Thursday, February 5, 2009

What underlies the conflict is the idea that Sri Lanka is not a nation defined by geography, but by competing races.

From the Guardian:

"
Sri Lanka's identity war

The Tamil Tigers are facing military defeat, but victory will be pyrrhic unless the Sinhalese rethink their supremacist attitudes

The speech by Sri Lanka's president claiming the extinction of the Tamil Tigers might signal the end of a war, but not of the fighting. What underlies the conflict is the idea that Sri Lanka is not a nation defined by geography, but by competing races.

The Indian Ocean island is home to a bewildering array of subnational and communal identities. There are Sinhalese Buddhists, Tamil Hindus, Tamil Christians, Dutch Burghers and Tamil-speaking Muslims known as Moors.

It now looks like two ancient civilisations – Tamils and Sinhalese – are locked in a Manichean struggle. The leadership of both peoples increasingly see Sri Lanka as an arena for conflict between absolute good and absolute evil. As both sides view the other as Satan, they both scorn compromise.

What we have here is south Asia's curse of identity violence. Once a group – be it defined by ethnicity or caste or creed – acquires the status of a nation it becomes intolerant of all others. There's no doubt the failure of the Sinhalese in the 1960s to include Tamils in a national political project sowed the seeds of today's conflict.

In India, it is Hindu nationalists who question minority rights and want to reduce Muslims and Christians to second-class citizens. Pakistan, an Islamic republic, has its Sunni-Shia schism and the split between Punjab and the rest of the country. Bhutan's Buddhists expel Nepali Hindu immigrants.

This view of the world is aired openly in public. Sri Lanka's army chief Sarath Fonseka thought little of saying that the country "belongs to the Sinhalese … [minorities] can live in this country with us. But they must not try to, under the pretext of being a minority, demand undue things."

In this mindset, minorities exist merely on the goodwill of the majority. The most inclusive identity of all – being Sri Lankan – is a vanishing option for Tamils while Sinhalese thought is being slowly overtaken by fantasises of a Buddhist nirvana off the tip of India.

Bizarrely, statues of Gautama, icon of peace, have been used by the Sri Lankan state to mark territory seized from terrorists. Reducing every non-Sinhalese to a possible terrorist leads to dangerous waters. Sri Lanka must be the only democracy in the world to bomb its own citizens.

The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam suffer from a bloody version of this psychosis. There is little in the Tigers' revolutionary make-up that suggests were they ever to have created a state in the north and east of Sri Lanka that Sinhalese minorities would have felt safe. They have continued to murder Tamils who disagree with them – most notably, Sri Lanka's foreign minister Lakshman Kadirgamar.

The LTTE spent the ceasefire years rearming rather than rebuilding links with the mainland – a preference for militarism that led the group to decide not to back Sinhala politicians ready to do a deal with them.

The result was that Mahinda Rajapaksa, a populist Sinhala politician, won the presidency in 2005 rather than Ranil Wickramasinghe, who relied upon Tamil votes and who as prime minister had signed a ceasefire agreement with the LTTE in 2002. Rajapaksa has been the nemesis of Tiger hubris.

But the blame rests on both sides. The state's failure to devolve power into smaller units to take care of the ethnic and linguistic needs of a region left no safety valve for Tamil grievances. The Tamil population has been in thrall to men of violence, justifying slaughter with slogans of self-determination.

In this brief moment of victory, Sri Lankan politicians will have to ponder the cost. They will admit perhaps only to themselves that human rights have disappeared, opponents have been exterminated and innocent lives have been lost. Sinhalese leaders will have to deal with a brutalised Tamil population.

In picking up the pieces, perhaps Sri Lanka's establishment will eventually see that a total partisan victory is unattainable. The Tigers may have got a beating but there's little to stop them from returning to old-fashioned terrorism. Suicide bombers, assassination squads and guerrilla units are most likely to re-emerge unless there is a political settlement acceptable to all.

Identity politics makes this more difficult, but not impossible. To end this bloody cycle, both sides need to realise that conflict is part of human life – and rather than let it spin into violence, it should be fought with words."

Me:

DonthelibertDem

05 Feb 09, 10:10pm (1 minute ago)

"But the blame rests on both sides. The state's failure to devolve power into smaller units to take care of the ethnic and linguistic needs of a region left no safety valve for Tamil grievances. The Tamil population has been in thrall to men of violence, justifying slaughter with slogans of self-determination.

In this brief moment of victory, Sri Lankan politicians will have to ponder the cost. They will admit perhaps only to themselves that human rights have disappeared, opponents have been exterminated and innocent lives have been lost. Sinhalese leaders will have to deal with a brutalised Tamil population.

In picking up the pieces, perhaps Sri Lanka's establishment will eventually see that a total partisan victory is unattainable. The Tigers may have got a beating but there's little to stop them from returning to old-fashioned terrorism. Suicide bombers, assassination squads and guerrilla units are most likely to re-emerge unless there is a political settlement acceptable to all.

Identity politics makes this more difficult, but not impossible. To end this bloody cycle, both sides need to realise that conflict is part of human life – and rather than let it spin into violence, it should be fought with words."

We should certainly call for better treatment of minorities, human rights, freedom of the press, etc. We should also demand that no war crimes be committed. Now is also the time for the Tigers to disband.

As for anger at pressure from the rest of the world, it might have just worked in North Kivu silently, by countries pressuring Rwanda to cooperate with the Congo. But I don't agree with Randeep on this. Nothing could be worse than the indifference towards the Congo, or pussyfooting for thirty years with Mugabe. If you want people to notice the conflict, and help end it, you have to offer them the means of expressing that anger. Otherwise, they'll direct their attention elsewhere, where people won't be telling them to help but shut up.

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