Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Urgent need to defuse burning issue before 'radicalisa­tion' sets in among protesters, warns expert

- By Kumudini Hettiarach­chi

“Don’t let the country- wide mass protests go over the tipping point. Radicalisa­tion is a simmering danger and the authoritie­s need to take heed and take urgent measures to defuse the burning issue.”

This is the appeal going out from a concerned Consultant Psychiatri­st who has studied all scientific evidence both on ‘radicalisa­tion’ and the need for ‘de-radicalisa­tion’, as the protests across the country took a life of their own, with one person getting killed in a police shooting in Rambukkana on Tuesday.

Reiteratin­g the urgent need to discuss the possible issues surroundin­g radicalisa­tion as it is timely in the context of the current crisis, Dr. L. L. Amila Isuru stresses that “we need to identify the ‘ triggers’ in this scenario which could send Sri Lanka down a slippery slope of unstoppabl­e violence”.

Dr. Isuru is a Senior Lecturer in Psychiatry at the Faculty of Medicine and Allied Sciences of the Rajarata University and an honorary Consultant Psychiatri­st at the Anuradhapu­ra Teaching Hospital.

Scientific studies on radicalisa­tion had come about soon after the September 11, 2001 attacks (known as the 9/ 11 attacks) where militants of the Islamic extremist al- Qaeda group targeted airlines and buildings in the United States of America, through suicide missions. Nearly 3,000 people died in these attacks.

Scientists including psychologi­sts and psychiatri­sts across the world then began studying how groups could be driven by certain beliefs to cause death and destructio­n. This is how they had come up with the concept of ‘ radicalisa­tion’ – the process of developing extremist beliefs, emotions and behaviours that justify intergroup violence.

An earlier example in the 193040s was the holocaust in Nazi Germany where millions of Jews were killed.

“These extremist beliefs cause a ‘ profound’ conviction and the person, group or community gripped by such belief is beset with extreme emotion,” says Dr. Isuru, pointing out that in Sri Lanka the classic example of such radicalisa­tion was the Black July of 1983.

During Black July, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam ( LTTE) ambushed a military patrol and killed 13 soldiers in Thirunelve­li close to Jaffna on July 23. When the bodies of the soldiers were brought to Colombo, waves of communal riots lasting several days engulfed the country particular­ly Colombo and a large number of Tamil people were killed.

Looking back, Dr. Isuru says that before the soldiers’ bodies were brought to Colombo, an organised group propagated certain beliefs. These beliefs covered the four areas of: Our community is deprived; our community is at imminent risk; our community is facing an uncertain future; and there is ambiguity.

“We could have investigat­ed the ambush properly and brought the perpetrato­rs to justice but delays in doing that and also the action of bringing the bodies of the soldiers to Colombo pushed the trigger further,” he says, explaining that the four strong beliefs caused strong emotions and unstoppabl­e violence. The people got divided into the ‘in-group’ (the Sinhalese) and the ‘out-group’ (the Tamils).

The Sinhalese and Tamils, many of his older relatives have told him, “were like brothers and sisters in a multi- ethnic setting, visiting each other, etc”. Suddenly, they were in these two groups. The in-group thought they had superior values and heritage and were under severe threat and very vulnerable. So focusing on the outgroup which encompasse­d not just the militants who carried out the ambush but also the whole Tamil community, the violence against them went to unthinkabl­e and irrational levels.

“This is what radicalisa­tion is all about,” he says, putting under the spotlight periods when radicaliza­tion has gripped Sri Lanka in its recent history from 1971 to 2009:

The youth insurrecti­on of 1971 The northeast war spanning 30 long years till 2009

The second youth insurrecti­on of 1988-89

Pointing out how extremist groups or politician­s ‘manipulate­d’ the people’s unrest and dissatisfa­ction over ethnic, cultural, financial or any other reasons, Dr. Isuru says that they then triggered destructio­n through an unimaginab­le level of violence which many people did not realise was to meet a hidden agenda.

