SCOPP counters endless misrepresentation, racism
The last few weeks have seen increasing efforts on the part of the
LTTE and its surrogates to disrupt the steady progress of the Eastern
Province towards peace and multi-party multi-ethnic democracy, the Peace
Secretariat said.
The SCOPP said: "Continuous complaints are made about the TMVP, one
of the most remarkable examples in the world of a former terrorist group
transformed into a democratic political force.
Though anti-democratic NGOs wanted the local elections in Batticaloa
District cancelled, even they had to concede that there was less
violence there than previously, and that weapons were not much in
evidence.
The generally clean bill of health given the election by independent
observers has now led to the two major opposition parties taking part in
the Provincial Council election scheduled for May 10th.
Last week however saw the first election related death, the victim
being a TMVP member, as were the only two persons killed during the
local elections. Nevertheless, despite this clear evidence of relentless
victimisation of the TMVP, the LTTE and its fellow critics of the
Government insist that it is the TMVP that is violent.
Meanwhile the TNA, the political party that won maximum
representation amongst Tamils in the North and East due to the election
frauds noted by, amongst others, the EU observers at the 2004 General
Election, continues to stay out of electoral politics, in line with
general LTTE policy.
Instead, whilst on the one hand claiming that the TMVP, which did
remarkably well in the local elections, is terrorising the East, they go
on to claim that the Government has a mission 'of continued
Sinhalisation of the east.'
The latest justification for this claim is the appointment of a
Sinhalese, Upul Weerawardene, as Secretary to the Eastern Ministry of
Education. TNA MP P Ariyanarenthiran claimed that this happened when the
previous Secretary, R. Thiyagalingam, was 'all of a sudden, moved out of
his position.'
It is only much lower down in the prominent attack on the appointment
in Tamilnet that it is revealed that 'Thiyagalingam has been appointed
as the Eastern Provincial Council Secretary', an important post in view
of the forthcoming election and the establishment at last of Provincial
government.
According to Ariyanarenthiran's logic, it would be wrong to have
senior Tamil officials in Sinhala majority areas in the country, which
is a lunatic claim, and does no service to the very able Tamil officials
who have functioned in senior administrative positions all over the
country.
His criticism of Weerawardene's appointment is based, according to
the article, on the fact that 'More than ninety percent of the schools
in the East are Tamil schools', which ignores the distinction between
Tamil and Muslim schools, and also the demography of the Province, which
is about a quarter Sinhalese.
Such racism is unusual in Sri Lankans, who generally understand the
need for pluralism.
This was obvious for instance at the recent Conference on Peace and
Reconciliation in Norway, when Vaiko defended the ethnic cleansing by
the LTTE of Muslims in the North on the grounds that they were
collaborators with a Sinhalese government, whereas the Sri Lankan
Tamils, to a man, regretted the action.
But the TNA now seems to be going on the Vaiko path, which would
appear to conform with LTTE policy, of denying others any place in what
is claimed to be the Tamil homeland, which would justify similar
chauvinists denying Tamils any place in the rest of the country. This is
an obnoxious position.
Certainly governments in recent years can be faulted for not assuring
enough Tamil recruitment into the public service; that deficiency can in
no way be justified by the claims of counterparts to Vaiko and the TNA
that there was over-recruitment in colonial times that militated against
the Sinhalese.
But now that the current government has at last initiated a policy of
conscious targeting of Tamils for recruitment in areas where
deficiencies were most prominent and damaging, the argument of
Ariyanarenthiran should be repudiated by all those who want peace and
justice in a united Sri Lanka.
Of course, given current sensitivities, the Government should not
seem to impose individuals unjustly. But it should be noted that
Weerawardene will be the only Sinhala Secretary now to a Provincial
Ministry, one of six in the East, and he will in fact only be acting.
Having been deputy previously, he continues in that substantive post,
whilst having been appointed to cover the duties of the Secretary
following Thiyagalingam's new responsibilities.
Meanwhile the post of Chief Secretary, occupied last year by a
Sinhalese who was killed, is now occupied by a Tamil.
Since efficiency and commitment to all citizens should be the
criteria for appointments, rather than ethnicity, it may seem improper
even to think of the latter quality. But sadly the deliberate
misinformation the TNA propagates needs to be rebutted, and should be
rejected forthwith, in particular by the leaders of his party that still
functions in a multi-ethnic Sri Lankan Parliament." |