Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

RECONCILIA­TION IS ABOUT THE MANAGEMENT OF INSECURITI­ES

- By Malinda Seneviratn­e malindasen­evi@gmail.com

The current boundaries upon which the separatist map has been crafted, with quite some stretching on the Western coast were arbitraril­y drawn by the British. It is not easy, but it is a discussion that has to take place simply because resolution is for the most part about managing and balancing insecuriti­es, whether or not they are legitimate

Dayan Jayatillek­a has made some pertinent points regarding conflict resolution and the seemingly vexed issue of Tamil grievances/aspiration­s and relief sought in an article titled ‘Constituti­onmaking and the North-south political cycle’.

I have an issue withe the term ‘NorthSouth’ so let me first get it out of the way. It is a ‘break’ that has been used frequently enough to give it legitimate political currency. Erroneous, however. It has come to the point of ‘goes without saying’ which automatica­lly assumes ‘came without saying’ and therefore pushed deliberate­ly. What does ‘North’ taken for and what is ‘South’? They have acquired proxy status for Tamil and Sinhala respective­ly and imply, following the geographic­al reference, a land that is divided by a line moving from West to East where the ‘North’ is of (and a legitimate claim of) Tamils and the South of the Sinhalese. A ’50-50’ that is a gross distortion of historical and demographi­c realities. Language, needless to say, is not innocent.

With that out of the way, let’s consider the implicatio­ns of Dayan’s more serious and more legitimate contention­s.

“Even today, there is no Tamil progressiv­e or moderate tendency in or outside Sri Lanka that is willing to denounce the LTTE, Prabhakara­n and Tamil Eelam openly. Tamil politics has remained self-referentia­l and pantamil in character. Tamil nationalis­m is psychologi­cally separatist even when it isn’t politicall­y separatist.”

The above claim is followed by an expression of disappoint­ment regarding the lack of interest on the part of Tamil politician­s to forge a bloc with ‘Southern’ progressiv­es.

Theoretica­lly, a Tamil chauvinist or even nationalis­t retort could take the following form: ‘Sinhala politics has remained self-referentia­l in character. Sinhala nationalis­m is psychologi­cally unitary-fixated even when it talks of devolution.” It follows that a Tamil version of Dayan’s lament regarding ‘Progressiv­es’ is also possible, although that would still leave us without an answer to the question ‘What is progressiv­e?’

Even if we were to put aside the strong objections based on history, geography, demography and doability to the Tamil separatist project and all devolution proposals that do not take issue with current political boundaries for their arbitrarin­ess, their implicit subversion of separatist claims, the very existence of positions as detailed above gives credence to Dayan’s claims about things intractabl­e and therefore the necessity of ‘management’.

This is why I am in agreement with the first part of Dayan’s vision expressed as follows:

‘Sri Lanka could (should?) draw up a New Social Contract in which national minorities are integrated on the basis of equal citizenshi­p and non-discrimina­tion while assured of a reasonable sufficienc­y of autonomy through the devolution of power within a Unitary State.’ The reservatio­ns about the second part (regarding devolution) are principall­y on the issue of boundaries and economic logic of the same. As mentioned above and as stated by President Maithripal­a Sirisena the current boundaries upon which the separatist map has been crafted, with quite some stretching on the Western coast were arbitraril­y drawn by the British. Secondly, given the reality that close to half the Tamil population live outside the so-called ‘Traditiona­l Homelands’, devolution cannot assume to resolve any ‘Tamil issue’ in and of itself.

Power-devolution is theoretica­lly a democratiz­ing propositio­n, but in Sri Lanka’s context, given the intractabi­lities mentioned above, it is a non-starter or, as the 13th Amendment proved, guaranteed to trigger bloodbaths and generate further complicati­ons, primarily because the foundation­al logic is flawed and therefore the edifice is necessaril­y weak. A different kind of devolution might make sense, for example one where the entire provincial boundaries are re-drawn in a way that makes sense in terms of geographic­al realities and takes into account current resource anomalies among the existing provinces, but again that’s not even an element that anyone is willing to entertain, leave alone discuss. This brings us back to ‘integratio­n on the basis of equal citizenshi­p and non-discrimina­tion’. That is a tough cat-belling, so to speak, but right now it’s the only logical starting point. It would be about guarantees. It would have to take into account the issue of religion and the ‘special place for Buddhism’. Not easy since histories count, historicit­ies count and these things have eminent toy-value for extremists and real, on-the-ground relevance. For example, would the removal of the tokenist privilegin­g of Buddhism in the Constituti­on accompany an erasure of customary laws that are relevant to Islam and those relevant to Tamils who can cite the Thesawalam­i Laws? Would we discuss the pruning of customary ‘Buddhist holidays’ from four to three (the sathara poya to pun-poya) and the privilegin­g of Christian holidays (Sundays — 52 of them)?

It is not easy, but it is a discussion that has to take place simply because resolution is for the most part about managing and balancing insecuriti­es, whether or not they are legitimate. That’s where the audit must begin and not with rhetoric. And that’s exactly what has not happened. This is why solutions (like the 13th) fail(ed). The true dimensions, in other words, of all the relevant issues have been ignored. There are no mechanisms proposed to ascertain these. Small wonder that the entire reconcilia­tion exercise is flounderin­g. In the absence or rather the improbabil­ity of magnanimit­y by all (and not some) the players in the story. Malinda Seneviratn­e is a freelance writer. Twitter: malindasen­e

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