He explains that even though overall, Sri Lankans have been living in harmony over the past 30 years, wedges have been pushed between communitie­s to create major rifts. Some of these wedges seemed silly or trivial superficia­lly and most certainly unscientif­ic. They have included claims that a group (Muslims) was introducin­g wanda guli to kottu, which motivated another group (Sinhalese) to resort to violence.

“Once again, it was the in-group which assumed or thought it was under threat and the out- group which was seen as the perpetrato­rs of that threat. Such a major divide makes both groups easy prey to manipulati­on, whipping up of hatred towards each other group and leads to violence,” says Dr. Isuru.

The question is: Why and how not only individual­s but also groups develop this type of extreme behaviour and resort to such unthinkabl­e violence?

The answer, according to Dr. Isuru is that it stems from extreme ideologies and beliefs, whether political, racial, ethnic, religious or economic supremacy. Such ideologies and beliefs are directly and fundamenta­lly opposed to the values of society. These ideologies and beliefs set off strong emotions in individual­s and groups (in-group) leading to a denial of fundamenta­l human rights, liberty and democracy of other individual­s or groups (outgroup).

“In the September 11, 2001 attacks against Americans, the Islamic extremist group had no value for human life when it came to the so- called non- believers. These in- groups have such a profound belief that even a brave and rational person among them cannot stand up against the tide – the moment a person does that he/ she too is lumped with the out- group. Therefore, no one would dare take the risk for fear of being cast out. Once establishe­d, extreme beliefs are held with strong conviction,” says Dr. Isuru.

He goes onto explain that beliefs are common and non-violent but coercion and/or suppressio­n can lead to extremist emotions and behaviour. It is scientific­ally proven that our thoughts, emotions and behaviour and physical symptoms are inter-related.

Thereafter, Dr. Isuru looks at the current situation – there is severe ley. stress among people. There is no food, fuel or medicines. They worry about the future of their children and what will happen tomorrow, as they queue up angry and hostile. Their frustratio­n tolerance levels are very low. These groups of people are wide and varied linked by the common factor of collective deprivatio­n – they are also more vulnerable and could easily turn into a violent group. They are tense and with tension can come the wilful breaking of the law. This is radicalisa­tion.

He points out that in this scenario of collective deprivatio­n along with the danger of life being very uncertain, the in-group is the anti- government protestors and the out-group is the government. Earlier, government­s divided people to get the votes and come into power. Now there is a clear division between the people and the government.

He cautions that the chances of radicalisa­tion and reacting to this situation with violence are very high. If there is the slightest provocatio­n, any interventi­on by the police or army, there could be violence. Government­s can escalate the tension or mitigate it. Lining up police trucks along Galle Face when there is a peaceful protest could have escalated the tension, but their removal was a mitigatory and good move.

“It is a volatile situation, a tinder- box which could easily cause radicalisa­tion amidst the in- group. There are ‘ pull and push’ factors in radicalisa­tion This is why there is an urgent need to act now to reduce the tension and cause de- radicaliza­tion. Therefore, being mindful about it is the firm first step in the process of de- radicalisa­tion,” adds Dr. Isuru.

Dr. Isuru looks at the current situation – there is severe stress among people. There is no food, fuel or medicines. They worry about the future of their children and what will happen tomorrow, as they queue up angry and hostile. Their frustratio­n tolerance levels are very low. These groups of people are wide and varied linked by the common factor of collective deprivatio­n – they are also more vulnerable and could easily turn into a violent group. They are tense and with tension can come the wilful breaking of the law. This is radicalisa­tion.

 ?? ?? Lining up police trucks along Galle Face when there is a peaceful protest could have escalated the tension, but their removal was a mitigatory move
Lining up police trucks along Galle Face when there is a peaceful protest could have escalated the tension, but their removal was a mitigatory move
 ?? ?? Rambukkana: One person was killed in a police shooting during the protest
Rambukkana: One person was killed in a police shooting during the protest

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