A Letter from Professor Dr.John P.Neelsen to Kumar Rupesinghe on Aid
Dear Mr.Rupesinghe,
Allow me to reply to your appeal for financial contributions for
the construction of 1000 latrins, and (earlier for) educational
materials for Tamil youngsters in the camps in the Vanni. To
state my position clearly at the outset: I am totally opposed to
your proposal and hope to convince at least some of the other
recipients of your appeal!
Only in passing, I like to remind you of the high sounding
speeches, including yours, on peace, negotiations, and
reconciliation at the
April 2006 conference in
Zurich/Switzerland ("Envisioning New Trajectories for Peace in
SL") or your similarly titled volumes. With the armed resistance
defeated, the LTTE decapitated, today these sentiments and
arguments appear light-years away. I wonder how you (and the
other, particularly Singhalese, participants) read -and defend -
your respective contributions now...
Anyhow, today you are seemingly assuming a purely humanitarian
viewpoint and, indeed, the door has been thrown wide open for
all manifestly similarly minded people in NGOs and governments
all over the world.
But, the plight of the Tamils is not due to a natural disaster,
not another tsunami, but the result of the conscious policy of a
government that had no qualms of bombarding people that it claims
as its own citizens with heavy artillery, according to some
reports even illegal chemical weapons.
When even the then supporters of the GoSL in Berlin, Paris or
London have demanded an enquiry into war crimes and violations
of human and humanitarian law in view of the estimated 20.000
mostly dead civilians during the last few weeks, when even the
established media question the internment of 300.000 Tamil IDP,
there is no way for any self-respecting intellectual or the
critical public in general in the country concerned to pretend
that the only problem left to be tackled is "humanitarian".
Just the contrary! You speak -echoing the official government
line - of '300.000 temporarily displaced Tamils being 'sheltered
in welfare centres'. This is but typical Orwellian language
trying to turn reality upside down in light of the razor sharp
barbed wires surrounding these camps, of the military
controlling all access to and exits from them, of the prevention
of independent outside observers, journalists and NGOs from
entering them, of official announcements that a new prolonged
phase of "counter-insurgency".
The'welfare centres' are but internment camps, the
'rehabilitation in the camps' is but a racist policy of
collective suspicion, intimidation, witchhunt, and
impoverishment. When you talk of the "fear and anxiety of the
people undoubtedly brainwashed by the LTTE" you seem to forget
Bindunuwewa or Chemmani or the numerous reports by UN agencies
and Human Rights organizations that have castigated the massive
human rights violations, such as disappearances, extra-judicial
killings, and torture committed for decades by the security
forces especially against the SLT.
Apart from their own experiences, these terrified people may
also have heard of the situation on the ground following the
'liberation' of the Eastern province in mid-July 2007. What the
government euphemistically describes as a "Nagenahira Navodaya
or Eastern Awakening" programme, has nothing to do with
"post-conflict reconstruction" but is a nightmare of violence,
political instability, repression, and land expropiration
according to the International Crisis Group (Asia report No 165
of April 16, 2009 entitled "Development Assistance and Conflict
in Sri Lanka - Lessons from the Eastern Province").
And this is only the tip of the iceberg when viewed against the
appropriation of the state by the majority coupled with the
systemic oppression, including pogroms, of the Tamil people and
the minorities in language, education, public employment or land
colonisation.
Against this background, your appeal is anything but well-minded
and humanitarian, it is highly political, in fact legitimizing
the racist policies of the GoSL. Instead of rising against the
root causes, mobilizing the Singhalese public to fight against
chauvinism, the security state, the dictatorship masqerading as
democracy, for the rule of law and against the "culture of
impunity", for a democratic, inclusive, participatory polity and
society, you call for hand-outs, for charity implicitely
justifying the present state of affairs.
As a former Dy.Director of SIPRI, Oslo and coordinator of the UN
Programme on Conflict Resolution, you know that in a conflict
each and every action can not be viewed in isolation, but has to
be seen in its socio-political context. In the concrete
situation: A camp is a camp, to put a whole people behind barbed
wire is racism.
The unambigous struggle for the immediate dissolution of the
camps and the return of the IDP to their homes must be the
absolute priority, and not to make life somewhat easier for the
inmates...
Such a political commitment is, by the way, also in the best
long-term interest of the Singhalese and all the other people
living on the island.
Sincerely,
Prof. Dr.John P.Neelsen
Institute of Sociology
Tuebingen University
D - 72074 Tuebingen/Germany
Appeal for Aid by Kumar Rupesinghe: "WINNING THE PEACE"
The territorial battle between the Government of Sri Lanka and
the LTTE is at an end. Over two hundred and eighty thousand
people have come into government controlled areas with fear and
anxiety in their eyes, some maimed and injured and some
separated from their kith and kin.
The rehabilitation of the Tamil people in the camps is a major
challenge, for they look a defeated people, undoubtedly
brainwashed by the LTTE and shell shocked and emaciated.
This is why I am keen to ensure these young people to obtain
English training and training in information technology. Once
this program gets going then other vocational training skills
can be imparted to them. The young people should not be allowed
to be idle for 24 hours is a very long time in a camp. Therefore
they should be given reading material in Tamil and the books,
magazines and journals should be carefully whetted. A strategic
plan must be created with a long term vision. We owe this to a
desperate and troubled mind of a future younger generation in
the camps. *We must not let history repeat itself*.
During any war terminations, people must pick up the pieces and
rebuild their societies. In Sri Lanka too such a moment has
arisen.