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Distant voices, desperate lives

John Pilger

Published 14 May 2009

History teaches us that when no one listens, tragedy ensues. Sri Lanka’s Tamils face terrible suffering. They urgently need to be heard

In the early 1960s, it was the Irish of Derry who would phone late at night, speaking in a single breath, spilling out stories of discrimination and injustice. Who listened to their truth, until the violence began? Bengalis from what was then East Pakistan did much the same. Their urgent whispers described terrible state crimes that the news ignored, and they implored us reporters to “let the world know”. Palestinians speaking above the din of crowded rooms in Bethlehem and Beirut asked no more. For me, the most tenacious distant voices have been the Tamils of Sri Lanka, to whom we ought to have listened a very long time ago.

It is only now, as they take to the streets of western cities, and the persecution of their compatriots reaches a crescendo, that we listen, though not intently enough to understand and act. The Sri Lankan government has learned an old lesson from, I suspect, a modern master: Israel. In order to conduct a slaughter, you ensure the pornography is unseen, illicit at best. You ban foreigners and their cameras from Tamil towns such as Mulliavaikal, which was bombarded recently by the Sri Lankan army, and you lie that the 75 people killed in the hospital were blown up quite wilfully by a Tamil suicide bomber. You then give reporters a ride into the jungle, providing what in the news business is called a dateline, which suggests an eyewitness account, and you encourage the gullible to disseminate only your version and its lies. Gaza is the model.

From the same masterclass you learn to manipulate the definition of terrorism as a universal menace, thus ingratiating yourself with the “international community” (Washington) as a noble sovereign state blighted by an “insurgency” of mindless fanaticism. The truth and lessons of the past are irrelevant. And, having succeeded in persuading the United States and Britain to proscribe your insurgents as terrorists, you affirm you are on the right side of history, regardless of the fact that your government has one of the world’s worst human rights records and practises terrorism by another name. Such is Sri Lanka.

This is not to suggest that those who resist attempts to obliterate them culturally if not actually are innocent in their methods. The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) have spilled their share of blood and perpetrated their own atrocities. But they are the product, not the cause, of an injustice and a war that long pre-date them. Neither is Sri Lanka’s civil strife as unfathomable as it is often presented: an ancient religious-ethnic rivalry between the Hindu Tamils and the Buddhist Sinhalese government.

Sri Lanka, as British-ruled Ceylon, was subjected to classic divide-and-rule. The British brought Tamils from India as virtual slave labour while building an educated Tamil middle class to run the colony. At independence in 1948, the new political elite, in its rush for power, cultivated ethnic support in a society whose imperative should have been the eradication of poverty. Language became the spark. The election of a government pledging to replace English, the lingua franca, with Sinhalese was a declaration of war on the Tamils. Under the new law, Tamils almost disappeared from the civil service by 1970; and as “nationalism” seduced both left and right, discrimination and anti-Tamil riots followed.

The formation of a Tamil resistance, notably the LTTE, the Tamil Tigers, included a demand for a state in the north of the country. The response of the government was judicial killing, torture, disappearances and, more recently, the reported use of cluster bombs and chemical weapons. The Tigers responded with their own crimes, including suicide bombing and kidnapping.

In 2002, a ceasefire was agreed, and it held until last year, when the government decided to finish off the Tigers. Tamil civilians were urged to flee to military-run “welfare camps”, which have become the symbol of an entire people under vicious detention, and worse, with nowhere to escape the army’s fury.

This is Gaza again, although the historical parallel is the British treatment of Boer women and children more than a century ago, who “died like flies”, as a witness wrote.

Foreign aid workers have been banned from Sri Lanka’s camps, except the International Committee of the Red Cross, which has described a catastrophe in the making. The United Nations says that 60 Tamils a day are being killed in the shelling of a government-declared “no-fire zone”.

In 2003, the Tigers proposed a devolved Interim Self-Governing Authority that included possibilities for negotiation. Today, the government gives the impression it will use its imminent “victory” to “permanently solve” the “Tamil minority problem”, as many of its more rabid supporters threaten. The army commander says all of Sri Lanka “belongs” to the Sinhalese majority. The word “genocide” is used by Tamil expatriates, perhaps loosely; but the fear is true.

