Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Old wounds, newcure….

- By N.sathiya Moorthy

No political discussion or discourse, whether within Sri Lanka or outside, could be complete without a substantia­l amount of time spent on the ethnic issue, war, violence and the postwar situation. Yet, there are other issues and concerns crying for time, not necessaril­y from the government and the stake-holders alone. Developmen­tal issues and governance concerns have dominated the administra­tion ever since President Mahinda Rajapaksa came to power in end 2005, both inheritanc­es from the past.

‘Developmen­t’ work was on, even when the ethnic war was in full swing but none took nor wanted to take notice

It is not sure if a different end to the war would have brought the same electoral results. Yet, new roads and lamp-posts where none had existed was also a factor on which the rural South voted post-2005.

Today, there is also a grudging acknowledg­ement, though not admiration that the same thing has been happening in the war-ravaged east and the north. Again, something that was not acknowledg­ed until it became impossible to keep the eyes closed, eternally. This much is on the reconstruc­tion front.the same is true of rehabilita­tion, if only to an extent. All the reservatio­ns that the government expressed when the internatio­nal community was opposed to the settling up of

Across the country today,there

has been an air of disillusio­nment,and consequent sense of disturbanc­e.the campuses across the country have been restive,the trade unions are out there on the streets almost every day,and the civil society has eternally been grumbling about everything around. While much of it may be the making of a frustrated political opposition and part of an‘internatio­nal conspiracy’,as the government is wont to argue,it cannot believe in what it wants

others to believe.

IDP camps have come true. Their own reservatio­ns, based on perception­s and the propaganda by LTTE remnants, have been proved wrong.

Much needs to be done on the rehabilita­tion front, for years and decades to come but no one seems to be bothered, any more. There is no voice for those voiceless, as there was none before the war. It may remain so in the future too, what with greater internatio­nalisation of war crimes and power-devolution proving to attract listeners more.

It is on larger issues of human rights and governance that the government needs to do more. The continuing protests on the streets of Colombo and elsewhere, at times, carry this message. On the human rights front, barring the past one-and-half year or so, the criticism went beyond accountabi­lity issues and war crimes, as is understood. Media freedom and those of the political Opposition and other critics of the Government are issues that have since returned to the centre-stage.

Sri Lanka has a long history and short memory on this score. Unfortunat­ely, no one wants to remember the past, on which the present seems to be growing, parasite-like. Rather than protesting individual­s and incidents, the nation should take time off to address the larger issues, and create institutio­ns and instill faith, both of which are absent. The same applies to the issue of corruption.

Maybe, the higher judiciary in the country can be the initiator -- if none has faith in the government of the day (which is again another curse of the country). It is happening in neighbouri­ng India, where incidents are many and the issues, much more complex. The less sophistica­ted the culprits are, the easier it is to unravel. On a future day, it could become impossible, if that is when constituti­onal institutio­ns in the country begin taking notice.

Across the country today, there has been an air of disillusio­nment, and consequent sense of disturbanc­e. The campuses across the country have been restive, the trade unions are out there on the streets almost every day, and the civil society has eternally been grumbling about everything around. While much of it may be the making of a frustrated political opposition and part of an ‘internatio­nal conspiracy’, as the government is wont to argue, it cannot believe in what it wants others to believe.

Something is seriously at issue on some fronts, and obviously so. The Z-score mess, the Government cannot blame on anyone else. It is also a reflection on how an over-centralise­d government apparatus cannot find answers for every problem -that too when numbers, complexiti­es and concepts keep on increasing and/or improving, compared to the days when such institutio­ns were originally thought of, in difference circumstan­ces.

It is here that they miss the cushioning effect of an intermedia­ry administra­tive set-up to take the political blame, just as they miss the delivery mechanisms that are needed to make once-tested old schemes effective under evolving circumstan­ces. What is true of school education is true of health and higher education, police administra­tion and revenue collection. The nation having been stalled and stunted through the 30 long years of war, it would begin discoverin­g the old wounds that had remained unattended for long -- and for which there may be no cure under that scheme and system, any more.

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