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EUROPEAN UNION & THE TAMIL STRUGGLE

A Touch of Farce in Strasbourg

Nadesan Satyendra
June 1994

Unmoved by the joint statement of more than 17 non governmental organisations at the United Nations Commission on Human Rights in February this year (1994) on the urgency to recognise the right of Tamil people to self determination, the European Parliament declared in May 1994, its belief that 'a useful form of aid from the European Union to Sri Lanka would be the provision of books and educational equipment for the teaching of the English language.'


The European Parliament's last session in Strasbourg, before fresh European elections, added a touch of farce to the efforts being made to resolve the armed conflict in the island of Sri Lanka.

Unmoved by the joint statement of more than 17 non governmental organisations at the United Nations Commission on Human Rights in February this year (1994) on the urgency to recognise the right of Tamil people to self determination, the European Parliament declared in May 1994, its belief that 'a useful form of aid from the European Union to Sri Lanka would be the provision of books and educational equipment for the teaching of the English language.'

An explanatory statement went on to say:

''... one of the causes of the development of conflicts in Sri Lanka, after its peaceful achievement of independence in 1948 was the segregation of schools on linguistic lines. Attempts are now being made to remedy this by encouraging the use of English. It is already the lingua franca of the educated Sinhalese and the educated Tamils, but its wider use would be valuable in bridging the ethnic divide. While there are many excellent teachers in Sri Lanka, it would seem worthwhile the EC making a special effort to assist with funds, books and teaching aids. Graduate unemployment as well as linguistic division are special problems in Sri Lanka, which would be relieved by such assistance.''

To declare solemnly in this day and age that English is 'the lingua franca of the educated Sinhalese and the educated Tamils' is to fail to recognise that the true Tamil intelligentsia today is Tamil speaking and not English speaking. It is to fail to recognise that 'education' and 'English' are not synonyms. It is also to fail to recognise that thousands upon thousands of 'educated Tamils' speak only Tamil.

It is also to fail to recognise that the Tamil struggle for self determination arose on Tamil soil and has been shaped by Tamils who have hardly ever spoken in English. It is also to fail to recognise that Tamil is one of the oldest, if not the oldest, living language in the world, was written and spoken several centuries before English, and is today written and spoken by more than sixty million people around the world.

By all means let us study the languages of the world. By all means let the English study Tamil and the Tamils study English. Each may gain some understanding of the other in this way. But to suggest that the answer to the armed conflict on the ground in the island of Sri Lanka is to teach English to the 'natives' is to preach a cynical, ethnocentric utopionism.

It is hardly likely that the European Parliament would have suggested that, say, the ethnic divide between Germany, and Great Britain would be bridged by teaching French to both Germans and the British on the basis that, French was the lingua franca of the 'educated German' and the 'educated British' (during pre Napoleonic times).

The segregation of schools on linguistic lines was not a 'cause' of the conflict in the island of Sri Lanka. For one thing, schools were not segregated on linguistic lines. That which was separated was the language stream within each school. But, be that as it may, the fact that two peoples are educated, each in their own mother tongue, does not have the result that these two peoples cannot associate with each other in equality and in freedom - unless they are taught the tongue of their erstwhile alien ruler.

It is unfortunate that the European Parliament did not educate itself by making an effort to understand that which was said by 15 non governmental organisations at the February 1993 sessions of the United Nations Human Rights Commission:

''We are of the view that any meaningful attempt to resolve the conflict (in the island of Sri Lanka) should address its underlying causes and to recognise that the armed struggle of the Tamil people for self determination, arose as a response to decades of an ever widening and deepening oppression by a permanent Sinhala majority, within the confines of an unitary Sri Lankan state.

It was an oppression which included the disenfranchisement of the plantation Tamils, systematic state aided Sinhala colonisation of the Tamil homeland, the enactment of the Sinhala Only law, discriminatory employment policies, inequitable allocation of resources to Tamil areas, exclusion of eligible Tamil students from Universities and higher education, and a refusal to share power within the frame of a federal constitution. It was an oppression by an alien Sinhala majority which consolidated the growth of the national consciousness of the Tamil people.

During the past several years the Sinhala dominated Sri Lankan government has attempted to put down the armed resistance of the Tamil people and has sought to conquer and control the Tamil homeland. The record shows that in this attempt, Sri Lanka's armed forces and para military units have committed increasingly widespread violations of the rules of humanitarian law...

However, despite the sustained attacks of Sinhala dominated governments over a period of several decades, the territorial integrity of the Tamil homeland in the North and East of the island has remained. The Tamil population in the North and East, who have lived for many centuries within relatively well defined geographical boundaries, share an ancient heritage, a vibrant culture, and a living language which traces its origins to more than 2500 years ago.

A social group, which shares objective elements such as a common language and which has acquired a subjective consciousness of togetherness, by its life within a relatively well defined territory, and its struggle against alien domination, clearly constitutes a 'people' with the right to self determination.

Today, there is an urgent need for the international community to recognise that the Tamil population in the North and East of the island of Sri Lanka are such a 'people' with the right to freely choose their political status. It is our view that such recognition will prepare the ground for the resolution of a conflict which has taken such a heavy toll in human lives and suffering during the past several years.''

A charitable explanation for the farcical nature of the resolution of the European Parliament may, perhaps, be found in the comments made by Peter Taylor writing in the European Newspaper of 13-19 May 1994:

''The European Parliament's last session in Strasbourg before the elections was a bit like end of term in a boarding school. Metal trunks containing MEPs most cherished mounds of paper work lined the labyrinthine corridors, and from behind doors left ajar came hearty sounds of farewell. Almost half the MEPs will be gone for good - either through retiring, being dropped from their national lists or losing the election...

The European Parliament is a bizarre institution... Parliament which shares the Council of Europe's chamber is the cuckoo in its nest. Its own symbolism - forest of flags, the ubiquitous 12 star logo, Beethoven suborned to EU service - shows no such restraint. 'Official dignity tends to increase in inverse ratio to the importance of the country in which the office is held' wrote the English novelist Aldous Huxley. Judged by that standard, 'Europe' must rank alongside, say, Chad.

In the Chamber itself, ushers dressed in white tie and tails, like sommeliers, fuss around an amphitheatre of desks. Of 518 MEPs (soon to be 567), there might be 30 in the chamber most of the time - vastly outnumbered by herds of puzzled visitors in the public galleries. Hardly any of the MEPs are famous faces... Soporific litanies do not however mean that nothing important is happening. Quite the contrary. The Friday morning sessions, when most MEPs have left, is precisely when it is easiest to slide in a little noticed amendment to protect some special interest group. MEPs are supposed to register their financial interest but the system is widely regarded as inadequate. For commissioners themselves and for the huge army of 'research assistants' (many in the pay of lobbyists), no such register even exists...''

Whether the resolution on the situation in Sri Lanka was 'slided in' is a matter of conjecture. But, that it was passed on a Friday is a fact.

Again, what is not a matter of conjecture is the colossal ignorance that the resolution displays - an ignorance which would be laughable had not the resolution been intended to be taken seriously. It seems that the European Parliament has preferred to live up to Peter Taylors description of it as a 'bizarre institution'. But it would be slighting Chad to say that 'Europe' ranks alongside Chad. After all Chad, a third world country, does not display the arrogance of neo colonialism which believes that English is the panacea for the world's ills.



 

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