Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

CONTEXTUAL­ISING ‘ETHNICITY’, REVISITING ‘ETHNIC ISSUE’

- By N.sathiya Moorthy

The LTTE’S eliminatio­n of Tamil-speaking Muslims as part of the non-ut minority has left the community clueless, since.

President Mahinda Rajapaksa‘s reiteratio­n of the Government’s commitment to “walk an extra mile to establish permanent peace through reconcilia­tion” should be a welcome reaction to the Geneva vote. For reconcilia­tion to be permanent, there is an urgent need for contextual­ising ‘ethnicity’ to contempora­ry Sri Lanka and revisit the ‘ethnic issue’ as needs to be acted upon. In turn, the Government and the Sinhala polity need to accept that the TNA’S demands are no more those of a fractured section of the ethnic minority, but an evolving compulsion in any modern State structure.

It does not require an academic discourse to conclude that ‘ethnicity’ in the minority context does not stop with the ‘Sri Lankan Tamils’ (SLT). The voiceless Upcountry Tamils (UT) still feel marginalis­ed at near-subsistenc­e levels. At the turn of Independen­ce when they needed the rights-conscious SLT the most, the latter joined hands with the ‘majoritari­an SinhalaBud­dhist polity’ to render the UT Stateless and disenfranc­hised. Postwar, the subterrane­an restlessne­ss of their youth is not matched by the imaginatio­n and reach of their divided political leadership.

The LTTE’S eliminatio­n of Tamilspeak­ing Muslims as part of the nonUT minority has left the community clueless, since. Post-war, the TNA, claiming near-sole representa­tive status for the SLT, has not engaged the divided Muslim polity to revive the pre-’90 spirit. The UT polity is still out of bounds for them. In ethnic terms, it is a revulsion born out of social exclusion, not just marginalis­ation. For historic reasons, often confused with personal egos and primordial ambitions of individual leaders and factions, the UT and Muslims have sought to identify with the Sinhala party in power.

This has evolved into the Sri Lankan State’s duty to protect their interests. For this reason alone, ethnic discourse in present-day Sri Lanka has to be broadbased. Post-90, if the overreachi­ng Sri Lankan State protection is not available to them in their perception, the Muslims expect political preservati­on provisions in the Constituti­on similar to the offer to the Tamils. The Upcountry Tamils’ aspiration­s are still primary yet the execution mechanisms available to them in the light of the JVP-LTTE experience in the future should not be under-scored.

Census-2011, whose final figures should be known in a few months, has the potential to change the figures and patterns to the detriment of the SLT. So will be the number of elected SLT representa­tives, following consequent de-limitation. To facilitate SLT re-integratio­n, their anticipati­on flowing from low figures caused by war and external migration over the years unrelated at times to the war needs to be satisfacto­rily addressed. The choice is between guaranteei­ng State protection and justifying any continuing challenge to the State.

Guaranteed State protection was perceived to have been lost when the First Republican Constituti­on removed Section 29 (2) (b) of the Soulbury formulatio­n in 1972. The simultaneo­us adoption of a ‘unitary State model’ may have had more to do with the previous year’s ‘First JVP insurgency’ than the ‘ethnic issue’. In today’s world, the ‘standardis­ation scheme’ (1971) and possibly the ‘Sinhala Only’ law (1956) may have been acclaimed as ‘affirmativ­e action’ to make the nation-state more inclusive. At the hands of the affected people, they became majoritari­an tools. The accompanyi­ng anti-tamil violence lent credence to the formulatio­n.

In the post-war Tamil context, developmen­t substituti­ng for devolution need not be majoritari­an, either. The results may be contestabl­e, but in political terms, it had worked in post-insurgency JVP heartland. The JVP losing its class-based identity after hijacking it from the traditiona­l Left that in turn had diluted the cause in the Fifties, and upholding a ‘Sinhala-buddhist nationalis­t’ agenda did not gel with the aspiration­s of the masses that had expected more from them. The disavowal of inclusive political participat­ion by post-insurgency JVP, barring exceptions, has contribute­d to their marginalis­ation on both counts.

There was no justificat­ion for ‘ Pogrom-83’. It flowed from the LTTE’S eliminatio­n of an army convoy that had had consequenc­es of its own on the State. It suited everyone to pass it off as ‘majoritari­an violence’. A top man behind the mobsters and the massacre was not a Buddhist, though a Sinhala. Condescend­ing middle class mind-set of the entrenched SLT and competitiv­e trade practices were other factors. The failure of the Sri Lankan Government to interfere in time and the Sri Lankan State to intercede effectivel­y caused the problem to balloon further.

It is no justificat­ion. Yet the ‘ethnic issue’ has thrived on the sense of insecurity of the Sri Lankan State structure. Only years after Pogrom-83, The State authorised the butchery of the Sinhala-jvp militants of either gender in their reproducti­ve age-group and numbering 50,000-plus, almost at one-go (1987-89), by the Sri Lankan armed forces flowed from this insecurity. Competitiv­e Sinhala politics than majoritari­an Sinhala-buddhist mind-set, Tamil ultra-nationalis­m, war and violence fed it, too. For reasons of fast identifica­tion with the past, post-insurgency JVP has not complained.

Personal equations of the times also propped it all. It was not always ethnic. Most times, it was personal. Acceptance of S W R D Bandaranai­ke as UNP Prime Minister (1951) and S J V Chelvanaya­gam as a part of the innercore of dominant Jaffna Tamil polity (1948-51) may have -- just may have -re-written post-independen­ce history. JRJ had Sirimavo disenfranc­hised and Parliament’s term extended, to feel more secure and less vulnerable -the right men at the wrong place or vice versa. Ethnicity, incidental to the discourse otherwise, became the bug-bear, the cover.

The TNA’S demand for Police and Land powers, among others, has universal appeal and relevance in contempora­ry Sri Lanka. They are the wrong people to argue the case. They will neither co-opt others, nor let others speak for them. It is politics again, but majoritari­an-centric justificat­ion would be on offer. Post-war, the Sri Lankan State’s concerns on police powers too are real. Yet, the Government is meandering without being forthright for solutions to be found.

Ethnicity in Sri Lanka today is predicated by language (SLT), religion (Muslims), social status (UT), and disinteres­t (Burghers). A lasting solution cannot be denominati­on-centric as has been attempted in the past. It has to be all-inclusive, with socio-economic developmen­t making common cause with power-devolution (as the forgotten JVP insurgenci­es would indicate). There is much more to it than SLT, and Police Powers -- and they are and unenforced part of the Constituti­on, on which a mandamus writ could still exist.

 ??  ?? SWRD Bandaranai­ke
SWRD Bandaranai­ke
 ??  ?? Chelvanaya­gam
Chelvanaya­gam
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