The war for dismembering this country is not
confined to the North and the East. It is being fought in many
other places, both here and abroad, especially in Colombo, where
the political leadership and the national economy are targeted.
Ridding Colombo of LTTE cadres is therefore a sine qua non
for defeating terrorism. All over the world, capital cities are
the prime targets of terrorists and countries battling terrorism
are compelled to adopt extraordinary measures to protect them.
In dealing with an elusive enemy, the police and
the armed forces are at a distinct disadvantage. Terrorists are
omnipresent and can pose as civilians as long as they are not
caught in flagrante delicto. Even the democratic role
models like the US and the UK have had to adopt draconian
measures to keep terrorists at bay. The British police have
orders to shoot terror suspects in the head slap-bang with no
questions asked.
In this country, the security forces and the
police are doing a thankless job. When raids are conducted, they
are blamed for harassing the public and when bombs go off, they
are faulted for their lapses! Their difficulties and concerns
must be appreciated vis-à-vis the monster they are
fighting, against numerous odds. They have to think of novel
ways of tackling an outfit which is quite innovative and full of
surprises. It is against this backdrop that the controversial
expulsion of Tamils from Colombo should be viewed.
The government has naturally drawn heavy flak
over its action, which is being widely condemned as
discrimination against the Tamil community. Some have chosen to
blow it out of proportion. Opposition and UNP Leader Ranil
Wickremesinghe has likened the plight of Tamils under the
present government to that of Jews in Germany during the World
War II and that of black Africans under the apartheid regime in
South Africa. We thought Mr. Wickremesinghe needed lessons only
on Sri Lankan history. Another politician (Mano Ganeshan)
promptly chose to call the eviction of Tamils ‘ethnic
cleansing!’
They are entitled to their views. But, where
were those champions of human rights when the LTTE forcibly
evicted tens of thousands of Muslims who had been living in the
North for generations at a two-hour notice in 1990? They were
allowed to carry only a change of clothes with them. Ear studs
of women and girls were removed with pliers! They are still
languishing in welfare centres in Puttalam. That, Mr. Ganeshan,
is ethnic cleansing!
A TNA MP took his shirt off in Parliament in
protest against the expulsion in question. Those who have so
shamelessly enslaved themselves to the LTTE and are justifying
its savage terror don’t need any clothes at all. No amount of
clothes is going to help cover their nudity!
Such hypocrites are doing the biggest disservice
to the civilians caught in the nutcracker of terror. They have
hijacked the cause of those innocent people and are making
political capital out of their plight like vultures that feast
on carrion. If their concern for hapless civilians is genuine,
they must be able to take on the LTTE, too, which is making
cannon fodder of their children and exploiting them in every
conceivable way. Why are those human rights campaigners silent
on what is happening in area like Kilinochchi, which the LTTE
has turned into mono ethnic hellholes?
It is not to those hypocritical opportunists
that the government must listen. It must listen to the feeble
voice of the hapless civilians, whom the police want to evict.
(Military Spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella is trying to have us
believe that they are leaving voluntarily and the government is
only providing transport: He must go tell that to the marines!)
They may not be able to provide ‘valid reasons’ as such to
justify their stay in Colombo but they, as is well known, have a
thousand and one reasons to be away from the war zone and the
LTTE’s clutches, the main being the safety of their children.
When life becomes unbearable in a particular place, the people
naturally vote with their feet. The government is driving them
back into the jaws of the predator. That is the tragedy!
There are, no doubt, LTTE cadres posing as
civilians among them. But, should all the Tamil people be
penalised for that? As TULF Leader V. Anandasangaree has pointed
out in a letter to the President—(The Island of June
08)—the LTTE is smart enough to evade eviction.
The city of Colombo belongs to all Sri Lankans,
regardless of their ethnicity or religion and they have a right
to live there or anywhere else in the country. That right
guaranteed by the Constitution cannot be questioned or denied.
It is the duty of the police and the armed forces to make the
country safe for all communities to live in. While extraordinary
measures are certainly called for to meet the growing threat of
terrorism, the eviction of Tamils from any part of the country
on any ground cannot be countenanced. That amounts to blatant
racial discrimination. If the government considers such action a
surrogate for better surveillance and intelligence, which alone
can help keep the Tigers at bay, it is making a terrible
mistake.
The Supreme Court is right in having immediately halted the
harebrained scheme. Three hearty cheers!