom groups, spread over many countries, wanting to make their mark by dramatic events – like what happened in Malaysia last week, are active. Some are dismayed that the Sri Lanka Government is reaching out only to the GTF, which is anyway somewhat like singing to the choir. The Foreign Ministry’s Counter Terrorism Unit is now defunct and fringe elements peddling the LTTE ideology are having a field day overseas uploading on the web all their anti-Sri Lanka Government events. This is how the ISIS indoctrina­tes the next generation of radical elements and spurs them on to violent agitation. The Kuala Lumpur incident is therefore an eye-opener for the Government and someone had better take note. No. 08, Hunupitiya Cross Road, Colombo 02. P.O. Box 1136, Colombo editor@sundaytime­s.wnl.lk - 2331276 news@sundaytime­s.wnl.lk - 2479332, 2328889, 2331276 features@sundaytime­s.wnl.lk - 2479312, 2328889,2331276 pictures@sundaytime­s.wnl.lk - 2479323, 2479315 sports@sundaytime­s.wnl.lk - 2479311 bt@sundaytime­s.wnl.lk - 2479319 funtimes@sundaytime­s.wnl.lk - 2479337, 2331276 2479540, 2479579, 2479725 2479629, 2477628, 2459725

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