India could play a critical part. The south Indian state of Tamil Nadu has a Tamil-speaking population with centuries-long ties to the Tamils of Sri Lanka. In the current Indian election campaign, anger over the siege of Tamils in Sri Lanka has brought hundreds of thousands to rallies. Having initially helped to arm the Tigers, Indian governments sent “peacekeeping” troops to disarm them. Delhi now appears to be allowing the Sinhalese supremacists in Colombo to “stabilise” its troubled neighbour. In a responsible regional role, India could stop the killing and begin to broker a solution.

The great moral citadels in London and Washington offer merely silent approval of the violence and tragedy. No appeals are heard in the United Nations from them. David Miliband has called for a “ceasefire”, as he tends to do in places where British “interests” are served, such as the 14 impoverished countries racked by armed conflict where the British government licenses arms shipments. In 2005, British arms exports to Sri Lanka rose by 60 per cent.

The distant voices from there should be heard, urgently.

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11 comments from readers

jakeMilton
15 May 2009 at 07:48

true

punitham
16 May 2009 at 09:52

John Pilger, thank you.

Oppressed ethnic minorities have no voice at the UN and Sri lanka has been expertly doing damage control exercise at the UN for decades frustrating international human rights organisations. Even the Commonwealth was insanely blocked by Sri Lanka from tabling Tamils' pleas.

With several episodes of press censure the army of occuption has been carrying out atrocities in Northeast with impunity.

In the last three years alone thousands of violent incidents - mainly against Tamils - in heavily militarised Northeast Sri Lanka and Colombo go uninvestigated - International Independent Eminent Group of Persons left Sri Lanka last year saying that there is no political will to solve the crimes.

As yet there is no sign that the Sinhalese are going to be fair to the Tamils.

punitham
16 May 2009 at 17:46

John Pilger

Thank you for writing this.

One of the reasons why this has been protracted so long is that there have been several episodes of press censure in the last sixty years so much so that even people in the South have been in the dark about what has been going on in the Northeast under the army of occupation.

If this is ever going to be resolved it'll be only with the help of journalists, esp. investigative journalists.

palstein
17 May 2009 at 16:01

Paragraphs 5,6 & 7 attempt to summarize the conflict.

What a poor, hopeless summary this is for a writer of such high reputation.

During the colonial period (1833-1948) Sri Lanka was governed with the support of the tamil family dynasty

of Ramanathan/ Arunachalam/ Ponnampalam in the British Legislative council. At the time of independence, in order to protect their privileges, nationalism was stirred by elites of both communities

(read about the 50/50 demand for power by Tamil elite during independence).

"Support in society should have been for poverty eradication." There is not much evidence of any elite

Sri Lanka Tamil proposals for eradicating poverty amongst the Sinhalese or Indian Tamils. With only

5% of the Sinhalese population able to speak English at independence, unfortunately the Sinhalese politicians used the language card to gain support.

The conflicts in Sri Lanka are multi-polar, with the ethnic issue being just one. This issue cannot be

addressed in isolation of the most challenging one faced by its citizens during colonialism and since

independence - economics.

ALL distant voices from there should be heard, urgently - not just ones focusing on division and nationalism promoted by a group of high-caste elite Tamils at the expense of all other citizens of Sri Lanka.

Sri Lankans need to find common consensus which can address all its issues in parallel.

sie.kathieravelu
18 May 2009 at 13:14

"Sri Lankans need to find common consensus which can address all its issues in parallel."

The best political solution to address the problems faced by various sections of the Sri Lankan society - particularly the poor, the politically weak and the “minorities” who do not carry any “political weight” - would be to DILUTE the powers of all elected representatives of the people by separating the various powers of the Parliament and by horizontally empowering different sets of people’s representatives elected on different area basis to administer the different sets of the separated powers at different locations.

This system would help to eradicate injustice, discrimination, bribery and corruption and help to establish the “Rule of Law” and “Rule by ALL” for sustainable peace, tranquility and prosperity and a pleasant harmonious living with dignity and respect for all the inhabitants in the country. Everyone must have “equal” powers, rights, duties and responsibilities and most importantly everyone should be deemed “equal” and treated “equally” before the law not only on paper but also practically – be it the Head of State, The Chief Justice or the voiceless poor of the poorest in the country.

Since all political and other powers flow from the sovereignty of the people, it is proposed that these powers be not given to any ONE set of representatives but distributed among different sets of people’s representatives (groups) elected on different area basis (village and villages grouped) to perform the different, defined and distinct functions of one and the same institution - the Parliament – like the organs of our body – heart, lungs, kidneys, eyes, nose, ear etc. – performing different and distinct functions to enable us to sustain normal life.

IF THERE IS A SINCERE WILL to treat all inhabitants of the county with dignity and as respectful citizens of this country, enjoying equal rights in all respects, then THE ABOVE IS A WAY

twodaughters
19 May 2009 at 01:01

So the war has ended; now let the journalists in to see that that there has not been thousands of innocent casualties. The stories we are hearing is one of slaughter carnage with several thousand bodies lying on the beaches and jungle. Will the Sri-Lankan government let the Journalists in?

They stated there were only 70,000 civilians trapped in the area, more than 250,000 are now being held in camps with no or very little sanitation, shelter or food. Human rights organizations have seen Satellite footage of shelling in the safe areas by the Sri-Lankan Army. Aid workers are not being allowed in, why? Is it because of the reports of the thousands of dead bodies littering the beaches and surrounding area?

I was a neutral before this conflict; but now looking at what the Sri-Lankan president and his countryman have done, this has shifted my opinions. The Tamil population needs a homeland; they once ruled parts of Ceylon before the various European colonizations. Partition is now the only answer, the Tamil population needs an independent homeland, and there is too much hatred, inherent prejudice in the Singhalese population to allow them to live in harmony and equality with the Tamils.

Sri-Lanka is a country with one of the worst human rights records. I wonder how long it will take the Singhalese population to realize that the President must now turn his attention to Sri-Lanka's failing economy; he will not have the excuse of a war to fall back on.

Shame on India, China and Russia for their 30 pieces of sliver; and on the western Governments who have turned a blind eye.

Pathma
19 May 2009 at 01:10

Dear Jhon,

I,ve been listening , reading your comments for a long time. I admire your stand in politics very much.

As a Srilankan Tamil I know we have no voice for a long time. Tamils are peace loving people and try to have a life in North and Eastern part of Srilanka which is dry, flat and very hot.

We need people like you to expose what is happening in the war zone. I thank you from bottom of my heart. God bless you

newsps1
21 May 2009 at 04:46

Can't a journalists' association or some strong group campaign strongly to get access to this area?

I can't understand this Government's thinking - even any truth they say won't be believed now, unless it comes from an independent source.

Tamil Australian
22 May 2009 at 04:19

Dear John,

Thank you for the bringing the plight of the Tamil people in Sri Lanka, who are voiceless

Thamizhan Tamil
23 May 2009 at 13:04

Thank You very much for this article Mr John Pilger.

Tamils all over are grateful to you now for your good work in writing about the terrible, unacceptable situation in Sri Lanka. THANK YOU!

Rani
24 May 2009 at 07:38

Thank you Mr. Pilger for seeing the conflict as it truly is. A Tamilian blood bath. The Tamil civilians need help and they need help fast.

With the LTTE gone, it's up to the Tamil diaspora now to continue to fight for our people. We need a Tamil Eelam, that is our only solution. We will continue to protest until the international community makes the Sri Lankan government pay for what has happened the Tamil people.

We need justice.

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About the writer

John Pilger

John Pilger, renowned investigative journalist and documentary film-maker, is one of only two to have twice won British journalism's top award; his documentaries have won academy awards in both the UK and the US. In a New Statesman survey of the 50 heroes of our time, Pilger came fourth behind Aung San Suu Kyi and Nelson Mandela. "John Pilger," wrote Harold Pinter, "unearths, with steely attention facts, the filthy truth. I salute him."

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