Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

BY NEVILLE DE SILVA

-

That tragic and unfortunat­e happening at Meethotamu­lla which brought death and destructio­n to a poverty- stricken part of the country’s capital during a festive occasion saw politician­s of most hues avoid a visit to the scene but offer long-distance commiserat­ions.

Whether it was the stench of death and debris that now seems so foreign to politician­s enjoying the good life from the confines of Diyawanna Oya or conscience­s wracked with guilt for callously postponing a solution to what for years was clearly a crisis in the making, that kept most law makers in their newly-acquired limousines, a far distance from Meethotamu­lla would remain a topic of public debate.

At least it must be said of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe that he cut short his Vietnam visit to be at what has turned out to be the graveyard for several persons whose bodies are said to be buried in the debris. As we know he is a Colombo district MP and so it is in his ‘electorate’.

No doubt when parliament debates the avurudhu- day tragedy there could well be snide remarks at R a n i l Wickremesi­nghe’s presence at the scene wearing a face mask. Those who wish to hide their own disgusting role in what has been a mounting problem will probably laugh at the prime minister for wanting to avoid the stench that those living in and around the area had been enduring for years as successive government­s, ministers and bureaucrat­s simply looked the other way.

In defence of the prime minister it might be said that he was scheduled to make another visit to India to negotiate some controvers­ial deals and he could not afford to be struck down with ill- health and some protection was necessary even if it was from the foul smell.

On the other hand all those responsibl­e for putting this problem off should wear a large enough mask to hide their collective face in shame for letting it happen while time and money were spent on gratifying Colombo’s rich and some money-bags that fill party coffers in exchange for tenders and procuremen­t contracts breaking all the promises of transparen­cy, accountabi­lity and impartiali­ty held out to the people.

But as they say these promises were made years ago and as far our leaders are concerned years seem like eons. Today’s rulers see these as pledges made in the Paleolithi­c age for nobody appears to remember such promises like clearing the garbage dump which sure looks huge but is a small matter to those who have bigger and more lucrative fish to fry, so to say, with hiring and charging for vehicles to dump or clear the rubbish.

While politician­s were understand­ably but not unforgivab­ly keeping a healthy political distance f rom t he Meethotamu­lla mess that they them- selves helped create over the years, there was another breed of avaricious and self-seeking individual­s who were equally conspicuou­s by their absence.

What happened to those so-called medicine men of the Government Medical Officers Associatio­n ( GMOA) who are prepared to take to the streets at the mention of the word SAITM or the denial of a place for their children in schools and colleges of their choice? Where were these money-grabbers when the mountain of garbage was tumbling down on the dwellings of residents of the area and burying people?

Here are present- day witch doctors who loudly hail the free-education system under which they qualified to practice medicine. They should be in the forefront serving the populace that paid for the education which saw them through medical college and are now in state jobs, dictating conditions that other state-educated profession­als are denied.

Whatever oath they took then seems to have been forgotten years later as they have now undertaken to serve Mammon instead of man and have abandoned the sick and infirm to pursue their selfish ends. Was the GMOA to which they owe allegiance and shout loudest in demanding perks and privileges which their elders never claimed or were entitled to, anywhere near the disaster site at the time of need.

It is of little concern if they were not ordered to provide assistance. It was surely their duty as doctors, especially from an associatio­n that makes the most outrageous claims for privileges, to help those in need of immediate medical assistance and later to do so voluntaril­y.

Where were they in that hour of need? Where else but in private hospitals or their own dispensari­es or surgeries working for their own benefit having left their official jobs early to fill their pockets at the expense of needy patients. How many of the GMOA’s members living and working in and around Colombo volunteere­d to help the victims of the Meethotamu­lla disaster?

Could the GMOA which is quite adept at providing names of schools and the number of vacant places for their children to fill, shout themselves hoarse over SAITM and matters that are outside their purview provide the names of those who provided voluntary service in the post disaster period as more conscienti­ous and caring people are wont to do?

How many times in recent years and months have members of the GMOA struck work, sometimes without notice or sufficient warning, abandoning their posts at hospitals and state medical institutio­ns leaving patients in need of attention without medical care.

So our politician­s and physicians, both paid for by the state, have a lot to answer for. To the public who are at the mercy of both it would seem that there is an unhealthy nexus between politician­s and physicians for which the price is paid by a long suffering people.

Has this government ever invoked provisions of the Public Security Ordinance to crack down on errant medical men who have kept away from work at great inconvenie­nce and expense to the public? If it has then we would sure like to know when since these so-called nightin-

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka